Frank Sinatra
About
Biography
Filmography
Family & Companions
Bibliography
Notes
In the annual theatre exhibitors' poll of the ten most popular boxoffice stars at the movies, Sinatra placed 10th in 1956, 5th in 1957, 10th in 1958, 7th in 1959, 8th in 1960 and 8th in 1962.
Presented by Austria with the Cross of Science and Arts (1984).
Biography
The first, and possibly the greatest American musical superstar, Frank Sinatra was inarguably one of the most successful, multi-talented entertainers of the 20th-Century. Starting out as a crooner with bandleaders like Tommy Dorsey in the late-1930s, by 1942 "Sinatramania" had swept the country and his live performances were causing riots. Just as suddenly, a combination of damaged vocal cords, reputed ties to organized crime, and a torrid romance between the still married Sinatra and actress Ava Gardner conspired to end Sinatra's reign by 1950. In one of the most incredible career resurrections of all-time, he reinvented himself with an Oscar-winning performance in "From Here to Eternity" (1953), followed by a string of era-defining hit records with Capitol, such as Come Fly with Me! and Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely. Sinatra cultivated his larger-than-life persona with his celebrity buddies, the "Rat Pack," who were immortalized in the hip crime-comedy "Ocean's Eleven" (1960) and rubbed shoulders with the likes of President John F. Kennedy. Always eager for new challenges, he founded his own record company and earned more rave reviews for roles in films like "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962). Although he retired briefly in the early '70s, Sinatra returned soon after to thrill longtime fans with more sold out concerts and chart-topping albums like 1993's Duets, right up until his 80th birthday. Over the course of his 60-year career, Sinatra elevated popular music to an art form while he attained the status of legend - the Chairman of the Board.
Born on Dec. 12, 1915 in Hoboken, NJ, Francis "Frank" Albert Sinatra was the only son of Italian immigrants Natalie "Dolly" and Anthony Martin Sinatra. His father worked as captain with the Hoboken Fire Department and boxed on the side, while his mother was a noted figure in the local Democratic Party, but also performed then-illegal abortions behind closed doors - a risky enterprise that landed her in jail on more than one occasion. Although he had never learned to read music, Sinatra taught himself to sing by ear and after seeing Bing Crosby perform, the young Sinatra announced his intention to become a professional singer to his skeptical parents in the early 1930s. Given permission by his mother - by all accounts an imposing figure and major force in her son's life - the teenager dropped out of high school and eventually joined a trio of young vocalists, called The Three Flashes, who were willing to take on another singer. Renamed the Hoboken Four, they went on to win first prize, in the form of six-month touring contract, on the popular "Major Bowes' Original Amateur Hour" radio program. Sinatra's time with the group was short-lived, however, and before long he was back home and working as a singing waiter and MC at a local resort for $15 a week.
Not long after recording his first demo record, titled "Our Love," in early 1939, Sinatra signed on with bandleader Harry James. The young crooner recorded and toured extensively with James for six months until he was lured away by competing bandleader Tommy Dorsey, one of the biggest acts in the country at the time. Under Dorsey's leadership, Sinatra's public exposure increased exponentially, as did his own vocal ability. The relationship was also a strained one from the start, as his contract with Dorsey entitled the bandleader to a full third of Sinatra's lifetime earnings as an entertainer. Although Billboard magazine had voted him Best Male Vocalist of 1941, Sinatra increasingly chaffed under his serf-like deal with Dorsey and sought to escape the confines of their agreement. After buying out of his contract - a mystery-shrouded event that ignited rumors of payoffs, coercion and mob connections which would dog Sinatra for the rest of his days - the vocalist embarked on a solo career the likes of which the entertainment world had never seen before.
