Yesterday, it was reported that David Chase, the creator ofThe Sopranos,indicated that Tony Soprano had not died at the end of theHBOTV series. Now, hesaysthat his answer was “misconstrued.” A message from his publicist reads: A journalist for Vox misconstrued what David Chase said in th...
"It was time." That'sSopranoscreatorDavid Chase's succinct explanation for why he finally decided to return to his beloved universe with the highly-anticipated prequel filmThe Many Saints of Newark. For the latest installment ofEW'sAround the Table, Chase chatted with his saints, Michela De ...
"It’s a profound honor to continue my dad’s legacy while stepping into the shoes of a young Tony Soprano," Michael said in a statement obtained by ET. "I’m thrilled that I am going to have the opportunity to work with [Sopranoscreator] David Chase and the incredible company of...
He seemed to leave “The Sopranos” behind for good at Holsten’s restaurant, an ending “Sopranos” co-writer Matthew Weiner called the TV equivalent of smashing your guitar. “I needed it,” Chase explains over Zoom. “I guess I personally needed it. I don’t mean financial...
It’s an opinion as ludicrous as it is unquantifiable, and it unsurprisingly got under the skin of many impassioned TV fans, including friend of the pod Michael Schur, co-creator of “The Good Place” and “Brooklyn 99,” who wrote: “People kept sculpting after Michelangelo finish...
'The Sopranos' creator David Chase turned us all into Tony’s shrink, then duped us into believing he could be saved. It took us eight seasons to figure out we’d been had.