Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini shares many comical moments while shooting ‘The Sopranos.'.Photo:Dia Dipasupil/Getty; Jason LaVeris/FilmMagicWhenLorraine Braccoreflects on her time working withJames GandolfinionTheSopranos,it’s with good humor and tremendous fondness for a man who was just as much of a prankster off-camera as he was a gifted actor on-camera.The actress, 69, who starred on the HBO mobster drama as Dr. Jennifer Melfi, shared many scenes with Gandolfini’s iconic character, Tony Soprano — and it was always a “fun” time, Bracco shares with PEOPLE.“He had fun to him, Jimmy. He had a great sense of humor,” Bracco recalls. “He was a prankster about a lot of things. We pranked each other a lot.”“I worked one day an episode, and we always had the Melfi scenes at the end, because Jimmy had so much dialogue to learn," she continues. “One day, I walk into the makeup trailer, and he looks at me, and it’s in the summer, and I’m all tanned, brown, looking good and happy, and he said, ‘Who died and gave you this job?’”Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini during season 3 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO / Courtesy EverettFor one scene with Gandolfini, Bracco enlisted Jeff Marchetti, a member of the production crew then, to plant a fart machine under her chair onset.“I made believe I was sick from the beginning of the day,” she explains. “’Oh, I don’t feel good. I ate something. I’m not doing well. I was not going to come to work, but I know that you have a big scene to do. I didn’t want to screw you up and ruin the day.’ … Then I would be like, ‘Oh, my stomach. Oh, wait a minute. Oh!’ and then I would fart a little bit.”“Jimmy would look at me. I said, ‘I told you I didn’t feel good.’ Then I would sit back down, and then we would let the farts go. ‘Oh, you’re full of s—, Lorraine,’ he said. He grabs me, looks at me and takes the pillow from the chair. There’s nothing there. So, we did it one more time, and he just said, ‘F— you.’ He knew it was a joke. I worked it.”Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini in season 5 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO/Courtesy Everett CollectionDuring another day of production, Bracco found a large “present” from Gandolfini.“’I have a present for you. I put it in your trailer,’ he said. I was like, ‘Oh, wow.’ How exciting, right?” the actress says. “I get to my trailer. There’s this big box. I said, ‘Okay, it’s not jewelry.’ I open it up, and it is a stuffed cock. A bird. Rooster-like. At the bottom, the word ‘Coq’ — C-O-Q — was written. That’s Jimmy.”Through all their antics, however, Bracco never failed to recognize Gandolfini’s immense acting talent, which earned him eight Emmy nominations and won him three awards. Years afterhe died in 2013 at age 51of a heart attack, Bracco remembers Gandolfini as a “very committed actor.““I would forget that I was in the scene with him, and I would watch him, because he had a lot of monologues, which is very rare in television, and he would want to shoot them all together in one go,” she says. “I used to love to watch him do that.”For more onThe Sopranos, pick up the latest issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.The Sopranosis available to stream on Max.
Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini shares many comical moments while shooting ‘The Sopranos.'.Photo:Dia Dipasupil/Getty; Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic
Dia Dipasupil/Getty; Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic
WhenLorraine Braccoreflects on her time working withJames GandolfinionTheSopranos,it’s with good humor and tremendous fondness for a man who was just as much of a prankster off-camera as he was a gifted actor on-camera.The actress, 69, who starred on the HBO mobster drama as Dr. Jennifer Melfi, shared many scenes with Gandolfini’s iconic character, Tony Soprano — and it was always a “fun” time, Bracco shares with PEOPLE.“He had fun to him, Jimmy. He had a great sense of humor,” Bracco recalls. “He was a prankster about a lot of things. We pranked each other a lot.”“I worked one day an episode, and we always had the Melfi scenes at the end, because Jimmy had so much dialogue to learn,” she continues. “One day, I walk into the makeup trailer, and he looks at me, and it’s in the summer, and I’m all tanned, brown, looking good and happy, and he said, ‘Who died and gave you this job?’”Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini during season 3 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO / Courtesy EverettFor one scene with Gandolfini, Bracco enlisted Jeff Marchetti, a member of the production crew then, to plant a fart machine under her chair onset.“I made believe I was sick from the beginning of the day,” she explains. “’Oh, I don’t feel good. I ate something. I’m not doing well. I was not going to come to work, but I know that you have a big scene to do. I didn’t want to screw you up and ruin the day.’ … Then I would be like, ‘Oh, my stomach. Oh, wait a minute. Oh!’ and then I would fart a little bit.”“Jimmy would look at me. I said, ‘I told you I didn’t feel good.’ Then I would sit back down, and then we would let the farts go. ‘Oh, you’re full of s—, Lorraine,’ he said. He grabs me, looks at me and takes the pillow from the chair. There’s nothing there. So, we did it one more time, and he just said, ‘F— you.’ He knew it was a joke. I worked it.”Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini in season 5 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO/Courtesy Everett CollectionDuring another day of production, Bracco found a large “present” from Gandolfini.“’I have a present for you. I put it in your trailer,’ he said. I was like, ‘Oh, wow.’ How exciting, right?” the actress says. “I get to my trailer. There’s this big box. I said, ‘Okay, it’s not jewelry.’ I open it up, and it is a stuffed cock. A bird. Rooster-like. At the bottom, the word ‘Coq’ — C-O-Q — was written. That’s Jimmy.”Through all their antics, however, Bracco never failed to recognize Gandolfini’s immense acting talent, which earned him eight Emmy nominations and won him three awards. Years afterhe died in 2013 at age 51of a heart attack, Bracco remembers Gandolfini as a “very committed actor.““I would forget that I was in the scene with him, and I would watch him, because he had a lot of monologues, which is very rare in television, and he would want to shoot them all together in one go,” she says. “I used to love to watch him do that.”For more onThe Sopranos, pick up the latest issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.The Sopranosis available to stream on Max.
WhenLorraine Braccoreflects on her time working withJames GandolfinionTheSopranos,it’s with good humor and tremendous fondness for a man who was just as much of a prankster off-camera as he was a gifted actor on-camera.
The actress, 69, who starred on the HBO mobster drama as Dr. Jennifer Melfi, shared many scenes with Gandolfini’s iconic character, Tony Soprano — and it was always a “fun” time, Bracco shares with PEOPLE.
“He had fun to him, Jimmy. He had a great sense of humor,” Bracco recalls. “He was a prankster about a lot of things. We pranked each other a lot.”
“I worked one day an episode, and we always had the Melfi scenes at the end, because Jimmy had so much dialogue to learn,” she continues. “One day, I walk into the makeup trailer, and he looks at me, and it’s in the summer, and I’m all tanned, brown, looking good and happy, and he said, ‘Who died and gave you this job?’”
Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini during season 3 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO / Courtesy Everett
HBO / Courtesy Everett
For one scene with Gandolfini, Bracco enlisted Jeff Marchetti, a member of the production crew then, to plant a fart machine under her chair onset.“I made believe I was sick from the beginning of the day,” she explains. “’Oh, I don’t feel good. I ate something. I’m not doing well. I was not going to come to work, but I know that you have a big scene to do. I didn’t want to screw you up and ruin the day.’ … Then I would be like, ‘Oh, my stomach. Oh, wait a minute. Oh!’ and then I would fart a little bit.”
“Jimmy would look at me. I said, ‘I told you I didn’t feel good.’ Then I would sit back down, and then we would let the farts go. ‘Oh, you’re full of s—, Lorraine,’ he said. He grabs me, looks at me and takes the pillow from the chair. There’s nothing there. So, we did it one more time, and he just said, ‘F— you.’ He knew it was a joke. I worked it.”
Lorraine Bracco and James Gandolfini in season 5 of ‘The Sopranos.'.HBO/Courtesy Everett Collection
During another day of production, Bracco found a large “present” from Gandolfini.
“’I have a present for you. I put it in your trailer,’ he said. I was like, ‘Oh, wow.’ How exciting, right?” the actress says. “I get to my trailer. There’s this big box. I said, ‘Okay, it’s not jewelry.’ I open it up, and it is a stuffed cock. A bird. Rooster-like. At the bottom, the word ‘Coq’ — C-O-Q — was written. That’s Jimmy.”
Through all their antics, however, Bracco never failed to recognize Gandolfini’s immense acting talent, which earned him eight Emmy nominations and won him three awards. Years afterhe died in 2013 at age 51of a heart attack, Bracco remembers Gandolfini as a “very committed actor.”
“I would forget that I was in the scene with him, and I would watch him, because he had a lot of monologues, which is very rare in television, and he would want to shoot them all together in one go,” she says. “I used to love to watch him do that.”
For more onThe Sopranos, pick up the latest issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.
The Sopranosis available to stream on Max.
source: people.com