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College

 
TV Episode:

The Sopranos: College

  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Prime-Time Drama, Crime Drama
  • Themes: Mafia Life, Suburban Dysfunction, Doctors and Patients
  • Director: Allen Coulter
  • Release Year: 1999
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 60 minutes

Plot

Painful truths are revealed in the popular HBO series' standout fifth episode. New Jersey crime boss Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) escorts his daughter, Meadow (Jamie-Lynn Sigler), on visits to several colleges in New England. As Tony and Meadow travel, he discusses his occupation with her openly for the first time. Although he's reluctant to do so, it has become obvious that Meadow and her younger brother, Anthony Jr. (Robert Iler), are aware of their father's criminal career. Stopping in a small Maine town, Tony spots a one-time snitch against the family named Fabian Petrulio, who long ago disappeared into the federal witness protection program. Between Meadow's appointments at various schools, Tony resolves to murder Fabian. Although Tony has confessed, to the delight of his wife Carmela (Edie Falco), that he is in therapy, she is unaware that his doctor is an attractive Italian-American woman, Dr. Jennifer Melfi (Lorraine Bracco), to whom Tony has become drawn sexually. Home with the flu, Carmela becomes furious when she receives a call from Melfi about a scheduling conflict. Confiding her marital frustrations to her movie-loving friend Father Phil, Carmela's relationship with the priest threatens to become romantic when Phil decides to spend the night on the couch. Back in Maine, Tony learns that Petrulio now goes by the name "Fred Peters." Convinced he's got the right man, Tony plots his revenge on Petrulio. "College" first aired on February 7, 1999. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
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"College"
The Sopranos episode
Sopranos ep105.jpg
Tony and Meadow visiting New England colleges.
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 5
Written by James Manos, Jr.
David Chase
Directed by Allen Coulter
Production no. 105
Original airdate February 7, 1999 (1999-02-07)
Guest stars

see below

Episode chronology
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"Meadowlands" "Pax Soprana"

"College" is the fifth episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos. It was written by co-producer James Manos, Jr. and series creator/executive producer David Chase and was directed by Allen Coulter. It originally aired on February 7, 1999.

The episode was rated as the best of the series by Time magazine.[1] and was ranked #2 on TV Guide's list of "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time".[2]

Contents

Cast

* = credit only

Guest cast

  • Paul Schulze as Father Phil
  • Tony Ray Rossi as Fred Peters
  • Oksana Lada as Irina Peltsin
  • Lisa Arning as Peter's Wife
  • Ross Gibby as Bartender
  • Mark Kamine as Admissions Dean
  • Michael Manetta as Gas Station Attendant
  • Keith Nobbs as Bowdoin Student
  • Luke Reilly as Lon Le Doyene
  • Sarah Thompson as Lucinda
  • Olivia Brynn Zaro as Peters' Daughter

Synopsis

Tony takes Meadow on a trip to New England to visit colleges she is considering. The pair first visit Bates College, and Meadow makes a well-known joke about the school's sexual atmosphere. On the drive from Bates to Colby College, Tony is taken aback when his daughter asks if he is 'in the Mafia', and his instinctive reaction is to deny everything. When Meadow proves skeptical, he relents and admits (if not understates) that a portion of his income is from illegal gambling and other activities. Meadow admits to taking speed to study for SATs, but after Tony reacts angrily, will not state her source of the drugs. Both seem relieved by this mutual honesty on difficult topics.

Later, Tony spots a familiar face from afar at a gas station—Fabian Petrulio, a former member of the DiMeo crime family who turned FBI informant and was relocated under the Witness Protection Program. Despite Meadow's obvious alarm and suspicions at his agitated reaction (chasing a car through oncoming traffic), Tony resolves to locate the man, confirm his identity, and personally execute him---while continuing his trip with Meadow. Tony leaves his daughter at a college bar while he tracks down Petrulio. He confirms Petrulio's identity when he sees a bust of Ronald Reagan in Petrulio's office, similar to those that Petrulio had created while in prison. Tony fails to realize that his snooping has not gone unnoticed; handgun in hand, Petrulio in turn tracks Tony and his daughter back to the roadside motel where they are staying. However, two elderly bystanders present prevent Petrulio from taking a shot at an unsuspecting Tony.

The next morning, Tony drops off Meadow for an interview at Colby, and leaves to ambush Petrulio at his "Frederick 'Fred' Peters" travel agency. Tony strangles him with a length of wire as Petrulio pleads for his life. On his return to Bowdoin, Tony is met with more skepticism from his daughter, and is struck by a Nathaniel Hawthorne quote on display in the college: "No man... can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which one may be true."

Meanwhile, back in New Jersey, Carmela has been at home recovering from a case of the flu, and is paid a surprise visit by Father Phil while A.J. is at a friend's sleepover. Father Phil and Carmela relax with baked ziti, wine, and the film The Remains of the Day. Carmela's emotions are spurred when Dr. Melfi phones to reschedule Tony's appointment, revealing to Carmela that her husband's psychiatrist is female. Carmela pours out her heart to the Father about her marriage, her fears for her children and her soul, and Carmela is nearly driven to kiss Father Phil, only the moment is lost when the priest's stomach revolts against his alcohol consumption. The Father sleeps it off on the sofa until morning. Tony and Meadow return the same day, but Tony's inquiry as to what Carmela was doing spending her evening alone with another man is turned around when she mentions her conversation with Dr. Jennifer Melfi, putting Tony on the defensive.

Deceased

  • Fabian "Febby" Petrulio:Garroted by Tony Soprano after ratting out members of Paulie's and Pussy's crew in the late '80s.

Awards

  • James Manos, Jr. and David Chase received the Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series for their work on this episode.
  • Edie Falco got her first Emmy nomination and win for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for her performance as Carmela in this episode.

Locations

Production

  • Series creator, David Chase, has stated that when HBO first read the script, they objected to Tony's murder of Febby. Executives said that Chase had done so well in building Tony up as a sympathetic character that they believed if Tony committed such a cold-blooded killing, fans would turn on him and the show would lose its protagonist. Chase said that he believed fans would turn on Tony if the character didn't commit murder because it would make him appear weak.[3] Eventually, Chase won the decision and the episode has become a fan favorite.
  • Chase names this as his favorite episode because of its self-contained nature.[4] James Gandolfini and Jamie-Lynn Sigler similarly cite this installment.

Music

  • The song played over the end credits is "Gold Leaves" by Michael Hoppé.
  • The song playing in the bar when Fabian enters to ask whether anyone has been asking about him is Cadence to Arms, a version of Scotland the Brave by the Dropkick Murphys.

External links

References

  1. ^ Time: The Best of the Sopranos
  2. ^ "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time" TV Guide; June 15, 2009; Pages 34-49
  3. ^ The Sopranos: The Complete First Season: DVD interview
  4. ^ DVD commentary from episode 13 of season 4, Whitecaps

 
 

 

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