By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 9.19.02 @ 12:01AM
The guys in Chicago were a lot suaver than the slobs on ''The Sopranos.''
Washington -- I have refrained from writing about "The Sopranos"
for fear of getting killed. Well, maybe only for fear of having my
hubcaps stolen. You see I grew up in Chicago, and spent much of my
adolescence in the homes of Mafia families. I played ball with
Mafia guys and even dated a Mafia girl. That was not unusual, if
you were growing up in Oak Park and River Forest, two suburbs on
Chicago's west side. In the 1950s and 1960s some famous Mafia big
wigs lived there and had for years. They were the "old money." Yet
younger Mafia men were then moving in from the "old neighborhood"
and bringing their families along. So I could hang out with the
kids of the "old money" and the new. I was as close to them as the
Kennedys were to my fellow Oak Park resident, Sam Giancana, though
unlike either Bob or John Kennedy my association with the Mafia was
never professional.
In this column I shall not mention any of my young friends' real
names. Who knows what line of work they might be in today? Some
might have gone straight, taking up careers, say, at Arthur
Andersen or Enron. Yet others may have remained in the family
business, running such enterprises as bowling alleys and liquor
stores that apparently were uncommonly lucrative. I would rather
not attract their attention.
A point I hasten to make is that the Mafia families I knew were
of a suaver sort than the slobs who appear on "The Sopranos." When
I was hanging out with Mr. -- let us say ---Smith's son I never saw
Mr. Smith in his undershirt. Nor did I hear him take the Lord's
name in vain, nor use the F-word as a punctuation mark. When I
dated, Mr. -- let us say --Jones's daughter, there was no danger of
pregnancy or sexually communicable diseases. The children of Mr.
Smith and Mr. Jones and of Mr. "Big Tuna" Doe and of Mr. "The
Waiter" White, and so forth, were as well behaved as their parents
seemed to be.
Unlike Tony Soprano, Mr. Smith had no therapist. He had a
barber. He also had his own barber chair. It was in the basement of
his capacious home, and Mr. Jones conducted much of his business
from it. The barber was always there. Occasionally we teen-agers
would shoot pool in the basement. If our hair was becoming
exuberant, Mr. Smith would ask his barber to give us a trim. My
parents were of the opinion that Mr. Smith's "barber" could also
have given us what Tony Soprano would now call a "wack." It was
understood that the barber was also a body guard, possibly an
experienced killer -- in earlier Mafia vernacular, "a torpedo."
From my experience The Godfather and its first sequel
got the Mafia right -- the last sequel was from outer space. There
was a dignity to the members of the Mafia whom I knew, though the
terrible crimes committed by Mafiosi make them villains not heroes.
To be sure, some were only engaged in minor crimes, and I am pretty
certain that some went into retirement to be haunted by conscience,
the law, and the enfeeblement of old age -- Mr. Smith's Florida
doctor was a classmate of mine. He now takes calls from the aged
Mr. Smith at all hours regarding the old fellow's oxidizing
plumbing. Many Mafiosi, however, have been moral monsters.
Are the slobs of "The Sopranos" accurate renderings of today's
organized crime families? I have no idea. I do know that a
little-known accomplishment of the Reagan Administration was the
severe repression of organized crime. It is possible that they have
all fallen on hard times and no longer live in mansions. Still, for
me, an on-going puzzle is why such large audiences of law-abiding
Americans flock to movies about the Mafia. Growing up in Oak Park
and River Forest, I know my family and the majority of my friends
had little fascination with the Mafia. The Smiths and Jones had
polite children. The children's parents never got in any trouble
with the law (oh perhaps an occasional brush with the IRS) or any
of the lurid scandals that befall polite society today,
particularly political society. Yet, my parents did not encourage
my friendship with young Smith, and when he quietly began spending
more time at the family liquor store by high school graduation, my
family was relieved.
Incidentally, most of the Mafia kids drifted away from us by
late high school. Now maybe those that stayed in the family
business are in the same mess as Tony Soprano. His life strikes me
as ghastly. So why do so Americans remain hooked on the Mafiosi as
entertainment? I have heard the stuff about their family values and
metaphorical significance. That is not the heart of it. My guess is
that the viewers, who in "record-breaking" numbers showed up for
"The Sopranos" the other night, were suffering a mild case of
voyeurism, hoping to observe things on television that they are not
supposed to see. The gaudy television series is not much more than
that.
topics:
Television, Business, Movies, Law