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James Gandolfini looks beyond Tony Soprano

Actor will miss cast and crew, but is relieved to leave mob boss behind

James Gandolfini
Craig Blankenhorn / AP
James Gandolfini says he used to like his character, Tony Soprano, but Tony's misdeeds and murders eventually wore on him.
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updated 11:47 a.m. ET June 8, 2007

NEW YORK - There was no decisive moment, no seismic shift, no ceremony when James Gandolfini put “The Sopranos” behind him. But he has. Comfortably.

“I was told that it would be a transition,” he says and shakes his head. “Not much. It’s very calming to move on.”

Gandolfini, of course, had played gangster-in-therapy Tony Soprano — earning raves, clout and unsought celebrity — since the HBO drama premiered in January 1999.

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Now there’s only one piece of unfinished business. The finale, which airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT, will bring to a close a saga as powerful and oddly relatable as anything ever seen on TV. This conclusion, however satisfying or disappointing, will surely leave “Sopranos” fans wanting more.

But not Gandolfini.

“The character has been with me for so long,” he says, “it’s a relief to let him go.”

No wonder. For 86 episodes, Gandolfini submerged himself in that fiendish, tormented character. He channeled the dark world of “Sopranos” creator David Chase. He was regularly summoned to his own psychic danger zone. All in all, the experience was “wearing,” he says.

There also was a physical toll. “The Sopranos” revolves around Tony, which meant Gandolfini had an exhausting workload.

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“But in a way, being tired helped me play the character. If the guy had to look good and be handsome and happy, the hours we worked would certainly not help. They helped ME a great deal,” he laughs. “I was allowed to be grumpy and tired and look like (crap).”

That was then. Whatever awaits Tony in the series-ender — prison, death or some sort of escape — Gandolfini has already laid him to rest.

Time after time, Gandolfini felt the end at Silvercup Studios in Queens, and on locations such as Tony’s home turf of northern New Jersey. All during April, members of the large “Sopranos” cast would shoot their last scene with him, then leave forever. Then he’d shoot a last scene with another cast member, who would disappear.

“There wasn’t any grand finale,” he says.

Or was there? Gandolfini suddenly remembers his last scene alongside Steven Van Zandt, who since the beginning played Tony’s loyal consigliere Silvio.

“This is no indication of my feelings toward anyone else, but, for some reason, that really hit me when he left. Wow!”

Praise for cast and crew
Speaking to a reporter at HBO headquarters last week, Gandolfini, who recently signed a production deal with the network, was taking a break from screening footage for a documentary he’s making about U.S. soldiers in Iraq who recover from near-fatal injuries.

Dressed casually in short sleeves, chinos and running shoes, the 45-year-old actor is down-to-earth and deferential, yet remains a formidable presence even without Tony’s cockiness and mobster cred. His voice, while reflecting his New Jersey background, is richer, more robust than Tony’s astringent delivery.

Though famously press-shy ever since “The Sopranos” blindsided him with stardom, Gandolfini has consented to this rare interview. Nursing coffee from a foam cup, he shares nearly an hour in agreeable give-and-take, only drawing the line when one too many questions delves into his acting technique: “Oh, please! Who gives a (crap)!” he scoffs. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to be abrupt.”

He misses no chance to deflect credit toward his colleagues.

“I might be in a lot of scenes, but the crew is in EVERY scene,” he points out. “The crew is there 16 hours a day, every day.

“And the cast totally propped me up in many scenes. After three or four scenes sometimes I was adrift, and because (the editor) could cut to such other good actors, they were there to help me.”

It was a two-way street, according to Michael Imperioli, who played Tony’s hothead nephew Christopher, now dead (thanks to Tony’s cold-hearted intervention) after a car crash a few episodes ago.

“Every time you go and do a scene with this guy,” Imperioli said at the start of the season, “he manages to give 105 percent. That rubs off. That makes YOU work harder.”

“I had the greatest sparring partner in the world, I had Muhammad Ali,” said Lorraine Bracco, who, as Tony’s psychiatrist Dr. Melfi, went one-on-one with Gandolfini in their penetrating therapy scenes. “He cares what he does, and does it extremely well.”


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