SopranosCreator David Chase Reflects on Show's 25th Anniversary: 'The Best Thing I Probably Will Ever Do' (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

James Gandolfini and ‘The Sopranos’ creator David Chase.Photo:Evan Agostini/Getty

Actor James Gandolfini and creator and executive producer David Chase attend the HBO premiere after party for “The Sopranos” at Rockefeller Center March 27, 2007 in New York City.

Evan Agostini/Getty

WhenTheSopranospremiered on Jan. 10, 1999, the mobster drama transfixed audiences as it brought to life the seedy world of New Jersey Italian American crime boss Tony Soprano.

“I still feel this tremendous sense of gratitude that it’s still going on,” he tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. “I can’t remember this happening with any other television show ever.”

The Sopranoswasn’t a sure thing. Broadcast networks, including Fox, initially passed on it before HBO saw Chase, 78, had something special. Looking back, Chase says it would have been a “disaster” if a network had aired the show.

‘The Sopranos’ stars Edie Falco, Michael Imperioli, Lorraine Bracco, James Gandolfini and David Chase in 2006.Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic, Inc

2006 TCA HBO Networks - Presentation: Edie Falco, Michael Imperioli, Lorraine Bracco, James Gandolfini and David Chase

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic, Inc

“[The networks] were really not going to be able to deal with this, and I wasn’t going to be able to deal with what they want,” he explains, adding that HBO granted him total creative freedom “to be honest to the subject matter.”

Chase’s fascination with the mob goes back to his childhood when he and his father Henry, a hardware store owner, watchedThe Untouchablesevery Thursday.

“What really made the show come alive was the gangsters — Frank Nitti, who had been Capone’s assistant, Frankie Yale — all these psychopaths was what really made that show popular. That’s when I got into it,” he recalls. “At the same time, I was old enough to understand that part of Italian-American culture was this subculture called La Cosa Nostra [the mafia], and because I was Italian-American and lived in a very Italian-American household, that all bled together.”

“Look at the show, and there you see it. It’s a cliché to call that stuff magic, but he was totally inhabiting that fictional creature,” Chase says.

Jamie-Lynn Sigler, James Gandolfini, Edie Falco and Robert Iler in ‘The Sopranos’ in 1999.Courtesy of HBO

The Sopranos

Courtesy of HBO

TheSopranosearned 21 Emmys, five Golden Globes and two Peabody Awards during its six season run from 1999 to 2007 — its success due, in large part, to Gandolfini’s star-making turn as the menacing yet darkly funny Tony.

When Gandolfinidied in 2013at age 51 of a heart attack,The Sopranoshad been off the air for six years, but there was no doubt the show — and its complex, iconic protagonist — had secured a lasting legacy. Better yet: new viewers continue to discover the show, as many did during the pandemic.

“It’s the best thing I’ve ever done,” Chase says. “It’s probably the best thing I ever will do.”

For more on David Chase andThe Sopranos, pick up the latest issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.

The Sopranosis available to stream on Max.

source: people.com