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Tony Soprano

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Anthony John Soprano, Sr. is the Boss of the DiMeo family in the fictional HBO TV series, The Sopranos, played by James Gandolfini.

Throughout the series, Tony Soprano has to juggle the ongoing needs of both his personal family and his professional family. He has a volatile relationship with his wife, Carmela, and a loving -- if somewhat strained-- relationship with his two children, Meadow and Anthony, Jr. Passionate and often hotheaded, he is nonetheless intelligent and struggles to conduct his personal and professional lives with reason rather than passion.

Tony is frequently unfaithful to his wife. His affairs and one-night stands and his inability to be faithful have been a source of conflict between Tony and Carmela, leading to a year-long separation. Affairs have included Mercedes saleswoman Gloria Trillo and Russian dancer Irina Peltsin. Tony lets his hedonistic pursuits conflict with his business. He had sex with Svetlana Kirilenko, Uncle Junior's nurse and Irina's cousin. He also had an affair with Valentina la Paz. Their relationship started while Valentina was dating Ralph Cifaretto. Tony also slept with Charmaine Bucco before he was married but while he was dating Carmela.

Coupled with this, Tony has to juggle northern New Jersey's most powerful criminal organization, keeping it functioning properly and keeping dissonance to a minimum. Tony is technically only the 'Acting Boss' of the DiMeo Crime Family, keeping it operating while Official Boss Junior Soprano is on house arrest and going senile .The relationship between Tony and Junior was very close for many years, with Junior acting as a father figure for Tony following the death of Giovanni (AKA Johnny Boy) Soprano, Tony's father. However, the relationship was strained when a disgruntled Junior, becoming more and more marginalized in the organization as the FBI's investigation into his activies increased. He pulled the mock execution of Christopher Moltisanti and had Brendan Filone killed, which infuriated Tony. If that wasn't bad enough, he soon conspired with Tony's own mother, Livia Soprano, to have Tony himself killed (although the hit failed).

Despite a level of local notoriety, Tony represents himself publicly as a waste management consultant to Barone Sanitation, one of the many fronts for his criminal enterprises. Tony has been using his putative nephew (actually his wife's cousin) Christopher Moltisanti as a buffer between him and his capos during the past two seasons in order to insulate himself from the FBI.

Past

Tony grew up living with his mother, father and two sisters in New Jersey. His father, Johnny Boy, was always involved in crime and Tony recollects some of his activities in flashbacks on the show. A young Tony has been portrayed by several actors. Bobby Boriello played Tony in the episode "Down Neck" when he had his first panic attack - prompted by seeing his father mutilate a pork store owner and then his mothers intense pleasure at receiving free meat. Tony believed that his father preferred his older sister Janice to him. Tony's Uncle Corrado Soprano ("Junior") lived near by and worked with Johnny Boy closely when Tony was a child. In another flashback sequence Tony recalled his father's relationship with his sister Janice and his use of her as a cover for attending meetings with criminal associates at a children's fair. At the time Tony thought that Janice was his father's favourite child. In therapy when asked to remember happy childhood memories about his mother Tony struggled to come up with any, he later described her as a joyless woman who wore his father down to a little nub.

Tony went to high school with Artie Bucco and Davey Scatino and remained friends with them into later life. Tony was also close to his cousin Tony Blundetto and neighbourhood kids used to call them Tony Uncle-Al and Tony Uncle-Johnny after their father's to tell them apart. In their teenage years the two Tony's spent summers at their Uncle Pat Blundetto's farm - Pat was a soldier in the DiMeo organization. They were sometimes joined by their younger cousin Christopher Moltisanti, who they bullied. Tony B was arrested for his part in a hijacking when the two Tonys were young men. Tony was supposed to join Tony B on the job but failed to because of a panic attack - at the time he told people that he was attacked and injured.

Tony was part of an unofficial crew of young criminals consisting of Silvio Dante, Ralph Cifaretto and Jackie Aprile, Sr. Tony gained notoriety in the DiMeo crime family by robbing a card game run by Feech LaManna along with Silvio and Jackie. From then on he was on a fast-track to becoming a made man.

