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GENERAL >> MAIN BOARD >> RIP James Gandolfini
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Message started by Gazza on Jun 19th, 2013 at 6:50pm

Title: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Gazza on Jun 19th, 2013 at 6:50pm
Sad news. Died on holiday in Italy after taking a heart attack.

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/james-gandolfini-dead-51-article-1.1377435

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by BILL PERKS on Jun 19th, 2013 at 7:01pm
WOW. THIS BLOWS.
DUDE HAD AN AWESOME LIFE.
SALUD !

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 19th, 2013 at 7:01pm
Wow, so sad. I was hoping it was another hoax. Unfortunately true. RIP Jimmy.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by BILL PERKS on Jun 19th, 2013 at 7:04pm
JOHNNY CAKES IS DEAD
GINNY SAC IS DEAD
HUGO DEANGELIS IS DEAD
CANT BELIEVE JUNIOR OUTLIVED TONY.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by MrPleasant on Jun 19th, 2013 at 7:19pm
Really? Such a great actor.

RIP-

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 19th, 2013 at 10:36pm
For a Stones connection. They did use Stones music in The Sopranos. This one among them.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwLt2uipMTE

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Zack on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:37am
Whacked by God.  That sucks.

RIP Tony.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by LanternHigh on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:50am
I'd heard of it this morning in the news. So young! Just 51.
RIP James

Thanks for your career of actor that had gave us good characters. You was excellent.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Heart Of Stone on Jun 20th, 2013 at 5:14am
R.I.P. James, great actor.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Joey on Jun 20th, 2013 at 8:09am
RIP Tony Soprano !!!!!!!


" The Role of a Lifetime Ronnie "


http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a73/LadyJane1/Stones/992861_10151528118874895_620117023_n.jpg

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Gimme Shelter on Jun 20th, 2013 at 11:45am



RIP James Gandolfini

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Boomy on Jun 20th, 2013 at 1:52pm
You guys remember him at the MSG Licks HBO show? They got a shot of him singing and dancing a little.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by FPM on Jun 20th, 2013 at 2:06pm


I'm shocked and saddened by this more than I could have expected. Gandolfini's portrayal of Tony Soprano is
one of the single greatest roles in acting history, and I really don't think that's an exaggeration. I started re-watching
the Sopranos again today. TV was never better.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Edith Grove on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:08pm
New Orleanians remember James Gandolfini as Bacchus 2007














James Gandolfini of "The Sopranos" reigns as the Krewe of Bacchus rolls up Napoleon Ave. for the 39th parade with the theme "Through the Eyes of a Child" Sunday, February 18, 2007.


By Grace Wilson
on June 20, 2013 at 2:20 PM 


James Gandolfini died Wednesday (June 19) in Italy. He was 51.

"Like a lot of the people who write about TV who’ve written about Gandolfini and his legacy since his death, I was close enough to him a couple of times to see what a shy guy he was, how mostly uncomfortable he was with media attention, and how incongruous all that was in the context of his majestic performance as Tony Soprano," writes Dave Walker.

Our social media feeds are full of memories and pictures of Gandolfini as a jovial Carnival king as he reigned over Bacchus in 2007.

One of the more popular comments by Hey Bubba: "That was a great parade. At the beginning of Bacchus, one of the helpers handed Gandolfini a box of doubloons and he dumped the entire box on the screaming crowd. After that, the helpers gave him only handfuls of doubloons."


http://www.nola.com/celebrities/index.ssf/2013/06/new_orleans_remembers_james_ga.html#/5


Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by uncleson on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:13pm
Very sad news.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Factory Girl on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:23pm
RIP James Gandonfini...you had a great life but way too short.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by BILL PERKS on Jun 20th, 2013 at 3:47pm

Joey wrote on Jun 20th, 2013 at 8:09am:
RIP Tony Soprano !!!!!!!


" The Role of a Lifetime Ronnie "


http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a73/LadyJane1/Stones/992861_10151528118874895_620117023_n.jpg

JOEY ,PERKS IS IN THIS PHOTO.
TO THE RIGHT OF KEEF LEFT ARM,YOU WILL SEE A LAD IN A GREEN AND WHITE STRIPED SHIRT.I AM TOO HIS LEFT.
PERKS?
SHADES OF ALTAMONT.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 20th, 2013 at 4:44pm
Bada Bing James.......enjoyed his roles and RIP

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by Gazza on Jun 20th, 2013 at 4:55pm
Springsteen's show in Coventry tonight featured the entire Born To Run album played in sequence and dedicated to his memory. Nice touch.

