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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Guardian staff

An offer he couldn’t refuse: Sopranos diner booth sells for $82,600

A middle-aged white man with trim gray hair and glasses and black collared short-sleeved polo shirt sits with his arms on a yellow Formica table with two red benches facing each other, at a booth in a row of other booths in a restaurant. A jukebox sits alongside the partition between ketchup and napkins.
Ron Stark of Holsten's sits at a recreation of the booth where Tony Soprano may or may not have met his end, on Tuesday. Photograph: Wayne Parry/AP

More than 15 years after the cliffhanger final scene of The Sopranos screened in 2007, the classic American diner booth where it was filmed was sold at auction for a price that eventually cranked up to $82,600.

The TV mob drama, which the Guardian once described as “the most masterful show ever”, memorably saw the patriarch character Tony Soprano and his family sit in that booth in a New Jersey diner in the final scene of the series.

Soprano drops a quarter in the table-top jukebox and orders onion rings as he silently dreads a denouement. Then the show abruptly cuts to black.

On Monday night, that very booth, with deep red benches and a yellow Formica table in the real-life ice-cream parlor Holsten’s in Bloomfield, New Jersey, was sold, the New York Times reported.

Co-owner Chris Carley had asked for opening bids on the online auction site eBay above $3,000 and reportedly aimed to get a price of $10,000 for the booth. He had hoped to put the earnings towards a renovation he was planning for the eatery. He was selling other furniture and memorabilia from his establishment, as it needed a makeover after more than 60 years in business, the Times reported.

Over 24 hours, bids crept up, and eventually the booth sold – without the jukebox – for $82,600, which will more than cover the cost of the renovation. The sale included the furniture and the booth divider that sports a plaque reserving it for the Soprano family.

Locals and tourists have always come in to Holsten’s asking to sit at the Soprano booth but it became an informal shrine after the actor James Gandolfini, AKA Tony Soprano, died suddenly at 51 in 2013.

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