"Boca"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 9
Directed byAndy Wolk
Written byJason Cahill
Robin Green
Mitchell Burgess
Cinematography byPhil Abraham
Production code109
Original air dateMarch 7, 1999 (1999-03-07)
Running time51 minutes

"Boca" is the ninth episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos. It was written by Jason Cahill, Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess, directed by Andy Wolk and originally aired on March 7, 1999.

Starring

* = credit only

Guest starring

Also guest starring

Synopsis

Uncle Junior goes to Boca Raton, Florida, with his long-time girlfriend and secretary Bobbi Sanfillipo. In bed, she playfully praises his oral sex skills, but he stresses that she must never speak about this to anyone, and reluctantly explains that his associates "think if you suck pussy ... it's a sign of weakness." However, Bobbi has already spoken about her sex life with a woman at her nail salon. Word reaches Carmela, who goes to the same nail salon, and she tells Tony. While playing golf with Junior, Tony makes thinly-veiled vulgar jokes about it. Junior realizes what is happening and contemplates killing Tony. Enraged, he fires Bobbi and breaks up with her.

Tony, Silvio, and Artie invite Meadow's soccer coach Don Hauser to have drinks at the Bada Bing after a victory; they all have daughters on the team and are enthusiastic supporters. When they read in the newspaper that Don is moving to another coaching job, they try to convince him to stay. Paulie delivers a stolen 50-inch TV to Don's house and insists he take it, while Christopher abducts Don's dog and later, as "an animal lover", returns it.

Tony tells Meadow that Don may change his mind about leaving, but she is ungrateful and upset. When he remonstrates, she tells him that Don is having sex with her teammate Ally. Tony resolves that Hauser will never do that again. During their therapy session, Dr. Melfi asks Tony why he thinks punishing Don is his responsibility. Artie tries to show Tony that he is acting for vengeance and his own satisfaction rather than justice; Tony throws Artie out of the Bada Bing, but stays alone drinking, wondering if Artie was right. Later that evening, Tony tells Silvio to cancel the hit on Don, who is arrested. Tony goes home, staggering drunk, and tells Carmela that he "didn't hurt nobody", as Meadow watches from the staircase.

First appearance

Title reference

  • Junior goes to Boca Raton, Florida, with his girlfriend Bobbi Sanfillipo.
  • The word "boca" in Spanish or "bocca" in Italian means "mouth". This may be a reference to Junior performing oral sex on Bobbi, as well as several secrets being revealed by several characters throughout the episode.

Production

  • This episode wrongly reports the location of the University of Rhode Island (URI), claiming that it is in Providence when, in fact, it is in Kingston on the other side of the state. While URI has a satellite campus (the Feinstein Campus) in Providence, URI's sports teams play in Kingston.
  • Actor Steven Van Zandt wore his own golfing hat for a scene in which Silvio plays a round of golf.[1]
  • The Roxbury High School Girls' Soccer team (Succasunna, New Jersey) played the extras for both the opposing team and members of Meadow's team. The team used this opportunity as a fundraiser.

Other cultural or historical references

  • Junior mentions the "Escobedo brothers" to Mikey Palmice when explaining how it is possible for a psychiatrist to testify against a patient. This is a reference to the Menéndez brothers in Beverly Hills, who killed their parents and were later turned in to the police by their psychologist, L. Jerome Oziel. Also a possible reference to Escobedo v. Illinois, 378 U.S. 478 (1964), the United States Supreme Court case holding that criminal suspects have a right to counsel during police interrogations under the Sixth Amendment.
  • Junior hitting Bobbi in her face with a pie when they break up was used as an homage to The Public Enemy, where the main character does the same to his girlfriend with a cut-in-half grapefruit when he says he is leaving her. David Chase has cited The Public Enemy as an enormous influence.[2]
  • Over dinner, while discussing Ally's suicide attempt, Tony, under influence of what Dr. Melfi told him previously how self-inflicted shallow cuts to the wrists are actually a cry for help, says how she didn't really want to kill herself: "It wasn't like frigging Cobain, it was just a little suicidal gesture." He was referring to the iconic rock musician Kurt Cobain, troubled lead singer of Seattle grunge band Nirvana, who died by suicide with a shotgun at the age of 27, on the 5th of april 1994.

Music

  • When Junior is dancing with his girlfriend in Boca, the Spanish song played is "Frente a Frente" written by Mexican singer Juan Gabriel and sung by Spanish singer Rocío Dúrcal. This song is also played again when Corrado Soprano breaks up with her.
  • In an early scene, Meadow and her friend are watching the Morphine video for "Buena", and the song, "Dawna", is also played at the end of the episode as Tony Soprano lies on the floor, and through the rolling of the end credits.
  • When Coach Hauser visits the Bada Bing with Silvio Dante, the song played in the bar is "Can't You Feel the Fire" from Steven Van Zandt's album Freedom – No Compromise.
  • The song played when Charmaine confronts Artie in the basement about Tony's attempted bribing of Coach Hauser is "Little Joe" by The Spaniels.
  • The song Tony sings when he taunts Junior while they play golf is "South of the Border (Down Mexico Way)".
  • When Tony ponders what to do with Coach Hauser in his office, the song in the background is "Woke Up This Morning (Urban Takeover Mix)" by Alabama 3, who also perform the song's Chosen One Mix in the opening credits.
  • The song played when Tony comes home drunk and singing to himself is "There Was a Time" by James Brown.

Filming locations

Listed in order of first appearance:[3]

References

  1. Juliet Polsca, HBO. "Dressing the Sopranos". Archived from the original on October 20, 2013. Retrieved October 20, 2013.
  2. Martin, Brett (October 30, 2007). ""Woke Up This Morning": The Birth of a Show". The Sopranos: The Complete Book. New York: Time. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-933821-18-4.
  3. Ugoku. "The Sopranos location guide - Filming locations for". www.sopranos-locations.com. Archived from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
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