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The Soup Nazi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with anotherSeinfeld episode, "The Soup".

6th episode of the 7th season of Seinfeld
"The Soup Nazi"
Seinfeld episode
Episodeno.Season 7
Episode 6
Directed byAndy Ackerman
Written bySpike Feresten
Production code706
Original air dateNovember 2, 1995 (1995-11-02)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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Seinfeldseason 7
List of episodes

"The Soup Nazi" is the 116th episode of theNBC sitcomSeinfeld, which was the sixth episode of theseventh season.[1] It first aired in the United States on November 2, 1995.[1] In the episode,Jerry,George andElaine visit a soup stand operated by Yev Kassem (Larry Thomas), who has strict rules.

Plot

[edit]
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Jerry,George andElaine visit a new soup stand. Jerry explains that the owner, Yev Kassem, is known as the "Soup Nazi" due to his insistence on a strict manner of behavior while placing an order, but his soups are so delicious that the stand is constantly busy. En route, Elaine notices a man on the sidewalk with anarmoire for sale. She forgoes the soup in favor of buying it. However, herbuilding superintendent informs her that furniture move-ins are not allowed on Sundays, so she asksKramer to watch the armoire and promises to get soup from Kassem for him in return. While she is away,Bob and Cedric bully Kramer and steal the armoire.

At the soup stand, George complains about not receiving bread with his meal. When he presses the issue after being expected to pay for it, George's order is taken away and his money returned. On a subsequent visit, George buys soup, but Elaine, having scoffed at Jerry's advice on how to order, draws Kassem's ire and is banned for a year.

Jerry and his girlfriend Sheila visit the soup stand. Kassem is repulsed by their kissing, so Jerry disavows Sheila to stay on Kassem's good side. Jerry talks about the breakup with George, who expresses disgust at Jerry and Sheila'sbaby talk and public displays of affection. Undeterred, Jerry makes up with Sheila at Monk's. George tries to teach him a lesson by behaving similarly withSusan, but this only leads to escalating affection between the couples as Jerry and George struggle to out-disgust each other. Susan is charmed by George's public show of affection and continues to mirror this behavior. Sensing George's discomfort at this, Jerry gloats by informing him that he and Sheila have broken up again.

Kramer, who has befriended Kassem, tells him about the armoire theft. Kassem offers him an armoire he has in storage as a replacement. Elaine is elated and goes to Kassem to thank him. When Kassem learns the armoire was for Elaine, he says he would rather have destroyed it than give it to her. Vowing revenge, Elaine returns to her apartment with Jerry, where they discover Kassem's soup recipes in the armoire. Elaine returns to the soup stand and confronts Kassem with the recipes, stating her intent to publicize them.

Jerry encountersNewman, who is running to get a pot from his apartment. Newman tells him that because of what Elaine said to Kassem, he is giving away whatever soup he has left, closing down his stand, and moving to Argentina. Jerry runs towards the soup stand.

Production

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"The Soup Nazi" wasSpike Feresten's first creditedSeinfeld episode as a writer. The idea for the episode arose when Feresten toldJerry Seinfeld andLarry David about New York soup vendorAl Yeganeh, who was nicknamed "The Soup Nazi". Seinfeld and David laughed and said, "That's a show. Do that as your first show". Feresten's inspiration for the armoire subplot was a New York apartment building where he had lived, which forbade moving furniture on certain days. The armoire thieves were written as homosexual because Larry David decided that "Only gay guys would steal an armoire".[2] At the time Feresten wrote the episode, both he and Seinfeld were dating women who would use affectionate baby talk with them, which led to the Jerry/Sheila story.[3]

The first cast table reading for "The Soup Nazi" was held on September 28, 1995, and it was filmed before a studio audience on October 3.[4] In the episode, Elaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) referencesScent of a Woman. Louis-Dreyfus had never seen the film, but Seinfeld suggested she do an impersonation ofAl Pacino's character and showed her how.[5]

The character

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ActorLarry Thomas polished his portrayal of the Soup Nazi by studyingOmar Sharif's accent inLawrence of Arabia, and received anEmmy Award nomination for his performance.

The Soup Nazi was portrayed byLarry Thomas. Thomas, who did not realize that the character was based on a real person, received the inspiration for his portrayal from watchingLawrence of Arabia and studyingOmar Sharif's accent.[6][7][8]

The Soup Nazi has a cameo in theSeinfeldseries finale, in which his true name is revealed. He is a witness in the case against Seinfeld, Elaine, George and Kramer. He tells Hoyt about how he banned Elaine from his shop, only for her to return and ruin his business, forcing him to move to Argentina (paralleling theRatlines used by the real Nazis). Elaine angers him by smugly claiming, "His soup wasn't all that good anyway."

