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Edie Falco Reveals She Had Laryngitis While Filming “The Sopranos” Episode in Paris

Edie Falco Reveals She Had Laryngitis While Filming “The Sopranos” Episode in Paris

Raven BrunnerWed, March 4, 2026 at 6:30 PM UTC

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Edie Falco in 'The Sopranos.'Credit: HBO

Edie Falco is unstoppable!

The actress, 62, said she was sick while filming the season 6 episode of The Sopranos that took place in Paris.

Falco spoke of her experience in the HBO hit series while attending “Celebrating The Sopranos Season 3" at the Museum of the Moving Image in New York City on Friday, Feb. 27 with moderator Ari Aster, show creator David Chase and actor Dominic Chianese.

Speaking about the episode “Cold Stones,” which sees her character Carmela, the wife to James Gandolfini’s mafia crime boss Tony Soprano, jetting off to Paris with a friend, she said, “On the way to Paris, I got really sick on the airplane and I got laryngitis.”

Edie Falco in 'The Sopranos.'Credit: HBO

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As a result of her unexpected illness, the actress explained, "I shot the whole episode just mouthing the words. So when I got back to New York, I had to loop the whole thing. It was all done remotely.”

The Sopranos ran for six seasons from 1999 to 2007. The crime drama, created by Chase, starred the late Gandolfini as a troubled Mafia boss from New Jersey. Falco, meanwhile, played Tony’s wife Carmela.

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David Chase, Dominic Chianese, and Edie Falco.Credit: Thanassi Karageorgiou / Museum of the Moving Image

The Emmy-award winning series also starred Chianese, Michael Imperioli, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Lorraine Bracco and Robert Iler, among many others.

The Museum of the Moving Image event was in celebration of the opening of the Stories and Set Designs for The Sopranos exhibition. The museum held a series of special screenings, followed by talks with Chase and various cast members.

Falco also reflected on the legacy of the series in the panel. "Every once in a while I'll be watching something, sort of half paying attention, and they'll make a comment about The Sopranos. It's completely surreal that, from a personal standpoint, I serendipitously was part of this thing that's being talked about in other shows and that other people are watching."

"Here we are, 400 years after we leave the show, and people are still talking about it," the actress added.

Falco called her involvement in the show "one of the bigger emotional experiences of my life."

"As an actor, you want to feel like you touched people, or you reached them and somehow you connected with people even a small way. So the moments when I hear us mentioned in other things, it's like getting a blast of energy or something. I'm tickled to death by it," she said.

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