David Chase(II)
- Producer
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Born in Mt. Vernon, New York, and raised in New Jersey, David Chase
(born David DeCesare) dreamed of being a star drummer in a rock
band! He spent many years playing drums and bass trying to be part of a
successful rock band in the 1960s East Coast music scene. He also loved
movies, such as The Public Enemy (1931) with James Cagney and TV shows like The Untouchables (1959) with
Robert Stack. When not making music, he watched 1960s' Hollywood and foreign
films avidly. After his music career ended, he got the inspiration to
buy a movie camera and make his own movies. He studied at the Tisch
School of the Arts at New York University and later the graduate film
program at Stanford University. He began writing for network TV drama
programs in the early 1970s. He eventually became a writer and producer
on the classic NBC detective show The Rockford Files (1974) with James Garner. While on
"Rockford", he penned many memorable episodes and pieces of dialog. He
won his first Emmy in 1978, the year "Rockford" won the award for Best
Dramatic Series. Many biographies incorrectly state that Chase won his
first Emmy for writing the acclaimed TV movie, Off the Minnesota Strip (1980). Although it is
a sensitive and well observed story about a young runaway trying to
make sense of her life after being returned to her Midwestern family
from a life of prostitution in New York City, Chase actually won his
second Emmy (and a Writer's Guild Award) for that project. He then
spent the 1980s and early 1990s getting paid for writing various TV
scripts while writing feature film projects that never got produced. He
also began directing his TV scripts whenever possible. He often told
people stories about the troubled relationship he shared back in New
Jersey with his mother. Encouraged to write about it, he found a way to
combine a story about his mother with a mob story and a story about
psychotherapy, which Chase had also began during this time. This
intersection of ideas and themes led Chase to write the landmark pilot
script to a show that the Fox network developed, then passed on
shooting. HBO then decided to roll the dice with Chase on this odd
mixture of mother/son conflict, mobster danger and insecurities about
psychological therapy. The result: The Sopranos (1999). Everybody connected with
the project thought they would film a pilot episode, it would not go to
series and that would be that. It has since gone on to become one of
the most successful shows to ever come out of a cable network. Chase
and his crew have collected Emmy, Golden Globe, Writer's Guild and
Director's Guild Awards for the show. In terms of impact and subject
matter, it has been compared to The Godfather (1972). Chase vows to get his feature
film projects off the ground, as soon as "The Sopranos" ends its
run.