Gandolfini had drug and alcohol issues at the time.
“I think what Jim didn’t know or expect was just how difficult it is to be the lead of a series,” Chase continued.
“The Sopranos” co-star Steven Van Zandt estimated that Gandolfini “probably quit the show every other day.”
“We’d go to a bar, get drunk, have the exact same conversation. He’d say ‘I’m done, I’m not going back!’ There was a few times he disappeared for a few days,” he said in the doc. “You know, it just got to him.”
Falco, meanwhile, said that Gandolfini “was incredibly invested in making that character believable, and unless you’re really diligent, you can end up taking your work home. And as an actor, that’s not always a great idea.”
Drea de Matteo defended Gandolfini, however.
“We all partied, we all had a great f–king time,” she said.
Co-star Michael Imperioli, for his part, added that Gandolfini “had his own things to work out, like all of us,” and that their fame from the show changed Gandolfini’s life “dramatically.”
Describing how the “eradication of privacy” got strange for Gandolfini, Imperioli said, “He was in the spotlight wherever he went. And he was very different than Tony was. Very laid back…What’s funny is that, a lot of fans look at Tony as a role model, which is very scary in a lot of ways. He probably felt that – fans thinking he’s Tony, and he’s not.”