The Guardian (USA)

The Sopranos, glorious pioneer of today’s TV golden age

- Dorian Lynskey

In “College”, the fifth episode of The Sopranos, the double life of troubled mobster Tony Soprano comes into sharp focus. Tony has to perform two tasks – take his daughter Meadow to a college admissions interview and knock off fugitive informant Febby Petrulio – without letting his worlds collide.

Showrunner David Chase wanted Tony to garrotte Febby but HBO CEO, Chris Albrecht, blenched. Although HBO had been bold enough to pick up the show after every network had rejected it, Albrecht feared that viewers wouldn’t root for a protagonis­t who strangled a man in cold blood. That didn’t happen in 1999. Chase responded that if Tony didn’t do it, “he’s full of shit and therefore the show’s full of shit”. He got his way. Viewers loved it. RIP Febby. RIP received wisdom.

The Sopranos is such an acknowledg­ed landmark in television history that the 20th-anniversar­y celebratio­ns already feel exhausting. But when thinking about any cultural big bang, from the Beatles to Star Wars, it’s essential to crack the shell of overfamili­arity and remember a time when it was new, risky and had a fight on its hands.

Chase’s argument with Albrecht was one such turning point.

To Chase and showrunnin­g peers such as David Simon (The Wire) and David Milch (Deadwood), most TV drama, however well crafted, was full of shit, too restrained by moral simplicity and pat resolution­s to tap the form’s full potential. The Sopranosge­neration gambled on viewers’ ability to handle far more complex and ambiguous narratives than the networks were giving them, demonstrat­ing that television could equal, if not surpass, cinema and literature as a forum for audacious, multilayer­ed storytelli­ng. In the pilot episode, Tony Soprano says of the mafia: “Lately, I’m getting the feeling that I came in at the end. The best is over.” For television, the opposite was true.

As happened with the Beatles and Star Wars, The Sopranos’ innovation­s eventually froze into cliches. A few years after “College”, viewers had become so acclimatis­ed to charismati­c antiheroes that they would have been surprised if a protagonis­t didn’t make the worst choice. The Sopranos had no shortage of fine female characters – conflicted Carmela, monstrous Livia, poor Adriana – but the first wave of what became known as prestige TV was dominated by shows by and about “difficult men”, to quote the title of Brett Martin’s excellent book about the creative revolution: Mad Men, Breaking Bad, The Shield.

However, when you consider the most acclaimed recent shows, The Sopranos’ overt influence appears to be at a low ebb. Surly crimelords can be found in the likes of Narcos but they’re no longer front and centre. Killing Eve’s mesmerisin­g sociopath is a young woman. Mrs Maisel has never watched the life drain from the eyes of a rival comedian, although that would certainly shake things up in season three.

The real legacy of The Sopranos is more subtle and diffuse. With all those memorable scenes of wiseguys getting whacked, it’s easy to forget how daringly strange the show could be: the cryptic dream sequences, the perversely long detours into the private lives of secondary characters, that infamous Schrodinge­r’s cat ending that epitomised Chase’s commitment to living with ambiguity. That experiment­al spirit can be detected in shows as diverse as Noah Hawley’s Fargo and Donald Glover’s Atlanta, which regularly scramble expectatio­ns in ways that, with the honourable exception of Twin Peaks, were inconceiva­ble before The Sopranos. The fact that it feels natural to refer to Hawley and Glover (or Jill Soloway or Lena Dunham) as authors illustrate­s The Sopranos’ greatest achievemen­t: convincing the television industry to wean itself off triedand-tested formulas and trust maverick showrunner­s with peculiar ideas.

Twenty years on, prestige TV has attained overwhelmi­ng dimensions, empowering scores of creators who couldn’t have thrived in the rule-bound world of pre-Sopranos television. While the success of The Sopranos was made possible by the economics of cable channels, DVD binge viewing and episode-by-episode TV criticism, affluent streaming platforms such as Netflix have opened the floodgates. The vast amount of brilliant, idiosyncra­tic television that we now enjoy is due in no small part to David Chase’s refusal to be full of shit.

 ??  ?? Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) kills Febby Petrulio (Tony Ray Rossi) in ‘College’. Photograph: Channel 4
Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) kills Febby Petrulio (Tony Ray Rossi) in ‘College’. Photograph: Channel 4
 ??  ?? Jodie Comer as Villanelle, ‘Killing Eve’s mesmerisin­g sociopath’. Photograph: Supplied by LMK
Jodie Comer as Villanelle, ‘Killing Eve’s mesmerisin­g sociopath’. Photograph: Supplied by LMK

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