Title: Re: RIP James Gandolfini
Post by MrPleasant on Jun 21st, 2013 at 7:16am
Some Came Running

One of those foo-foo film sites. By Glenn Kenny

June 19, 2013


James Gandolfini, 1961-2013


David Chase used his secret sharer James Gandolfini in a quietly devastating way in his feature film writing/directing debut last year, Not Fade Away. Gandolfini plays Pat, the disapproving dad of '60s Jersey teen and fledgling rocker Douglas (John Magaro), and in the early exchanges between the working-class father and the Beatle-boots sporting son the words and attitudes are conventionally gruff and bluff, standard get-a-haircut stuff goosed with racial and sexual epithets for extra added discomfort. The discomfort turns out to carry something beyond its initial shock value, which the viewer doesn't get right away. And it seems a little odd, at first; having cast Gandolfini in the first place, and knowing all of what the actor is capable of, why give him so seemingly little to do? Well, we might think, this is after all a coming of age story; the son's, not the dad's.

But Chase is an artist of expansive brilliance and exquisite sensitivity, perhaps even more sensitivity than the television critics who have built a kind of church on the rock of The Sopranos even know. Later on in the movie, after a particular family crisis, Pat dresses up and takes his college-age, still-rocking son to a "nice" local restaurant, a private, favorite place of his, a place where he can unwind like a man. Having long not understood his son, Pat having experienced a personal crisis that has left him at something of a loss, now thinks that his son can understand him. And he makes a confession to his son. The confession is written in the words that a simple man, or a man who takes pride in believing himself a simple man, would use; no one, really, is better at a certain working-class idiom right now than Chase is. And Gandolfini takes the words, and without any affectation or winking or any kind of actorly showing off, he launches them over an entire emotional spectrum; he's sheepish, he's prideful, he's confident, and most of all, he's free, he's free...because he thinks his son, who's maybe a member of what Otis Redding called "the love crowd," is a person who can comprehend the sense of yearning that Pat is finally allowing himself to fully feel, to feel despite the very real danger involved.

And the finally crushing thing about the scene is that Douglas doesn't get it. At all. He reacts like the kid he still is.  He's embarassed, he's why-are-you-telling-me-this; the bluster of the ostensibly enlightened young generation can't stand up to genuine emotional revelation. (It's a tough scene for me personally, not least because my parents split up when I was in my teens, and there was more than one exchange I had with my old man that was rather like the one here.) And the look on Gandolfini's face as the scene ends is amazing. He never expected to be disappointed by his son in this way. But because Pat is a decent man, and perhaps not as simple as he believes himself to be, he does not let the rebuff stick. He begins to encourage Doug, albeit quietly, with magnanimous gestures, and an instruction he makes not with words but with a tilt of the head: If you can just get away from this (Jersey, stifling family. everything), you'll be all right.

Some critics have called Not Fade Away an exercise in nostalgia, and while it certainly does regard the fashions of its time with affection and avers that the music of its time was seminal in ways that go way beyond what we call mere "pop culture," it hardly trucks in the kind of triumphalism one normally associates with celebrations of good old days. The movie ends with its hero, lost and alone, on the streets of a Los Angeles that's past the summer of love and about to turn freakily ugly, his dreams unrealized, far from his friends, with failure behind him and failure likely in front of him. After he declines a ride from a car full of what look like future Mansonites, the night envelopes him like a shroud, and in that shroud is the shadow of his father, and his father's own sense of failure, and disappointment in himself. And without Gandolfini's presence, and acting genius, Chase could not have conjured precisely that shadow before bringing Douglas' sister back on screen to dance us out of the dark.

I don't think there's been a screen actor since Warren Oates who could do what Gandolfini did. His death is a gargantuan loss to art.

http://somecamerunning.typepad.com/some_came_running/2013/06/james-gandolfini-1961-2013.html

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