Many Saints Of Newark: What Happens Next To Each Character (Before Sopranos)

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With The Many Saints of Newark establishing early canon for the DiMeo crime family, the question now becomes what happens next to each of the surviving characters before The Sopranos story begins. Despite a rather soft box office reception, The Many Saints of Newark‘s HBO Max release has underscored the enduring popularity that The Sopranos franchise still engenders to this day. The Many Saints of Newark prequel has resuscitated The Sopranos‘ popularity on the streaming platform, reintroducing audiences to the culturally seismic HBO original series and boosting its week-on-week viewing numbers by an impressive 65%.

Initially set in 1967, The Many Saints of Newark endeavors to lay the narrative foundations for a multitude of Sopranos characters amidst the backdrop of a racially torn New Jersey. The Sopranos prequel primarily presents through a young Anthony Soprano (Michael Gandolfini), who lives in awe and adoration of his gangster uncle Dickie Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola). In addition to navigating Tony’s formative years, The Many Saints of Newark also harks back to its predecessor by employing contextual beyond the grave narration from the unborn Christopher Moltisanti (Michael Imperioli).

Related: Sopranos Prequel DOES Have A Tony Age Retcon (But Not The One You Thought)

Yet despite spanning a 5-year period in the DiMeo family history, there are still many lingering questions regarding what happens to the primary The Many Saints of Newark characters between the film’s end and the inaugural Sopranos episode set in contemporary 1999. The Many Saints of Newark concludes with Tony as a teenager grieving his uncle, while other critical Sopranos characters like Carmella (Edie Falco) are given very little screen time and development. Here’s where The Many Saints of Newark left each surviving character and what happens next to them before The Sopranos.

Anthony Soprano


Many Saints Sopranos Tony

Although The Many Saints of Newark paints two youthful portraits of a young Anthony Soprano, it is fair to say that his character still has much growth to undergo to form the ruthless mob leader presented by The Sopranos. The Many Saints of Newark ends with Tony staring at his idolized uncle’s corpse, before The Sopranos theme song, Alabama 3’s “Woke Up This Morning,” begins to blare. While this highlights a shift in the teenage Tony’s thinking as his naivety is stripped away, his life is littered with additional key events between The Many Saints of Newark‘s conclusion and the start of The Sopranos. Tony still has to marry Carmella, take charge of the DiMeo family, and raise his nephew Christopher, meaning all facts point to the necessity of another David Chase helmed prequel to be bookended by The Many Saints of Newark and The Sopranos.

Paulie Gualtieri


Many Saints Sopranos Paulie Walnuts

The Many Saints of Newark treats audiences to a young Paulie “Walnuts” Gualtieri, who appears to have seen very little emotional growth in the interim years between The Many Saints of Newark (1967) and The Sopranos (1999). The fledgling Paulie seen in The Many Saints of Newark already embodies the reckless and self-centered qualities that make him such a compelling portrait of a gangster in The Sopranos some 30 years later. Despite his stubborn nature, Paulie has risen to become a high-ranking member of the DiMeo family by the time The Sopranos kicks off, meaning there is ample story left to convey how he becomes one of the crime syndicate’s most successful earners. Paulie’s pious nature is also rigorously documented in The Sopranos, with his sudden churchgoing dating back to 1977 another yarn as of yet untold by Chase and company.

Johnny Soprano


Many Saints Sopranos Johnny

The former captain of the Soprano crew, Giovanni “Johnny Boy” Soprano, presents as a revered character in the 1999 HBO drama. However, the HBO Max movie displays a more human portrait of Tony’s father, with many of the DiMeo family referring to him as “a case” about his oft-forgotten combustibility. His relationship with his long-suffering wife Livia is also fleshed out, with The Many Saints of Newark underlining the difficulties Tony’s mother faces when Johnny is incarcerated. Canonically, then, Johnny Soprano still has a lot to offer The Sopranos‘ narrative as The Many Saints of Newark comes to a close, with his death of emphysema in 1986 the footnote in a long list of events that continue to imprint on his son, Tony.

Related: The Many Saints of Newark Should Have Been A Miniseries

Junior Soprano


Many Saints Sopranos Junior

Uncle June’s conniving nature is hammered home in The Many Saints of Newark, exemplified by the shallowly motivated hit he orders on Dickie in the film’s coda. Junior’s rise to power has only just begun in The Many Saints of Newark, with Junior the official boss of the DiMeo crime family for most of The Sopranos despite Tony’s continued machinations. This leaves swathes of unexplored narrative between the two men, with Tony’s journey to prominence within the family sure to aggravate Junior much like Dickie’s did in 1971.

Silvio Dante


Many Saints Sopranos Silvio Dante

One Many Saints of Newark character who already appears well fleshed out is Silvio Dante, Tony’s confidante and primary negotiator in The Sopranos. Silvio’s admission to Dickie that he should reconcile with his nephew at the end of The Many Saints of Newark is reminiscent of many Sopranos interactions between Silvio and Tony in which he provides wise counsel. While Silvio’s character may comparatively have less development to undergo to reach his final incarnation seen in the untouchable The Sopranos, a second series prequel could focus on Silvio’s budding potential as eventual Consigliere to Tony, in which he excels at several operations, including loan-sharking and running the family’s strip club: The Bada-Bing.

Carmella Soprano


carmella young old many saints newark the sopranos

A young Carmella sees minimal screen-time in The Many Saints of Newark, ultimately being restricted to just one scene where she lends Tony a dime to call Dickie. While primarily designed to portray Tony’s heartbreak, this scene is also deft in portraying how Carmella, even in her youth, is already beginning to dote on Tony. As one of the driving forces of The Sopranos‘ narrative, Carmella’s growth as a woman and a character has only just begun. Marrying Tony and bearing his children Meadow and Anthony Jr. is just the tip of the iceberg for Carmella’s complex character before The Sopranos begins in 1999, so expect any further HBO Max sequel chances to be built heavily around the compelling Carmella.

Christopher Moltisanti


While introduced as a Dickie’s baby that “knows things from the other side” in chilling foreshadowing to his eventual death, Christopher otherwise features quite heavily in The Many Saints of Newark given his continued narration of the story. Christopher’s monologues relay pertinent information to audiences and serve as a reminder of the callous killer that Tony eventually becomes despite his likable nature in The Many Saints of Newark. Canonically, Chris has the most growing to do of any of the characters listed so far, with his journey to adulthood and eventual Capo status a long and complex narrative yet to be told by the limited purview of The Many Saints of Newark.

Next: How Many Saints Of Newark Links To Sopranos’ Cut To Black Finale


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