Sinatra exploded onto the scene as a solo artist with his historic opening at New York's famed Paramount Theater, where he performed to throngs of screaming "bobby soxers" - young female fans of swing music in general, and Sinatra, in particular. Newly signed to Columbia, the record company enjoyed brisk sales during the musician's strike of 1942-44 by re-releasing Sinatra's earlier recordings made with James' band. Stoked by the crooner's endless touring and radio performances, "Sinatramania" reached its zenith in 1944 with what would be called "The Columbus Day Riot" after 35,000 fans went berserk trying to gain entrance to Sinatra's sold out return to the Paramount. It took literally hundreds of police to subdue the frenzied crowd. Deemed unfit by the U.S. military, due to a perforated eardrum suffered during his traumatic birth, Sinatra did not serve during World War II. His nearly ubiquitous presence in the media during that time, in part, allowed Sinatra to become the obsession of millions of lonely young woman across the country, while generating resentment from many jealous servicemen overseas.
Sinatra's domination of the entertainment world continued on all fronts as the war neared its end. For Columbia, he released his first concept album, The Voice of Frank Sinatra, which spent weeks at the No. 1 position on the Billboard charts. Having initially signed with RKO a few years prior, Sinatra increased his visibility - as well as his per film salary - with a growing list of movie appearances for MGM. A typical role for Sinatra during this period was that of a wide-eyed innocent, charmingly unaware of his appeal to the fairer sex. It was an onscreen persona he exploited to the fullest in a series of movies alongside hoofer Gene Kelly that began with the musical romantic-comedy "Anchors Aweigh" (1945). Also well-received was the feel-good post-WWII romance "It Happened in Brooklyn" (1947), co-starring English actor Peter Lawford, who would become a close friend of Sinatra's for years to come. Then, just as quickly as he had ascended to superstardom, the performer began an equally precipitous decline as the decade neared its end.
The downslide in Sinatra's popularity began in 1947 with widespread rumors of his association with mobsters like Lucky Luciano; exacerbated - if not completely fabricated - by the likes of newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst who notoriously despised the singer's then-liberal political leanings. Both concert attendance and record sales had slipped, and a film that miscast him as a priest - "The Miracle of the Bells" (1948) - left skeptical audiences unconvinced. Although his second effort with Kelly, "On the Town" (1949), met with success, Sinatra's fall from grace continued into the next decade with feature flops like "Double Dynamite" (1951) and "Meet Danny Wilson" (1952). What audiences did not see was more behind the scenes turmoil in the form of hemorrhaged vocal chords suffered during an earlier live performance, which noticeably roughened his famously velveteen voice. Sinatra's marriage to his first wife, Nancy Barbato, was also in shambles, due in no small part to his torrid affair with film beauty Ava Gardner. Following his divorce from Barbato, Sinatra embarked on a notoriously stormy marriage to Gardner, one that effectively ended in separation two years later, followed by their eventual divorce. Having lacked a hit record for a number of years and relegated to recording such novelty songs as "Mama Will Bark" in 1951, the crooner was dropped by MCA and Columbia in 1952. To even the most casual observer, it seemed as if Sinatra's meteoric career had all but burned itself out.
That was not to say that Sinatra had been entirely abandoned by his fans. A loyal disc jockey, opining that the performer deserved a moniker befitting his stature, dubbed Sinatra "The Chairman of the Board" for the first time during this low period and, despite his ebb in popularity, the name stuck. Always a fighter himself, Sinatra's salvation came in the form of an irrepressible scrapper named Angelo Maggio. The big-budget adaptation of James Jones' best-selling novel "From Here To Eternity" (1953) was expected to be one of the most anticipated movies of the year, and nearly every star in Hollywood wanted a part in it. First suggested by Gardner, whose star was on the ascension, Sinatra saw the role of the doomed Private Maggio as his ticket to a much needed comeback. So hungry was he for the part that after the initially cast Eli Wallach dropped out of the role, Sinatra agreed to cut his usual fee to a mere $8,000 in order to seal the deal. It was a gamble that yielded spectacular results, as Sinatra's moving performance in the drama about the loves and lives of a group of soldiers in the days leading up to Pearl Harbor not only reinvigorated his career, but also won him an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Sinatra was back.
