
Psychiatric News June 17, 2005
Volume 40 Number 12
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 2
Actress's Depression Helped Her Craft Role as Psychiatrist
Jim Rosack
Lorraine Bracco's struggle with depression helps her gain insights on
just how her character in the HBO series "The Sopranos" should act
when she is treating depression.
For the last five years Lorraine Bracco has played a psychiatrist on
television, treating the lead character on her show for depression. Now
Bracco, who plays Jennifer Melfi, M.D., on HBO's award-winning program
"The Sopranos," is telling the world that she has moved into the
real-world role of patient: she has suffered from depression, taken
medication, and "talked, talked, and talked."
"The irony hasn't escaped any of us," she said at APA's 2005
annual meeting last month in a session hosted by outgoing APA President
Michelle Riba, M.D.
Riba noted that it was important to have Bracco address the annual meeting
"to discuss the importance of the doctor-patient relationship in
overcoming the misconceptions and stigma that keep people from seeking
professional care."
Turning to her, Riba added, "Learning about your story is as
important to us as it is to the public."
"Indeed, my own experiences with depression helped me to create my
character," Bracco added, noting that her yearlong depressive episode
was in full swing when the pilot for the now highly acclaimed television show
was shot.
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Lorraine Bracco: "For over a year, I felt as though life were
happening around me, not with me. I was no longer experiencing any joy, any
happiness."
David Hathcox
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Bracco was initially slated by "Sopranos" creator David Chase
to play the part of Tony Soprano's wife, Carmela, a role eventually taken by
actress Edie Falco. However, Bracco said, she told Chase she really wanted to
play Dr. Melfi and gave him only one ultimatum: "I said, `You cannot
make me the psycho sex killer in the end.'"
Some see the character of Dr. Melfi as a realistic portrayal of the
difficulties in practicing psychiatry, including the delicacy of the
patient-doctor relationship.
"We've been fair and just in what a patient-doctor relationship is
really like," she told hundreds of annual meeting attendees. Others may
disagree on how fair or how accurate the portrayal is.
In one episode, Dr. Melfi's patient, Tony Soprano, played by actor James
Gandolfini, remarks, "This psychiatry shitapparently what you're
feeling is not what you're feeling, and what you're not feeling is your real
agenda."
That insight notwithstanding, Bracco's Melfi acknowledges on a separate
occasion the frustrations of caring for patients when she reveals to a
colleague, "I am drinking in between sessions."
The colleague circumspectly replies, "That's very serious."
Melfi, however, clarifies, "Just on the days when I see
[Tony]."
Bracco said she drew on her own life in fleshing out the character of
Jennifer Melfi, with loneliness being a key. Both she and Melfi, she noted,
have had bad marriages or failed relationships, and both have recently
"lost" children to college.
Bracco has also used her own struggle with depression to inform the scenes
between her character and that of Tony Soprano.
"We'll be going over a script, and there will be a line for me that
really is more appropriate from the patient's perspectivethat a
psychiatrist wouldn't necessarily say. And we'll change it," she
said.
In reality, Bracco said, she finds it easy to separate herself from
Melfi.
"I hear from people all the time that they talk to their therapists
about Dr. Melfi. I assure you, I don't talk to my psychiatrist about Jennifer
Melfi," she told press at a briefing following the annual meeting
session.
Bracco recounted what she termed "a really lousy decade" that
included many traumas. "For over a year, I felt as though life were
happening around me, not with me. I was no longer experiencing any joy, any
happiness," she said.
Bracco did not realize she had depression until her life was actually
"looking up." At that point, she did not consider getting
helpshe thought she "could handle it" on her own. She now
realizes that stigma played a significant role in her delay in seeking
treatment.
"I did not want to see a psychiatrist," she explained,
"and I did not want to take medication." She was "afraid
that medication would take away her range of emotion and interfere with her
ability to act.
When she did gain the courage to see a psychiatrist, however, the doctor
"listened to my symptoms and really took the extra steps to help me
understand that medications were O.K." He helped her "understand
how the medications worked, that they would not be a miracle cure, and that
they would take time."
As a result, Bracco continued, her expectations for medication and ensuing
talk therapy were realistic. Over several weeks, she began to notice she was
feeling better.
After about 15 months of medication and more than two and a half years of
talk therapy, Bracco feels well and continues to see her psychiatrist
regularly but less frequently. She is no longer on medication, but she would
not hesitate to take it again should the need arise, she emphasized.
"Stigma was my greatest enemy," she concluded. "I want to
help break stigma down and make mental health a public discussion. It is
incredible that I'm getting the opportunity to [tell the story of my
depression]. I've been told so many times that Dr. Melfi has inspired people.
Now I get to try to do that."
Bracco volunteered her time for the event "A Patient's
Perspective" and the press briefing that followed. Her travel expenses
were paid by Pfizer Inc. She has been working in partnership with Pfizer in
its consumer education campaign titled "Why Live With
Depression?," launched in March.
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