His father shepherded him through his ascendancy until his death in 1986 from emphysema. When he died Johnny Boy had risen to the level of Capo of his own crew - as had his brother Junior. Junior took over the paternal role and continued to advise and assist Tony. Tony remembers having to buy expensive dinners for Richie Aprile as a newly made man. Soldiers from Johnny Boy's crew Big Pussy and Paulie "Walnuts" Gualtieri passed their loyalty on to Tony and he became capo of his father's old crew. Old friend Silvio Dante joined him in the group.

By 1995 Tony was a well respected mainstay of the organisation when the boss of the family Eckley DiMeo was sent to prison. Tony's longtime friend Jackie Aprile, Sr. took on the role of acting boss.

Tony's grandfather Corrado Soprano was a stone mason who emigrated from Avellino in Italy in 1910. He helped to build a church in Tony's old neighbourhood that Tony occasionally takes his children to so he can tell them about their past. Tony also recalls that when he was 13 his grandfather would let him play around on his construction sites, even driving heavy machinery.

As a father

Tony has two children - Meadow Soprano and AJ Soprano. He also treats his putative nephew, Christopher Moltisanti(actually a 2nd cousin) as a son in many ways.

Tony is often portrayed as a loving father - he attends his children's sports games, wants them to be safe, happy and to have every opportunity in life. He hopes that both his children will escape the life of crime that he has led.

Tony takes great pride in Meadow's achievements. In season 1 he is moved close to tears by her performance at a choir recital. He often tells people about her aspiration to become a pediatrician.

However, he also sometimes alienates his children through his behaviour. He has always tried to conceal his criminal life from them - something that Meadow saw through early on and AJ also realised with guidance from his sister.

Tony's overprotectiveness of Meadow has led to feuds between them on several occasions - her first boyfriend at college had a mixed Jewish and African-American heritage and Tony's racism led him to try and drive him away. Meadow learned of her father's actions and didn't speak to him for several months eventually reconciling at christmas in 2001.

Meadow's next boyfriend was Jackie Aprile, Jr. the son of Tony's old friend Jackie Aprile, Sr.. Tony had promised Jackie Jr's father that he would try to keep Jackie on the straight path. Tony was initially pleased with the relationship believing Jackie to be a hard-working pre-med student from a good family. However since his Uncle Richie's release from prison and subsequent death Jackie had been becoming more and more involved in the mafia's world. Tony realised this by catching Jackie at strip clubs and a casino. He eventually delivered a beating to Jackie to warn him about abusing his daughter's feelings and confiscated a gun from him. Tony failed in his role as surrogate father to Jackie, perhaps because of his overprotectiveness of Meadow and a sign of his selfishness. Jackie was eventually killed after an ill-advised robbery gone wrong - Tony did not give the order but he certainly influenced the decision of the man who did. This drove Meadow to drinking and depression at the loss of her boyfriend, although they broke up shortly before his death.

Tony gets on well with Meadow's college friends after this and gets on well with her fiancee Finn.

Therapy

Tony has suffered from panic attacks that sometimes cause him to lose consciousness since his childhood. He has his first onscreen panic attack while cooking sausages at his son's birthday party - this occurs in a flashback in the pilot episode. Tony loses consciousness and knocks over the barbequeue causing a small explosion when a bottle of lighter fluid falls into the coals. Tony describes the experience of the panic attack as feeling like he had "ginger ale in his skull". This prompts him to seek help for the attacks and he sees his neighbour and family physician Bruce Cusamano. After extensive testing that includes an MRI scan and blood work no physical cause can be found so Dr. Cusamano referred Tony to psychiatrist, Dr. Melfi.

Tony's referral to therapy allowed a discussion of his thoughts and feelings away from both aspects of his life - this forum for reaching into the characters thoughts has been described as a Greek chorus and key to the viewers understanding of the character[link] Bill Carter "The Last Aria of Tony Soprano", Februrary, 2006 .

Tony was initially very resistant to the idea that there was a psychiatric cause for his symptoms. He resented being in therapy and refused to accept the diagnosis of panic attacks given him by the neurologists who had investigated his illness. Tony begins to open up once Dr. Melfi explains the doctor-patient confidentiality rules. He tells her about the stress of his business life - he has a feeling that he has come in at the end of something and describes a reverence for times past. Tony leaves out the violence associated with his criminal career. Tony tells Dr. Melfi a story about ducks landing in his pool. He also tells her about his mother, Livia, who is relentlessly pessimistic and cynical, at once demanding and resentful of assistance. By the end of the first session Tony has admitted that he feels depressed but storms out when Dr. Melfi presses him further about the relationship between his symptoms and the ducks.

