“It was always great from the beginning to the very end,” Falco gushed of her onscreen husband. “It always felt like playing with him.”
It was “easy and carefree” to become Tony and Carmela Soprano.
“He was incredibly invested in making that character believable,” she said elsewhere in the film. “Unless you’re really diligent, you can end up taking your work home. As an actor that’s not always a great idea. So, yeah, I think it may have taken a toll on him.”
The Story Behind the $30,000
Gandolfini famously received a massive pay raise from HBO, doubling his salary ahead of The Sopranos season 4. After the contracts were signed, he shared the wealth with his costars.
“When Jim got the deal, none of us even knew it was on the table,” Drea de Matteo (Adriana La Cerva) recalled. “We didn’t know to negotiate. I think he felt terrible about that. So, he called us all into his trailer one by one and gave everybody a check for $30,000.”
Falco appeared to be joking when discussing the money aspect, telling the documentary filmmakers she doesn’t “know anything about” the $30,000. “He was a very good-hearted, kind man. Looking out for his friends.”
As for why the “generous” Gandolfini gave the money? Chase had an idea about that.
“I think he felt HBO had f—ked them. And he wanted to do something to make up for it, to help,” the creator explained. “I also think that there was maybe a shred of regret for the days he didn’t show up for work.”
Inside Gandolfini’s Struggles
As his fame continued to rise, Gandolfini suffered — quietly at first but then things started to become public. (Gandolfini struggled with substance abuse as his fame continued to rise.)
Costar Steven Van Zandt (Silvio Dante) said Gandolfini threatened to “quit the show every other day.” While the star would always return to set “a few times, he disappeared for a few days,” Van Zandt recalled. “It just got to him.”
Albrecht said that Gandolfini made a deal with the network to “dock him $100,000 a day for every day he didn’t show up.” While the show’s star skipping work cost money, it also created “the worry about what’s happening to him.” Eventually, the cast and crew tried to have an “intervention” with the actor.
“He walked in, he saw everybody sitting there, and he went, ‘Oh f—k this.’ And he walked out,” Albrecht recalled, noting that Gandolfini said, “Fire me.”
While they were aware of his hardships, some costars defended Gandolfini. Imperioli, for one, said the level of fame was “a little strange” for the late actor. “That eradication of privacy, he was really in the spotlight wherever he went. He didn’t blend into the crowd,” he added.
De Matteo said the whole cast “partied” together while they were filming. “We had a great f—king time,” she said. “Maybe there were some mornings where it just was a little harder to get out of bed for all of us. It wasn’t just Jim.”
Chase, however, just thinks that “Jim didn’t know or expect” what it would be like to lead a series of this caliber.
“He felt that he had to go to places, he said, that were destructive to him. And painful for him,” the creator added.