Inspiration

[edit]
The restaurant Soup Kitchen International was the inspiration for this episode ofSeinfeld. The restaurant closed in 2004, but has since reopened.

The character was inspired byAli "Al"Yeganeh (Persian:علی یگانه), anIranian American soup vendor who ranSoup Kitchen International inNew York City, eventually turning it into the chainThe Original Soup Man.[9] Yeganeh was originally offended by the portrayal.[10]

According to writer Spike Feresten, Jerry Seinfeld and several members of the production team went to Soup Kitchen International for lunch weeks after "The Soup Nazi" aired. Upon recognizing Seinfeld, Yeganeh "did a triple take" and went into a profanity-filled rant about how the show had "ruined" his business, demanding an apology. Seinfeld gave what Feresten describes as "the most sarcastic apology I've ever seen anyone give."[11] Feresten has also said that some of the episode's encounters in the soup line, such as Elaine slapping her hands on the counter and telling the Soup Nazi he looks like Al Pacino, were based on scenes he witnessed at Yeganeh's real-life soup outlet.[3]

According toNora Ephron's DVD commentary, the first pop culture reference to Yeganeh (though not by name) seems to have come years before theSeinfeld episode, in the 1993 movieSleepless in Seattle. In the film, an unseen journalist pitches a story for the lifestyle section ofThe Baltimore Sun to their editor: "This man sells the greatest soup you have ever eaten, and he is the meanest man in America. I feel very strongly about this, Becky; it's not just about the soup."[12][13]

Legacy

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Thomas's portrayal of the Soup Nazi earned him a nomination for thePrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series in1996.[14]

Advertising

[edit]
AnEat'n Park sign featuring the Soup Nazi's catchphrase as a joke in 2016.

LikeJackie Chiles, the Soup Nazi character (played by Thomas) has appeared in commercials after the end of the series.

  • In an advertisement by the corporate lobbying groupCenter for Consumer Freedom, he denies food to people he considers to be too fat.
  • In June 2015, Thomas collaborated with Pepsi Max to promote their Top Street Food Project in Israel. According to the website, "US actor Larry Thomas, the notorious Soup Nazi from the hit series “Seinfeld,” roams the streets of Tel Aviv in a newPepsi Max commercial, striking fear into the hearts of Israeli salesmen and women as he searches for the perfect meal and demands a suitable beverage to quench his thirst."[15]
  • Thomas appeared, in character, along with Jerry Seinfeld in a television commercial forAcura that aired during the 2012Super Bowl. In the advertisement, Seinfeld is trying to bribe an ordinary guy to get an Acura, offering him soup from The Soup Nazi, who happily offers "Soup for you!". After Jay Leno beat Jerry Seinfeld in bribing the ordinary guy, the Soup Nazi was seen with Jerry, an alien, and a "Munchkin" at a restaurant where they are angered at Jay Leno's actions.
  • In 2013,Serbu Firearms refused to sell their model BFG-50A semi-automatic .50 rifles to theNew York City Police Department after the passage of theNY SAFE Act that classified their weapon as an assault rifle.[16] They issued a T-shirt depicting the Soup Nazi, with the slogan "No Serbu For You!" Serbu has since removed the image of Thomas and replaced it with one of their founder Mark Serbu.[17]

In popular culture

[edit]
  • Larry Thomas appeared as himself in theScrubs episode "My Self-Examination." He denies he is the Soup Nazi when asked by J.D. (Zach Braff), who then tricks him into saying the catchphrase "No soup for you!" by asking him "What is [the catchphrase] again? It's like, 'You're out of luck in the soup department...'"
  • RapperWale used lines from the episode as an introduction and outro to his song "The Soup" on his 2010 mixtapeMore About Nothing. He acts as the Soup Nazi and uses the soup chef's catchphrase "No soup for you!"
  • In the sitcomArrested Development, the crooked housing entrepreneur George Bluth Sr. is charged with signing a development deal withSaddam Hussein, despite the embargo againstIraq. Bluth claims that he acted in good faith, mistakenly believing that Hussein was Larry Thomas because of his resemblance to the Soup Nazi. This gets referenced in a later episode, where Thomas appears in the role as apolitical decoy for Saddam Hussein who has lost his job because of the American invasion of Iraq.