Livia's derisive outburst when the family visit Green Grove, a 'retirement community' that Tony is attempting to place his mother in, prompts a second panic attack. Dr. Melfi's prescribed prozac as an anti-depressant for Tony telling him that no-one need suffer from depression with the wonders of modern pharamacology. Tony fails to attend their next scheduled session.

At their next session Tony is still reluctant to face his own psychological weaknesses. Tony is quick to credit the medication for his improved mood but Dr. Melfi tells him it cannot be that as it takes 6 weeks to work - she credits their therapy sessions. Tony describes a dream where a bird steals his penis - Dr. Melfi extrapolates from this to reveal that Tony projected his love for his family onto the family of ducks living in his back pool and this brings him to tears, to his consternation. She tells him that their flight from the pool sparked his panic attack through the overwhelming fear of somehow losing his own family.

In the episode "46 Long" they continue discuss Tony's mother and her difficulties living alone. Tony admits that he feels guilty because his mother could not be allowed to live with his family. We learn that he has been left to care for his mother alone by his sisters. When Dr. Melfi asks him to remember good experiences from his childhood he has dififculty. It is clear that Tony's perception of his mother does not meet with the reality of her personality. He also shows that he blames Carmela for preventing his mother from living with them. Later they discuss Livia's car accident and Melfi suggests depression may have contributed to the accident - Tony misunderstands her and becomes angry. Tony has a panic attack while visiting his mother's home after she moves to Green Grove. In a later session Dr. Melfi pushes Tony to admit he has feelings of anger towards his mother and he again storms out. During this episode Tony introduces the concept of him acting like the sad clown - happy on the outside but sad on the inside.

In "Denial, Anger, Acceptance" Tony discusses Jackie's cancer with Dr. Melfi. She tries to use it as an example of Tony's negative thinking contributing to his depression. Tony becomes angry and storms out because he feels she is trying to trick him and manipulate his thoughts using the pictures that decorate her office. After Jackie worsens and Tony is called a Frankenstein by a business associate he returns to therapy to discuss these things with Dr. Melfi - she asks him if he feels like a monster.

In "Down Neck" Tony discusses a childhood memory of an early panic attack. He saw his father and uncle mutilate Mr Satriale, the local butcher, and later fainted at a family dinner consisting of free meat from the butcher. Dr. Melfi makes a connection between meat and Tony's panic attacks and also explores his mother's attitude to the fruits of his father's labour.

Later Dr. Melfi tries prescribing Lithium as a mood stabiliser. In the episode "Isabella" Tony sinks into a severe depressive episode and experiences hallucinations - he sees a beautiful Italian woman named Isabella in his neighbour's garden. Tony sees Isabella several times during the episode and later learns that she never existed. Melfi theorises that Isabella was an idealised maternal figure that Tony's subconscious produced because of his deep upset at his own mother's actions at the time.

In "I Dream of Jeannie Cusamano" Tony abruptly ends his therapy and convinces Dr. Melfi to go into hiding when he discovers that his Uncle Junior has found out about their sessions.

The relationship between Tony and Dr. Melfi has been up-and-down, with Tony reaching a level of comfort with Dr. Melfi that he has never experienced with anyone else before, not even his wife. This closeness leads Tony to have something of a "crush" on Dr. Melfi, something that is unattainable. However, the "prying" from Dr. Melfi is uncomfortable for Tony and he often turns sarcastic and antagonistic towards her, leading to an ongoing strain in their relationship.

Injury

In the premiere of the 2006 season, Junior Soprano, suffering from dementia, believes Tony to be "Little Pussy" Malanga and shoots him in the abdomen. He manages to dial 911 but loses consciousness before being able to tell the operator what happened.

The second episode of the sixth season reveals Tony is currently in a medically-induced coma in the hospital. In the second and third episode we see Tony in a dream-like state, eventually arriving at what could be purgatory [link] or perhaps an alternate life, where he is greeted by his late cousin, Tony Blundetto. It is also possible the shadowy figure in the doorway to the house is his mother, who is also dead. However, the voice of a younger version of his daughter calls him back. At the end of the third episode he awakes from his coma in a confused but stable state.

