soup nazi

The gang all loves the soup from a new, temperamental cook unofficially called the “Soup Nazi”. [1]

Later this year, the real-life “Soup Nazi” will begin selling his bisques, chowders and gumbos at franchised locations throughout the country - but with one missing ingredient: Yeganeh is adamant that franchisees don’t use the term “Soup Nazi” in their promotional materials. [2]

Ali “Al” Yeganeh was the inspiration for the “Soup Nazi ” character in the similarly-named episode of the NBC television sitcom Seinfeld. [3]

View company contact information for The Soup Nazi on IMDbPro. [4]

Jerry and his girlfriend are beyond affectionate, and their nickname “Schmoopie” drives George crazy. [1]

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. [5]

It is somewhat difficult to separate fact from fiction in this case, as reporters interviewing Yeganeh tend to casually alienate him at once by mentioning “Seinfeld ” and the “Soup Nazi ” description, which he finds to be very offensive and degrading to him as a chef and entrepreneur. [3]

Tie-ins with “Seinfeld” will be “strongly discouraged” among franchisees, the company says. [2]

Elaine buys an antique armoire on the street, but it is stolen while being guarded by Kramer. [1]

It has been revealed that once, Jerry Seinfeld and several members of the production team went to Soup Kitchen International for lunch weeks after “The Soup Nazi” aired. [...] It is in this episode where Yeganeh is fictionally portrayed as the tyrannical purveyor of his soups, making all of his customers follow a strict set of rules if they wish to successfully procure a bowl of one of his coveted liquid masterpieces. [3]

Thomas, who did not realize that the character was based on a real person, received the inspiration for his portrayal from Omar Sharif’s performance in Lawrence of Arabia. [5]

“He’s a total character, and characters sell,” says John Bello, chairman and acting CEO of the new venture, also called Soup Kitchen International. [2]

Elaine notices a sidewalk furniture dealer with an armoire for sale and decides to stop and buy it. [5]

Yeganeh, who counts everyone from entertainment mogul Barry Diller to “60 Minutes” grouch Andy Rooney among his regular customers, is a fixture in the New York City area. [2]

Sources:
[1] Seinfeld: The Soup Nazi - TV.com
[2] Soup Nazi” Set to Franchise - Article
[3] Soup Kitchen International - Wikipedia
[4] “Seinfeld” The Soup Nazi (1995)
[5] The Soup Nazi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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