In-person promotions

[edit]
  • Larry Thomas has used the character to promote soup kitchens for the homeless.[18]
  • In July 2012, the "Seinfeld Food Truck" embarked on an eight-stop United States tour. The truck, driven by Larry Thomas, handed out free soup along with otherSeinfeld-related food items: Snapple, Twix, Junior Mints, black and white cookies and muffin tops.[19]
  • Thomas was hired by Yeganeh's company in July 2015 to portray the Yev Kassem character as promotion forSoupman products.[20]

Other

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  • The episode inspired an actual soup chain,Soup Nutsy, which opened in 1996 in New York City. Though it had no official connection to, or endorsement from,Seinfeld or its creators, it included specificSeinfeld references such as describing two of its soups as "Jerry's Favorite" and "Kramer's Favorite", respectively.[21] In 1997 it was bought by Franchise Concepts.[22] As of 2022[update], a few of its locations remain inToronto,Ontario inCanada.[23]
  • In August 2009,Albert Gonzalez was convicted for robbery, being the most prolific hacker of credit cards (130 million). He operated on the Internet using the handle "Soupnazi".[24]
  • The 2009Seinfeld: A XXX Parody was inspired byThe Soup Nazi.[25]

References

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  1. ^ab"Seinfeld Season 7 Episodes".TV Guide. RetrievedDecember 10, 2021.
  2. ^"Seinfeld – Season 7" DVD bonus material, in which, during the episode's "Inside Look" featurette, Feresten recounts this story.
  3. ^abFeresten, Spike;Ackerman, Andy;Seinfeld, Jerry (2006).Seinfeld Season 7: Audio Commentary – 'The Soup Nazi' (DVD).Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  4. ^"Seinfeld – Season 7" DVD bonus material, "Notes About Nothing" subtitles
  5. ^"Seinfeld – Season 7" DVD bonus material, in which during the episode's "Inside Look" featurette, Louis-Dreyfus recounts this story.
  6. ^Schwartz, Lance (May 30, 2012)."Lance's Journal: The Soup Nazi Visits Lincoln, May 30"Archived 2016-01-16 at theWayback Machine.10 11.
  7. ^Jeffery, Morgan (January 20, 2012)."'Seinfeld': The greatest ever moments".Digital Spy.
  8. ^"Hulk, Soup Nazi to greet Wheaton flea market visitors".Daily Herald. August 18, 2011.
  9. ^See a profile of Yeganeh in "The Soup Man of 55th Street."New York Cookbook. ed. Molly O'Neill. Workman Publishing, 1992. pp. 70–71.ISBN 1-56305-337-3; See one of his recipes on p. 78. of the same work.
  10. ^"Original "Soup Nazi" Store Back in Business".CBS News. July 21, 2010. RetrievedMay 6, 2021.
  11. ^See the Season 7 DVD extras, in which during the episode'sInside Look, Feresten recounts this story.
  12. ^"Seinfeld "Soup Nazi" referenced in "Sleepless in Seattle"".YouTube. October 29, 2023.
  13. ^Jennifer Keishin Armstrong (2016).Seinfeldia: How a Show About Nothing Changed Everything.Simon and Schuster. p. 130.ISBN 978-1476756127.
  14. ^Walker, Dave (September 6, 1996). "'Soup Nazi' role gives struggling actor taste of fame, shot at Emmy".The Arizona Republic.
  15. ^"WATCH: Seinfeld 'Soup Nazi' won over by Israeli street food".The Times of Israel.
  16. ^Berman, Jillian (April 3, 2013)."Larry Thomas, 'Soup Nazi' Actor, Pushes Serbu Firearms To Pull Pro-Gun T-Shirt Featuring His Face".The Huffington Post. RetrievedApril 25, 2013.
  17. ^Higginbotham, David (April 9, 2013)."No Serbu For You, Soup Nazi Wants His Image Back". guns.com. RetrievedApril 25, 2013.
  18. ^"Seinfeld star makes sure there is soup for Boise homeless | KTVB.COM Boise". Ktvb.com. October 5, 2010. Archived fromthe original on March 30, 2012. RetrievedJune 7, 2013.
  19. ^Bain, Zoe (July 26, 2012)."Seinfeld "No Soup for You!" Food Truck Tours the Country, Serves Up Nostalgic Snacks".Delish. RetrievedMay 25, 2018.
  20. ^Soupman, Inc. (July 22, 2015)."The Original Soupman Announces Seinfeld Actor Larry Thomas Famous for "No Soup for You" Episode to Jump Into the Soup Fulltime".GlobeNewswire (Press release). RetrievedJuly 22, 2017.
  21. ^In This Corner, Soup Nutsy, Anthony Ramirez,The New York Times, August 4, 1996
  22. ^Soup Nutsy on the Move, David Chen,The New York Times, June 4, 1997
  23. ^"Soup Nutsy". Toronto ON. RetrievedJuly 10, 2022.
  24. ^"Ex-informant charged with even bigger data theft this time".Los Angeles Times. August 18, 2009. RetrievedJune 7, 2013.
  25. ^Keaper, Brian (2014)."Seinfeld: A XXX Parody".AskMen. RetrievedMay 6, 2019.

External links

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Season 1
Season 2
Season 3
Season 4
Season 5
Season 6
Season 7
Season 8
Season 9
† Indicates two-part episode
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