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James Gandolfini dies at 51; actor starred in ‘The Sopranos’

Actor James Gandolfini, shown in 2012, was a movie and Broadway actor who shot to stardom in "The Sopranos." He died while vacationing in Rome.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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James Gandolfini, the Emmy-winning actor who swaggered his way to fame as the murderous, clinically depressed mob boss on HBO’s groundbreaking drama “The Sopranos,” died Wednesday on vacation in Rome. He was 51.

The cause was a heart attack or stroke, HBO officials said. A Rome hospital confirmed that Gandolfini had been brought there for treatment.

The “Sopranos,” recently named the best TV show of all time by the Writers Guild of America, ran on HBO from 1999 to 2007 and starred Gandolfini as barrel-chested New Jersey Mafia capo-turned-boss Tony Soprano.

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PHOTOS: James Gandolfini | 1961-2013

His character alternated acts of mayhem, infidelity and fierce family loyalty with anguished visits to his psychiatrist, Dr. Jennifer Melfi, portrayed by Lorraine Bracco. His regular haunt was the Bada Bing, a strip club that frequently served as a base for his underworld enterprises.

In Gandolfini’s hands, a potentially unsympathetic and unrelatable character became a kind of post-modern Everyman, even down to his troubled relationship with suburban wife Carmela, played by Edie Falco.

He won three Emmy Awards for the role, now considered one of the landmark characters of television drama. By the early 1990s, he had experienced some success on Broadway but Tony Soprano made him a star.

“He was a genius,” David Chase, the writer who created the show, said in a statement. “Anyone who saw him even in the smallest of his performances knows that. He is one of the greatest actors of this or any time. A great deal of that genius resided in those sad eyes. I remember telling him many times, ‘You don’t get it. You’re like Mozart.’ ”

PHOTOS: Gandolfini’s career highlights

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The mob series, along with the comedy “Sex and the City,” vaulted HBO from a pay-cable outlet for studio movies and boxing to a destination for original programming that dominated the cultural conversation. The premiere of the fourth season in 2002 drew 13.4 million total viewers, according to Nielsen — an enormous figure for a scripted show on a network that was available in fewer than one-third of U.S. households.

That success led to an explosion in original series for basic cable networks, a trend that continues with such Soprano-like antiheroes as tortured cop Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) on FX’s “The Shield”; the ad man with the double life, Don Draper (Jon Hamm) on AMC’s “Mad Men”; and vigilante serial killer Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall) on Showtime’s “Dexter.”

“The Sopranos” started a movement toward edgier programming on cable that ultimately led to sharp viewing declines for the major networks.

Gandolfini was born in Westwood, N.J., on Sept. 18, 1961, to working-class parents of Italian American stock. His father was a bricklayer who later became a high school custodian; his mother worked in a cafeteria at the same school.

His immigrant parents spoke Italian at home, but Gandolfini, one of three children, never learned the language although, he later told interviewers, he always understood when they were angry with him. He retained a strong sense of his Italian roots into adulthood, he later said.

PHOTOS: Celebrities react on Twitter

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As the first-born male child of ambitious immigrants, he faced intense parental pressure to attend college, a notion he initially resisted. He earned a bachelor’s degree in communications in 1983 from Rutgers University.

“My mother beat it into me, ‘You’re going, you’re going,’ ” he later recalled. He finally relented and on his first night at Rutgers strolled into a keg party. “I thought, ‘What was I fighting for?’ ” he later joked.

His ultimate choice of a profession was inspired by the 1970s films he grew up with, including “Mean Streets,” Martin Scorsese’s breakthrough feature about a young Mafia soldier Charlie (Harvey Keitel) torn between loyalty to local mob bosses and his troubled friend Johnny Boy (Robert De Niro).

“I saw that 10 times in a row.… I just sat there,” Gandolfini recalled years later on Bravo’s “Inside the Actors Studio.” “I thought everything about it was great.”

But success was slow in coming. During his mid-20s, he was persuaded by Roger Bart — a friend who later found fame in Broadway’s “The Producers” — to attend an acting workshop emphasizing the Method acting techniques of Sanford Meisner, who encouraged students to use improvisation exercises to arrive at more immediate and emotional interpretations of characters.

In one exercise, the instructor asked him to pretend he was threading a needle. Gandolfini discovered, to his dismay, that he was unable to do it in front of the class. “I was scared to death. I was shaking,” he later recalled.

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PHOTOS: James Gandolfini | 1961-2013

But he found that the exercises were key to shedding self-consciousness and growing as a performer, allowing him “to get up in front of people and get up and just make a fool of yourself,” as he later put it.

For years he languished in supporting roles but found success on Broadway in the early 1990s in productions of “On the Waterfront” and “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

His first major film role was 1993’s “True Romance,” an offbeat crime caper written by Quentin Tarantino and directed by Tony Scott. He played a smiling hit man named Virgil who, in perhaps the most memorable scene, savagely beats a prostitute in a motel room. The scene took five days to film, he later recalled.

But it was his performance as Tony Soprano that made him a bona fide star, not to mention one of the highest-paid actors on TV. By the end of the HBO show’s run, he was earning at least $1 million per episode, according to published reports.

After the show ended its run — with a controversial, opaque finale that continues to inspire debate to this day — Gandolfini resisted any temptation to play another mafioso. “I want to get away from the violence a little bit, because it is starting to bother me personally,” he said.

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PHOTOS: Gandolfini’s career highlights

He returned to the theater, winning a Tony nomination for his role in Yasmina Reza’s 2009 “God of Carnage.” He also reeled off a succession of character parts in prestigious films, including last year’s “Zero Dark Thirty.”

He recently shot an HBO pilot, “Criminal Justice,” and completed parts in two as-yet-unreleased movies, a romantic comedy “Enough Said” and the crime drama “Animal Rescue.”

His survivors include his wife, Deborah Lin, whom he married in 2008; their daughter, Liliana; a son, Michael, from his first marriage, which ended in divorce; and two sisters, Leta Gandolfini and Johanna Antonacci.

Gandolfini could occasionally be at a loss for words when it came to explaining what made his performances work.

“Standing in public in other people’s clothes, pretending to be someone else,” he once said. “It’s a strange way for a grown man to make a living.”

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MORE ON HIS LIFE AND DEATH:

VIDEO: Tony Soprano’s best scenes

PHOTOS: Celebrities react on Twitter

OBITUARY: James Gandolfini swaggered his way to fame

REACTION: Stars heartbroken by news of Gandolfini’s death

scott.collins@latimes.com

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Times staff writers Elaine Woo, Steven Zeitchik, Meredith Blake, Greg Braxton, Yvonne Villarreal and correspondent Tom Kington contributed to this report.

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