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* In August 2009, Albert Gonzalez is convicted for robbery being the most prolific hacker of credit cards (130 million). He operated on internet using the avatar : "Soupnazi". <ref>[http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-hacker18-2009aug18,0,6510041.story LAtimes.com]</ref>
* In August 2009, Albert Gonzalez is convicted for robbery being the most prolific hacker of credit cards (130 million). He operated on internet using the avatar : "Soupnazi". <ref>[http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-hacker18-2009aug18,0,6510041.story LAtimes.com]</ref>

* In the award winning Belgacom commercial (Belgium) the catch phrase is "No koffiekoeken for you". This is said to Robert de niro because he has stolen the bath rope of the main character.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:00, 14 September 2009

"The Soup Nazi"

"The Soup Nazi" is the title of the 116th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld, which was the 6th episode of the 7th season. It first aired in the United States on November 2, 1995 and is considered a classic episode of the series.

The Soup Nazi is also the nickname of the titular character played by Larry Thomas. The term "Nazi" is used as an exaggeration of the excessively strict regimentation he constantly demands of his patrons.

Plot

Jerry, George and Elaine go out to a new soup stand Kramer has been raving about; its owner is referred to as the "Soup Nazi" due to his temperament and insistence on a strict manner of behavior while ordering. Jerry explains the procedure for ordering which George accepts, but Elaine rebuffs. Elaine notices a sidewalk furniture dealer with an armoire for sale and decides to stop and buy it. However, when she returns to her building with it, the building superintendent tells her there is no moving on Sundays.

When Jerry and George get to the soup stand, George follows the procedure but notices that he did not get bread with his soup. Jerry tells him to let it go but he asks for some, and is told he will have to pay for it. George objects, claiming everybody in front of him got free bread, and quickly has his money returned and his soup taken back with the catchphrase "No soup for you!"

Meanwhile, Jerry has been annoying George and Elaine with his open affection and baby talk (calling each other "Schmoopie") towards his new girlfriend Sheila (Alexandra Wentworth). When Sheila will not stop kissing Jerry in line at the soup stand, the Soup Nazi orders her out of the line, and Jerry is forced to pretend he does not know her. When he finds out, George admits his annoyance to Jerry. Jerry later tells Sheila he was joking and makes up with her. When George finds out, he begins to act similarly with Susan to make a point. Susan misinterprets George's intentions and thinks that George is finally enjoying showing his feelings in public, continuing to act that way after Jerry again breaks up with Sheila.

Elaine asks Kramer to guard her armoire on the street overnight. When he arrives, she goes to the soup stand to get him soup. While she is gone, some homosexual "street toughs" intimidate Kramer and steal the armoire. Elaine ignores everyone's prior advice and annoys the Soup Nazi with her behavior. He refuses her soup and bans her from coming to his restaurant for one year. She returns to her building to find Kramer without the armoire. Kramer, who has become friends with the Soup Nazi, tells him the story in passing. The Soup Nazi offers Kramer an antique armoire he has in his basement. Kramer gives the armoire to Elaine as a replacement for her stolen one. Elaine goes to thank the Soup Nazi for the armoire, but the Soup Nazi declares that he never would have given it to Kramer if he knew it was for her. Offended, Elaine returns home to discover the Soup Nazi's secret soup recipes stored in the old armoire. She returns to his shop, recipes in hand, and declares that she is going to destroy him by exposing the recipes. Feeling ruined, the Soup Nazi decides to close the business and move back to Argentina.

The character

The Soup Nazi was portrayed by Larry Thomas, who was nominated for a 1996 Emmy for the role.[1] Thomas, who did not realize that the character was based on a real person, received the inspiration for his portrayal from watching Lawrence of Arabia and studying Omar Sharif's accent.[2]

A stone-faced immigrant chef with a thick Stalin-esque moustache, he is renowned throughout Manhattan for his soups. He demands that all customers in his restaurant meticulously follow his strict queuing, ordering, and payment policies. Failure to adhere to his demands brings the admonishment, "No soup for you!", whereupon the customer is refunded and denied his or her order.

The Soup Nazi character makes a brief cameo in the Seinfeld series finale, in which his name is revealed to be Yev Kasem.

Inspiration

The character was inspired by Al Yeganeh, a New York City soup vendor who ran Soup Kitchen International in midtown Manhattan at 259A West 55th Street, near 8th Avenue. The store closed during the summer; a sign posted outside informs customers that the chef is in "Argentina for the summer".[clarification needed][3]

According to an Associated Press article published April 29, 2005, Yeganeh planned to open a chain of soup stores called The Original Soup Man. The first franchise opened in Princeton, New Jersey, on October 24, 2005. His company, Soup Kitchen International, plans to open 1,000 outlets nationwide.[4] Soup Kitchen International's original West 55th Street location is now closed.

