Boca (The Sopranos)

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"Boca"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 9
Directed by Andy Wolk
Written by Jason Cahill
Robin Green
Mitchell Burgess
Production code 109
Original air date March 7, 1999
Running time 51 minutes
Guest actors

see below

Episode chronology
 Previous
"The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti"
Next 
"A Hit Is a Hit"
Episode chronology

"Boca" is the ninth episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos. It was written by Jason Cahill, Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess, directed by Andy Wolk and originally aired on March 7, 1999.

Starring

* = credit only

Guest starring

Also guest starring

  • Al Sapienza as Mikey Palmice
  • Robyn Peterson as Bobbi Sanfillipo
  • Kevin O'Rourke as Coach Don Hauser
  • Tony Darrow as Larry Boy Barese
  • Joe Badalucco Jr. as Jimmy Altieri
  • Richard Portnow as Attorney Melvoin
  • Cara Jedell as Ally Vandermeed
  • Candace Bailey as Deena Hauser
  • Jaclyn Tohn as Heather Dante
  • Donna Marie Recco as Bebe
  • Nell Balaban as Receptionist
  • Moises Belizario as FBI Man
  • Mary Ellen Cravens as Taylor
  • Elaine del Valle as Waitress
  • Steve "Inky" Ferguson as Moldonado
  • Brian Guzman as Delivery Boy
  • Mark Hartman as Capman
  • Patrick Husted as Waiter
  • Marissa Jedell as Becky
  • Joyce Lynn O'Connor as Shelly Hauser
  • Annika Pergament as TV Reporter
  • John Nacco as Contractor
  • Bill Winkler as Soccer Ref

Episode recap

Meadow's soccer coach, Don Hauser, has become well liked by the fathers of the girls on his team including Tony Soprano, Artie Bucco and Silvio Dante, because of the success he produces on the playing field. The three fathers invite Hauser to the Bada Bing for drinks after a win. Soon, however, a newspaper reports that Hauser is leaving for a college coaching job at the University of Rhode Island, and the mob fathers begin trying to intimidate him into staying. Paulie Gualtieri delivers a 50-inch television to the coach's house and insists he take it. Christopher Moltisanti returns the coach's "missing dog" after apparently stealing it himself.

There is also unrest among the girls on the team. It's revealed that the coach has an ongoing sexual relationship with one of his players, Ally Vandermeed, who is a close friend of Meadow's and the star of the team. Shortly after the announcement that the coach is moving on, Ally tries to kill herself by slitting her wrists while her teammates are hanging out in a park. When Tony and Carmela learn of the suicide attempt, Meadow informs them about the inappropriate relationship between coach and player. Meadow tells her mother that Ally is in love with the coach, but he won't leave his wife.

Meanwhile, Junior Soprano visits Boca Raton for a weekend with Bobbi, his girlfriend of 16 years who works in the office of a union he controls. We learn that Bobbi values Junior's skill at performing cunnilingus, but that Junior does not like her to discuss this as he feels it would damage his masculine reputation in the DiMeo crime family. He asks that she not speak about this part of their relationship with anyone. Bobbi has made the mistake of discussing her sex life at a hair and nail parlor, but then tells her hairdresser that they should be quiet on the topic from now on. Her friend, however, has already gossiped about Junior's particular talent to others. These remarks are heard by a contact of Carmela Soprano and the story gets back to Tony. When Junior pokes fun at Tony during a golf game, Tony retaliates with veiled jokes about cunnilingus, aimed at Junior. For his part, Junior responds with a reference to Tony's therapy. Later, an angry Junior storms into Bobbi's office. He is so furious that Bobbi pleads with him not to hit her. Instead, he smashes a lemon meringue pie in her face and then walks out, informing a tearful Bobbi that their relationship is over and she is fired.

After Tony learns of the soccer coach's affair with his student, he contemplates murdering him in retaliation. After a visit with Dr. Melfi, who asks him why he would assume the burden of righting wrongs in society, and after hearing Artie's plea for legal justice, Tony calls off the hit and the coach is arrested by the police. After this, Tony arrives home after a night of drinking on Prozac and confesses to Carmela (as well as to an eavesdropping Meadow) "I didn't hurt nobody."

First appearance

  • Harold Melvoin: Corrado "Junior" Soprano's lawyer.

Title reference

  • Junior takes a trip down to Boca Raton, Florida every year with his girlfriend Bobbi Sanfillipo.
  • The word "boca" in Spanish or the Italian "bocca" mean "mouth." This may be a reference to Junior secretly performing oral sex on his girlfriend, which plays a large role in the episode, or could refer to the many instances of gossiping in the episode.
  • The title "Boca" (mouth) may also refer to the growing suspicion that Tony has become an FBI informer, as well as to the worry that he is talking about the business to his psychiatrist.

Production

  • This episode wrongly reports the location of the University of Rhode Island (URI), claiming that it is in Providence when, in fact, it is in Kingston on the other side of the state. While URI has a satellite campus (the Feinstein Campus) in Providence, URI's sports teams play in Kingston.
  • Actor Steven Van Zandt wore his own golfing hat for a scene in which Silvio plays a round of golf.[1]
  • The Roxbury High School Girls' Soccer team (Succasunna, New Jersey) played the extras for both the opposing team and members of Meadow's team. The team used this opportunity as a fundraiser.

Other cultural or historical references

  • Junior mentions the "Escobedo brothers" to Mikey Palmice when explaining how it is possible for a psychiatrist to testify against a patient. This is a reference to the Menendez Brothers in Beverly Hills, who killed their parents and were later turned in to the police by their psychologist, L. Jerome Oziel.
  • "Junior" hitting Bobbi in her face with a pie when they break up was used as an homage to The Public Enemy, where the main character does the same to his girlfriend with a cut-in-half grapefruit when he says he is leaving her. The Public Enemy is cited by David Chase to have been an enormous influence on him.[2]

Music

  • When Corrado "Junior" Soprano is dancing with his girlfriend in Boca, the Spanish song played is "Frente a frente" by Rocio Durcal. This song is also played again when Corrado Soprano breaks up with her.
  • In an early scene, Meadow and her friend are watching the Morphine video for "Buena" and the song is played at the end of the episode and into the closing credits.
  • When Coach Hauser visits the Bada Bing with Silvio Dante, the song played in the bar is "Can't You Feel the Fire" from Steven Van Zandt's album Freedom – No Compromise.
  • When Tony ponders what to do with Coach Hauser in his office, the song in the background is "Woke Up This Morning (Urban Takeover Mix) by Alabama 3.

References

  1. Juliet Polsca, HBO. "Dressing the Sopranos". Retrieved Oct 20, 2013. 
  2. Martin, Brett (2007-10-30). ""Woke Up This Morning": The Birth of a Show". The Sopranos: The Complete Book. New York: Time. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-933821-18-4. 

External links

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