Coming Up: A Soprano Safari

Yep, that’s what I’m planning now.  Susie and I are flying to New Jersey for a class reunion, and I’m going to be the ultimate tourist.   What I have in mind is a series of visits to key spots that were featured in the HBO television series, The Sopranos.  If there’s something you think I’ve missed, let me know and it may just show up on the list.

Holsten’s Restaurant

Holsten’s is the restaurant where Tony was whacked.  It’s still open.  Never been there; I’ve been wanting to ever since The Sopranos hit the airwaves.

Bahr’s and the Sandy Hook Marina

Bahr’s is the outstanding seafood restaurant Tony and others mention frequently in the series, and the Sandy Hook Marina where Tony kept his boat (The Stugots) is just below it. I’ve been to both places many times, and I’m looking forward to going again.

Pizza Land

Pizza Land is the pizza place you see Tony drive by in the opening scene of every episode.   It was a low revenue pizza joint before it made it into the Sopranos.  It has since become a sensation.  Today, they ship frozen pizzas all over the world, and it all came about because of that brief glimpse in the opening scene.

Wilson’s Carpet Store

The giant carpet guy statue is another feature seen in the opening scene of every Soprano’s episode.  It’s in Jersey City, the same place that xxx gun store is located (there the guys that handle the FFL transfer for the MacManus Award 1911 every year).  I’ll got a shot of the carpet guy and the gun shop.

St. Patrick’s Cathedral 

This is one of two churches used in the series.  It’s the one Tony shows to AJ when he explains what things were like for the Italian immigrants who came to America.  Like Wilson’s Carpet Store, it’s in Jersey City.  My Mom grew up in Jersey City and my grandparents lived there for a while.  I want to see it again; I haven’t been there in more than 60 years.

Cleveland Auto Body

This is a body shop that was run by Big Pussy Bompensiero and was taken over by his wife, Angie Bompansiero, after Big Pussy was whacked for being a rat.  I understand it’s a real body shop.  I want to get a photo.

Tony and Carmela’s Mansion

Yep, it’s an actual house that a couple actually lived in when The Sopranos producers spotted.  They asked if they could rent the house and the rest is history.

The Rutgers Campus

Rutgers is mentioned many times in The Sopranos.  In the story, Tony attended a semester and a half at Seton Hall, but in real life, James Gandolfini attended and graduated from Rutgers.  So did I.  I want to visit the campus again, stop in to say hi to the ROTC detachment, and shoot a few pictures.

The Paterson Falls

There are a couple of scenes filmed at the falls in Paterson, New Jersey.  In one, Mikey Palmici throws a guy off a bridge.  In another, Hesh threatens to do the same.   I’ve never been there.  I’ll fix that on this trip.

The Skyway Diner

This diner appears in several scenes, most notably with Janice Melfi (Tony’s psychiatrist) and Christopher Multisanti.  We have a lot of diners in New Jersey.  I’ve never been in a bad one.  If it’s still in business, I’ll stop there for a cup of coffee.

Joe’s Bake Shop

This is bakery where Christopher Multisanti shoots a counter guy in the foot for slow service.  I don’t now if it’s real, but if it is, I want to stop and get a pastry.  I know it will be good; it’s where I grew up there are no bad bakeries in New Jersey.

Father Phil’s Church

Father Phil was a kind of a mealy-mouthed priest that Tony saw through right away.  There were a few scenes filmed in that church.  I’m going to stop in.

Satriale’s

Satriale’s was a fictional pork store used by Tony and his crew.  It’s since been demolished and today it’s a parking lot.  That’s the pork store used in the series.  What you may not know is one quarter of a mile away on the same street is a real pork store that was used by the DeCavalcante crime family, the real organized crime group.   If I can get a photo without getting in trouble, I’m going to.

The Bada Bing

There never was a real Bada Bing topless joint, and topless dancing is illegal in New Jersey.  But The Satin Dolls in Lodi (a similar bar with a similar theme, but again, not topless) that was used for the show was real and I will stop there.  I read somewhere that it had closed too, but you never know.  Anything for the ExNotes blog, guys.


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