By the fourth episode Tony is mobile and fully aware and has regained his voice but is still recovering. Tony's attitude to life has been changed by his near death experience. He has yet to discuss his experiences while unconscious with anyone close to him. However, in the Season 6 episode Kaisha, he admits to Phil Leotardo (who had just suffered a heart attack), that while he was in a coma, he went to a place, but he knows he never wants to go back there. He talks philosophy with John Schwinn, another patient at the hospital, and mentions that while in the coma he had the experience of being drawn towards somewhere he did not want to go and narrowly avoiding it.

Dreams

Tony sometimes has vivid dreams that are shown to the viewer - episodes with dream sequences include "Pax Soprana", "Isabella", "Funhouse", "Everybody Hurts", "Calling All Cars" and "The Test Dream".

In "Meadowlands", Tony has a dream of several people in his life in Dr. Melfi's office, causing him to be paranoid that people will find out he is seeing a psychiatrist. The dream ends with Tony confronting Melfi, only to find out he's speaking to his mother, Livia.

In "Pax Soprana", Tony has several dreams and fantasies of Dr. Melfi. He becomes convinced that he is in love with her, but she turns him down when he makes advances towards her.

In "Isabella", Tony, suffering from depression after Big Pussy disappears, acquaints himself with a dental student named Isabella who is staying in the Cusamano home while they are on vacation. He later discovers that he hallucinated Isabella due to taking too much lithium, and that Isabella represented the mother he never had.

In "Funhouse" Tony's dream reveals to him something that he has been aware of subconciously for some time - his friend and soldier in his crew Big Pussy Bonpensiero is a federal informant. The dream also features Paulie Walnuts being shot while playing cards.

In "Everybody Hurts" Tony dreams of his ex-comare Gloria Trillo shortly after learning of her suicide by hanging. He visits her apartment and finds her in a black dress with a black scarf around her neck. She is cooking dinner and when she goes over to the oven the scarf drapes across Tony. Plaster falls down in front of Tony and when he looks up he sees that the chandelier is almost pulled out of the ceilling. Gloria is suddenly back at the table and offers Tony a choice between seeing what she has under her dress or under her scarf. As she goes to peel away the scarf, Tony wakes up and makes his way to the bathroom for some medication.

In "Calling All Cars" Tony has two dreams featuring Ralph Cifaretto. In the first he is being driven by Carmela in the back of his fathers old car while Ralph sits in the passenger seat. There is a caterpillar crawling on the back of Ralph's head. Tony's fellow passenger in the back seat changes - Gloria Trillo and Svetlana Kirilenko are both seen. The caterpillar turns into a butterfly. Dr. Melfi later tells him that the dream signifies a change for Ralphie and Carmela being in control.

In the second dream Tony follows Ralph to an old house which Ralph enters. Tony is dressed in trousers, suspenders and a vest. He knocks on the door and a female figure descends slowly in shadow. The door creeks ominously. Tony says he is there for the stonemason job but does not speak English well. Just as Tony is about to enter the house he wakes up.

In "The Test Dream" Tony comes to terms with having to kill his cousin Tony Blundetto, as well reflecting inner demons and fears ranging from his children's future, his relationship with his wife, his infidelities, those who have died by his hand or by his orders, his fate and even his relationship with his father. He is again shown in his father's old car accompanied by a range of past associates.

Quirks

Tony has numerous quirks and eccentricities.

Trivia

See also


The Sopranos
Episodes: List of The Sopranos episodes
Timeline: The Sopranos timeline
Miscellaneous: Deaths | Family Tree | Crew | Awards
Characters
> Tony | Dr. Melfi | Carmela
Christopher | Uncle Junior | Meadow | A.J. | Janice | Silvio
Paulie Walnuts | Bobby "Bacala" | Johnny Sack | Vito
Adriana | Furio | Tony B. | Ralph | Big Pussy | Livia

Secondary Characters

Organizations/Groups
DiMeo Crime Family | Lupertazzi Crime Family |
Bada Bing | Satriale's Pork Store | F.B.I.

External links

References

 


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