I took a poll on my Facebook page recently asking who
readers thought was the best fictional TV father? While the responses ranged
from Bundy to Brady, the greatest number of people said Cliff Huxtable, Bill
Cosby’s beloved OB/GYN from The Cosby
Show. One reader’s reasoning:
One father who never even occurred to me before this
conversation turned out to be among the most popular choices: Tony Danza’s Tony
Micelli from Who’s the Boss? One reader summed Tony up perfectly to me:
Those two fathers, though seemingly polar opposites (one a successful physician, the other a baseball player turned housekeeper), were
actually quite similar as the primary goal of both was to give their families a better
life. And if you mixed those two dudes together, you'll get who I think is the
greatest father in TV history: Tony Soprano.
As a die-hard TV fan, I was a rabid enthusiast of HBO’s The Sopranos throughout its entire eight
year run, starting with episode 1 and ending 1 second before the show’s cut-to-black
culmination in episode 86. Needless to say, I was shocked to hear of the
untimely recent passing of James Gandolfini for several reasons, not the least
of which is that he has a brand-new baby at home who is a couple weeks younger
than my 9-month-old Littler Dude. A true tragedy.
Beyond being a great father, Gandolfini’s Tony Soprano
was arguably the most compelling protagonist/antagonist combination ever seen
on TV. As both a doting father to his two kids, Meadow and AJ, and a godfather of
the largest organized crime family in New Jersey, Soprano ruled two distinct households
successfully, but never faultlessly. It
was the perfect dichotomy of “fathering” experiences and Tony managed to lead an atypical, yet successful, work/life balance.
The Soprano family, in happier times |
You might wonder how I can say that a murdering, thieving gangster
could be considered a quality father. The truth is that Tony Soprano is the
only “real” fictional mobster, and one of the few "real" fathers, we’ve ever seen. He had issues with his parents,
spouse, job and kids, just like pretty much any other parent. He battled
endless temptation. His friends frequently let him down or double-crossed him. But he also sought therapy to deal with
all of those conflicting ping-pong balls bouncing around his head. I can’t think of another celluloid Mafia Don
who has ever been as vulnerable as Tony Soprano consistently proved to be over
the years.*
Tony's other family |
Like most people, Tony’s family life was full of
challenges. Living in an upscale New Jersey neighborhood, his kids faced the usual struggles that teenagers commonly must deal with regarding school, friends and substances.
The Soprano kids became more withdrawn from family life upon learning,
kind of, about their father’s line of business. Tony’s parenting
philosophy was influenced heavily by his own upbringing, which was often the
subject of his therapy sessions. While he was afraid to tell his friends about
his therapy and use of anti-depressants for fear of being viewed as weak, I believe he
did it for the benefit of not only himself, but also his family. He spent vast
amounts of time with Dr. Melfi uncovering layers of damage that his parents,
especially his mother who at one point tried to have him killed, instilled in
him.
One episode that always sticks out in my mind about the kind
of parent Tony was is an early episode titled “College” where Tony took Meadow
to visit some schools in New England. In the long car ride up the coast, some big issues were
discussed, including drugs, drinking and Tony’s alleged line of work. Tony and his daughter dealt with an
uncomfortable line of questioning that went both ways, and that awkward
conversation opened the lines of communication for them going forward. The
episode later showed Tony being put in another awkward position when he unexpectedly bumped into a former colleague, who’d disappeared years prior into Witness Protection. Faced with the choice of spending
quality time with his daughter and doing his “work” made Tony choose how to
balance two very important matters, something most parents have to deal with every
day. I won’t give away what happened, but will say that Tony was a great multi-tasker.
So while you may scoff at my choice for TV’s best father,
and wonder why I didn’t choose Ward Cleaver, Father Ingalls or even Dan Conner,
I selected someone who regularly showed the inner-strength to deal with extreme
adversity for the betterment of his family. To me, Tony Soprano was that man.
James Gandolfini, RIP.
Who do you think is the best Father in TV history, and why?
*=Don’t even
mention Robert DeNiro in Analyze This,
which was released two months after The Sopranos premiered, as he was just
playing a hokey parody of a mobster.