Remember When (The Sopranos)

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"Remember When"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 15
Directed byPhil Abraham
Written byTerence Winter
Cinematography byBill Coleman
Production code615
Original air dateApril 22, 2007 (2007-04-22)
Running time58 minutes
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Stage 5"
Next →
"Chasing It"
The Sopranos season 6
List of episodes

"Remember When" is the 80th episode of the

television series The Sopranos, the third episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, and the 15th episode of the season overall. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Phil Abraham, it originally aired on April 22, 2007, and was watched by 6.85 million viewers on its premiere.[1]

Starring

* = credit only

Guest starring

  • Hesh Rabkin

Also guest starring

  • "Big Pussy" Bonpensiero
  • Ken Leung as Carter Chong
  • Butch DeConcini
  • Pat Blundetto
  • Dan Conte as
    Faustino "Doc" Santoro
  • "Beansie" Gaeta
  • Nashawn Kearse
    as Jameel
  • Jen Araki as Anika
  • Elizabeth Sung as Mrs. Chong
  • Gaston Renaud as Ramon
  • Herbert Rogers as Willie Overall
  • Charles Morgan as Prof. Brian Lynch
  • Stephen Singer as Dr. Mandl
  • Serafin Falcon as Esteban
  • Stink Fisher as Warren
  • Joe Pucillo as
    Beppy Scerbo
  • Donna Smythe as Gia Gaeta
  • Joseph Adams as Larry
  • Brian D. Coats as Itzhak
  • Joseph Conti as "Doc" Santoro's bodyguard
  • Kevin Kean Murphy as Ascot Man
  • Joseph Siravo as "Johnny Boy" Soprano (photo)
  • Rocco Sisto as Young Junior Soprano (photo)
  • Lin-Manuel Miranda as Bellman

Synopsis

The

Hesh
to cover a string of losing sports bets.

Larry tells the FBI that the late

Big Pussy on a boat. On the open sea, Tony questions Paulie again about the joke leak; Paulie again denies involvement. Tony glances at a hatchet and some fishing knives, but the tension passes. That night, Paulie has a dream in which he sees Pussy and, in a panic, asks him how he would handle his own death. Back in New Jersey, Paulie sends Tony and Carmela a $2,000 espresso machine
; Tony tells her that they owe their lifestyle to people like Paulie.

In

Phil, who becomes the new boss
of the Lupertazzi family.

Carter Chong
, who has been institutionalized for his anger issues.

Junior assaults Professor Lynch and is given a new regimen of sedatives. Carter devises a plan to distract the orderlies handing the pills to Junior so that he can covertly throw them away. Some of the drugs were meant to combat Junior's incontinence, and he soon humiliatingly wets himself. The orderly is fired for taking bribes and Junior is threatened with a transfer to a less pleasant, state-run facility if he does not take his medications. He complies with the treatment, much to Carter's disillusionment. Junior tries to make up with him, but calls him "Anthony." At a piano recital, Carter starts throwing paper balls at the pianist; when Junior shows disapproval, Carter becomes enraged and ferociously attacks him.

Junior is next seen with the other patients (though not Carter) receiving animal-assisted therapy in the garden. He is in a wheelchair, with one arm in a cast, apart from the others.

Deceased

  • Willie Overall
    : A bookie shot dead by Tony Soprano with a revolver on orders from "Johnny Boy" Soprano. It was Tony's first murder at the age of 22 (shown in a flashback to 1982).
  • Gerry Torciano
    murder and/or as payback for his insults towards Phil.
  • Doc Santoro's bodyguard: Gunned down alongside Doc Santoro.

Title reference

  • During dinner with Paulie and Beansie, Tony says "'Remember when' is the lowest form of conversation", being irritated by Paulie's constant digging up of the past.

Production

  • "Remember When" was the career directorial debut of Phil Abraham, a longtime Sopranos cinematographer ever since the first season of the show. Abraham initially started only as a camera operator for the TV series.
  • Lin-Manuel Miranda, writer and future star of Hamilton and In the Heights, makes a brief appearance in this episode as the bellman with whom Tony and Paulie briefly converse from the car. It was Miranda's first television acting role: he later noted the scene demonstrates his overall lack of experience, as he is visibly looking for his mark as he enters the scene.[2]
  • This episode marked the last appearance of actor Vincent Pastore in his role of Salvatore Bonpensiero.

Connections to prior episodes

Cultural references

A 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz; Paulie discusses driving the same model in the episode.

Music

References

  1. ^ Huff, Richard (2007-04-27). ""Sopranos" ratings slip again". The Denver Post. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
  2. ^ Fierberg, Ruth. "Lin-Manuel Miranda Describes the Gaffe He Made On His First TV Acting Job". Playbill. Retrieved 16 February 2022.

External links