Chase started in Hollywood as a
story editor for
Kolchak: The Night Stalker and then produced episodes of
The Rockford Files and
Northern Exposure, among other series. He also worked as a writer of 19
episodes while on
The Rockford Files—a show which he worked on in various capacities for more than four years. Although the one-hour series was well received by critics, only 10 episodes aired from November 1988 to February 1989.
The Sopranos , who played Jennifer Melfi, receiving the
Peabody Award for
The Sopranos in 2000 Chase worked in relative anonymity before
The Sopranos debuted. Chase got some input from his manager
Lloyd Braun and decided to adapt it into a television series. He drew heavily from his personal life and his experiences growing up in New Jersey, and has stated that he tried to apply his own "family dynamic to mobsters". For instance, the tumultuous relationship between series protagonist
Tony Soprano and his mother
Livia is partially based on Chase's relationship with his own mother. Chase had been fascinated by organized crime and the
mafia from an early age, witnessing such people growing up. He also was raised on classic gangster films such as
The Public Enemy and the crime series
The Untouchables. The series is partly inspired by the
Richard Boiardo family, a prominent New Jersey organized crime family when Chase was growing up, and partly on New Jersey's
DeCavalcante family. He has mentioned American playwrights
Arthur Miller and
Tennessee Williams as influences on the show's writing, and Italian director
Federico Fellini as an important influence on the show's cinematic style. The series was named after high school friends of his. Chase directed it himself. They finished the pilot and showed it to HBO executives, but the show was put on hold for several months. During this time, Chase, who had long experienced frustration at being unable to break out of TV and into film, He also directed the pilot episode and the
series finale (both of which he also wrote). Of the intentionally ambiguous final scene of the series finale that aired on June 10, 2007, Chase said, "I have no interest in explaining, defending, reinterpreting, or adding to what is there." In 2022, Chase and
Phil Abraham created a 2022 Super Bowl spot for Commonwealth / McCann with two characters from the show who appear in a 2021 New York City/New Jersey setting. In September 2024, HBO released a two-part documentary called
Wise Guy: David Chase and the Sopranos.
Not Fade Away Not Fade Away (2012), Chase's feature film debut, was released on December 21, 2012. It centers on the lead singer of a teenage
rock 'n' roll band (played by
John Magaro) in 1960s New Jersey. Described as "a music-driven coming-of-age story," the film reunites Chase with James Gandolfini (former star of
Sopranos), who co-stars as Magaro's father.
The Many Saints of Newark Although Chase was "against [the movie] for a long time",
Deadline Hollywood reported in March 2018 that
New Line Cinema had purchased the script for
The Many Saints of Newark, a prequel to
The Sopranos written by Chase and fellow screenwriter
Lawrence Konner. Chase said of the storyline, which centers on the
1967 Newark riots and racial tensions between the Italian-American and African-American communities, "I was interested in Newark and life in Newark at that time... I used to go down there every Saturday night for dinner with my grandparents. But the thing that interested me most was Tony's boyhood. I was interested in exploring that." The film was initially scheduled to be released on September 25, 2020, however, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, its release date was rescheduled to March 12, 2021 and later September 24, 2021 before ultimately being released on October 1, 2021. In October 2021, he and his Chase Films production company struck a deal with WarnerMedia. In March 2024, it was revealed that he will be directing an untitled horror movie for New Line Cinema. The screenplay will be written with Terrence Winter. ==Unrealized projects==