The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti

"The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 8
Directed by Tim Van Patten
Written by David Chase
Frank Renzulli
Cinematography by Phil Abraham
Production code 108
Original air date February 28, 1999
Running time 49 minutes
Guest appearance(s)

see below

"The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti" is the eighth episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos. It was written by David Chase and Frank Renzulli, directed by Tim Van Patten and originally aired on February 28, 1999.

Starring

Guest starring

Also guest starring

Episode recap

At his daughter's wedding, "Larry Boy" Barese informs members of the DiMeo crime family that, according to his source in the FBI, federal indictments will soon be handed down against the New Jersey mob. Both Junior and Tony tells the capos that business will continue, but advise that everyone undertake some "spring cleaning". During the wedding dinner, the capos gather their families and leave prematurely to get rid of incriminating evidence in their possession. The stunned bride is reduced to tears.

Upon arriving home, Tony and Carmela remove cash and guns from their house, which Tony later stashes in Livia's room at Green Grove. Carmela is upset when Tony asks for her jewelry, claiming he does not have receipts. When she expresses shock when he asks for her engagement ring, Tony allows her to keep it. Meadow and A.J. observe what is happening. Tony's crew undertakes similar precautions: Big Pussy and his wife burn all their papers in a barbecue grill, and Silvio enlists Christopher and Georgie to search for bugs in the Bada Bing's restroom.

At their therapy session, Tony tells Dr. Melfi he may not be at the next appointment, explaining that he may be going "on vacation". Melfi understands, having seen a news report about the impending indictments against the DiMeo family. Previously, Dr. Melfi and her family had discussed her "Italian" patient. While her ex-husband does not know the patient is Tony Soprano, he suspects the patient is connected to the mob. He is irate that approximately 5,000 mafiosi have given 20 million Italian-Americans a bad name, and suggests that she drop the patient.

Tony misses his next appointment with Melfi because he is detained by the FBI, led by Agent Dwight Harris. Tony allow the FBI to execute their search warrant. However, tensions arise when another agent, Frank Grasso, accidentally breaks a glass bowl in the kitchen and Tony, recognizing Grasso's ethnicity, curses him in Italian. When Carmela refuses to clean up the broken glass, Grasso is made to perform the task. While the family eats Chinese takeout, Tony complains that Italians are unfairly targeted by the police, and that Italians like Michelangelo and Antonio Meucci have contributed to society. A.J. points out that Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, but Tony credits Antonio Meucci as the real inventor of the device.

At their next appointment, Melfi charges for the missed session, prompting him to throw cash at her and storm out of the office. Meanwhile, Chris suffers recurring nightmares about the first man he killed, Emil Kolar. Worried, Chris enlists Georgie to help dig up Emil's body and relocate it. Chris also struggles to write a compelling story arc in his Mafia screenplay, and expresses concern that his life lacks a significant event that will prompt him to start a successful arc in his life. While performing an errand for Tony at a bakery, Chris takes his frustration out on the clerk by shooting him in the foot for making him wait longer for service.

Junior visits Livia, who reveals that Tony is seeing a psychiatrist to his disbelief. Meanwhile, Tony confronts Chris about the shooting and asks if he is suicidal. Tony's tentative attempts to have Chris discuss his feelings, as Tony himself does in therapy, are met with bemusement and derision. The next day, Chris receives a call from his mother, who tells him that his name is featured in a newspaper article on the Mafia. While his mother is disapproving, this is the recognition Chris has longed for. Upon seeing his name in print, he grabs an entire stack of newspapers and throws them in his car before speeding off.[1][2]

First appearances

Title reference

The title is a play on Christopher Moltisanti's name and that of noted 20th-century American playwright and sufferer of depression Tennessee Williams. Adriana calls Christopher her "Tennessee William" [sic] when he struggles with his screenplay.

Production

Other cultural references

Music

Reception

In a retrospective review, Todd VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club was positive. While he opined that the story with Melfi's family "has a tendency to stop the show dead in its tracks" in that "no one watching really cares what Melfi's ex-husband thinks", VanDerWerff listed Christopher's conversations with Paulie and Tony among his favorite scenes from the entirety of The Sopranos and argued that "the series shows it has a certain affection for these characters, these scumbags."[4] Alan Sepinwall also praised the scene between Christopher and Paulie as "remarkable [...] as it illustrates the folly of trying to model your life on your favorite movie and TV characters", but wrote that the dialogue in the scenes with Melfi's family about the popular image of Italian-Americans "grows a little didactic at times".[5]

References

  1. "The Sopranos - 1.08 - The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti Synopsis". HBO. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
  2. O'Connor, Mimi (2007-10-30). "The Sopranos: Episode Guide". In Martin, Brett. The Sopranos: The Complete Book. New York: Time. ISBN 978-1-933821-18-4.
  3. Weber, John; Kim, Chuck (2003-05). "Do You Have the Patience to Wait?". The Tao of Bada Bing! Words of Wisdom from The Sopranos. United States: Carhil Ventures LLC. pp. 88–89. ISBN 1-56649-278-5. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. VanDerWerff, Todd (June 30, 2010). "The Sopranos: "The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti"/"Boca"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
  5. Sepinwall, Alan (July 22, 2015). "The first ‘Sopranos’ episode to address the show’s critics, before they even saw it". Uproxx. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
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