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"[Carmela Soprano] was a mob wife, but she really was a rich, suburban housewife," Polcsa tells ET. "This was in the years of malls and that's where you shopped, and so, I spent a lot of time in ...
Whether that means rocking a Carmela Soprano (played by Edie Falco)–inspired faux fur coat, going heavy on the eye makeup as Goodfellas’ Karen Hill (Lorraine Bracco) brazenly did, or a high ...
The Mob Wife aesthetic has also been seen on the likes of Dua Lipa, Emily Ratajkowski and Hailey Bieber, who all donned elegant furs, glamorous gold accessories and bold makeup on the red carpet ...
Polcsa noted her favorite is Edie Falco’s Carmela Soprano. “To me, my mob wife was Carmela,” she explained. ... According to Polcsa, the social media aesthetic “has a life of its own.”
On platforms like TikTok and Instagram, users tapped into the mob wife aesthetic by taking cues from “Sopranos” characters like Carmela Soprano and Adriana La Cerva, Connie Corleone from ...
Carmela is a homemaker for the Soprano household, and works to create a semblance of legitimacy for her family, even though she is well aware their wealth is built on "blood money". Tony trusts Carmela enough to confide in her, to a degree, about some of his Mafia dealings, notably the failed attempt on his life and the death of Richie Aprile.
Falco received her breakout role in the HBO drama The Sopranos created by David Chase, which premiered in 1999 and ended in 2007. She portrayed Carmela Soprano, wife of Mafia boss Tony Soprano played by James Gandolfini. The series received wide acclaim, and is often considered to be one of the greatest television series of all time.
With the recent 25th anniversary of Sopranos, the aesthetic resurgence couldn't have come at a better time IMO. As we learned from Carmela Soprano herself, clothes don’t tell the whole story.