Prior to his fictional counterpart's appearance on Seinfeld, the real Al Yeganeh was unflatteringly referred to by local patrons as the "Terrorist." His soups were renowned for their excellent quality, but his interactions with customers seemed somewhat capricious. Some were granted extra side items like candy or bread, but no clear rules for this attention were ever established; this was referenced in episode by George's incident with the bread.

Before the episode was written, much of the cast of Seinfeld (including Wayne Knight) had been to Soup Kitchen International. One day, during production of the eighth season of Seinfeld, Seinfeld and several writers went to Yeganeh's soup stand for lunch. Upon recognizing Seinfeld, Yeganeh launched into a profanity-laced rant about how "The Soup Nazi" episode had "ruined his life", and he demanded an apology. Seinfeld gave what writer Spike Feresten described as "the most sarcastic, insincere apology" he'd ever heard. Yeganeh bellowed "No soup for you!" and ejected Seinfeld and his friends from the restaurant.[5]

According to Norah Ephron's DVD commentary, the first pop culture reference to Yeganeh (though not by name) seems to have come years before the Seinfeld episode, in the 1993 movie Sleepless in Seattle. In the film, a magazine writer discusses writing a story: "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."

Cosmo Kramer's inspiration, Kenny Kramer, mentions on his own website that he agrees that Yeganeh's nickname is unfair. He jokingly suggests his nickname be changed to "Al, The Soup Rat Bastard."

Legacy

  • Larry Thomas recently reprised his role as the Soup Nazi in a series of webisodes for Mattel to promote the game "Scene It: Seinfeld Edition." In the web series, the Soup Nazi auditions for other famous one-liners before finally hitting paydirt with "No soup for you!" The parodies include Basic Instinct, Apocalypse Now, A Few Good Men, Snakes on a Plane, Airplane! and other Seinfeld-isms like "Yada, yada, yada."
  • Larry Thomas appeared as himself in the Scrubs 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...'"
  • The Soup Nazi has been referred to in other television shows as well. In For British Eyes Only, a third season episode of Arrested Development, George Bluth, Sr. reveals he mistook Saddam Hussein for "the guy who plays the Soup Nazi," and for that reason was blamed for "light treason." Larry Thomas went on to guest star on the show as a Saddam Hussein impersonator.
  • "No Soup for You!!" was a category on Jeopardy!'s November 30, 2004 episode, which had Seinfeld-themed category names for the Jeopardy! round. (In the same episode Ken Jennings was finally defeated.)
  • On TV.com, users rated this the best ever episode of Seinfeld.
  • A Canadian chain restaurant called Pita Nutsy has a slogan, 'No pita for you!', imitating the Soup Nazi's famous words.
  • In Ben 10: Alien Force, Ben Tennyson references the Soup Nazi famous phrase when he says to Kevin Levin, "No juice for you!"
  • In an episode[which?] of Chowder at the end Chowder says to a group of fluffy lint like customers, "No food for you!"
  • In one episode[which?] of Bear in the Big Blue House, erstwhile character Jonathan Browne is refunded his money and denied the opportunity to buy bread when he somehow offends Lafferty, the baker. Lafferty illustrates this with his use of the phrase: "No grassy bills for you!"
  • In Larry's Giant Subs commercials with Soup Man Frenzy, a woman and her friend are holding up the line trying to pick a soup when an angry customer pushes forward saying "I want my soup!" to which the Soup man responds "NO soup for you!"
  • In Friends, Rachel's sister Amy confuses Ross with a guy who sells falafel. After she gets Ross mad, he cries out, "NO falafel for you!"
  • In August 2009, Albert Gonzalez is convicted for robbery being the most prolific hacker of credit cards (130 million). He operated on internet using the avatar : "Soupnazi". [6]
  • In the award winning Belgacom commercial (Belgium) the catch phrase is "No koffiekoeken for you". This is said to Robert de niro because he has stolen the bath rope of the main character.

References

  1. ^ See "Awards for Seinfeld." Internet Movie Database.
  2. ^ Confessions of a Soup Nazi
  3. ^ 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.
  4. ^ See the official website at The Original Soup Man.
  5. ^ See the Season 7 DVD extras, in which during the episode's "inside look", Feresten recounts this story.
  6. ^ LAtimes.com