Sinatra attacked his second chance with gusto when he signed a one-year contract with Capitol Records, where he was soon partnered with conductor-arranger Nelson Riddle. In collaboration with Riddle, the performer literally reinvented himself as a vocalist, crafting the classic Sinatra sound by deftly employing dramatic string arrangements with a deeply personal, idiosyncratic vocal styling. Taking full advantage of the recent advancements in high fidelity and the long-playing record (LP), Sinatra, working with arrangers like Riddle and Billy May, churned out a string of era-defining albums, including Swing Easy!, In the Wee Small Hours, Songs for Swingin' Lovers and Come Fly With Me. Sinatra embraced the leading songwriters of his day, interpreting Cole Porter, Ira Gershwin, Johnny Mercer, E.Y. Harburg and Lorenz Hart and irrevocably stamping their standards as his own in the process. The songwriting team of Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, however, stood out amidst these lions as crafting alternately jaunty and melodramatic songs that tapped into Sinatra's everyman appeal and capitalized on his unique phrasing ability.
Emboldened by his Oscar win, Sinatra built upon his screen success, going on to become one of the biggest movie stars of the era with several memorable roles. As the star of the crime-noir "Suddenly" (1954) he played a would-be assassin holding a small town family hostage as he awaits his victim: the President of the United States. Sinatra then stunned audiences and critics alike with his portrayal of a heroin addict in Otto Preminger's controversial "The Man with the Golden Arm" (1955), for which he earned another Best Actor nomination. At this point, Sinatra was conquering on all fronts, winning a Best Actor Golden Globe for his performance as a charming womanizer in "Pal Joey" (1957) then picking up the first of his many Grammy Awards for the album Come Dance With Me! in 1959. However, despite his continued success at Capitol, an increasingly restless and dissatisfied Sinatra wanted a record label of his own and consequently founded Reprise in 1960, through which released the hugely popular LP Ring-A-Ding-Ding the following year.
The desert boomtown of Las Vegas had long been a profitable business opportunity as well as a personal playground for Sinatra, who, in the early-1950s, acquired a percentage of the Sands Hotel, where he enjoyed a lucrative exclusive engagement contract for a number of years. In 1960, Sinatra also became partial owner of the Cal Neva Lodge & Casino, until he was stripped of his gaming license for nearly two decades after mobster Sam Giancana was spotted on the premises. As usual, Sinatra's social life continued to grab nearly as many headlines as his performances. Originally referring to a group that gathered around Humphrey Bogart, Sinatra and his hip celebrity pals Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop were dubbed the new "Rat Pack" by members of the press. Preferring to call themselves "The Summit" - a not-so-subtle reference to their status as Hollywood A-listers - the group frequently mixed business with pleasure, both partying and performing at the Sands and other glitzy locales on the Vegas Strip throughout the swinging '60s. The very definition of sophisticated cool during the era, the Vegas heist comedy "Ocean's Eleven" (1960) was considered the definitive Rat Pack movie, although several others would follow.
Peter Lawford, then married to Democratic Senator John F. Kennedy's sister Patricia, introduced his friend Frank to JFK, who notoriously enjoyed carousing with Sinatra's star-studded cronies, sex symbol Marilyn Monroe among them. For his part, Sinatra was so impressed by the political rising star that he even dubbed his clique the "Jack Pack" for a short time. Sinatra stumped hard for Kennedy during the 1960 presidential campaign, visited Hyannis Port, traveled on the President's private plane, cruised with the President on his yacht the Honey Fitz and even escorted the newly-minted First Lady, Jacqueline Kennedy, to the inaugural ball which he had organized. Desperately wanting inside the circle of power at the White House, Sinatra went so far as to completely remodel his Palm Springs house - even constructing a helipad for the President's arrival - in anticipation of a planned stay by President Kennedy in 1963. The U.S. Attorney General, Robert F. Kennedy, however, nixed the plan, thinking it would look bad to have his brother cavorting with a man with alleged mob ties; it was left to brother-in-law Lawford to break the news to The Chairman of the Board. So offended was he by the snub, that Sinatra effectively ended his friendship with Lawford that day, cutting him out the Rat Pack circle, and by the end of the decade he began to shift away from his left-wing leanings and increasingly into the fold of the Republican party.
On the big screen, Sinatra continued to deliver solid performances in several notable films. One of the most memorable of his career was Sinatra's turn as the stalwart, perceptive Bennett Marco in the political psychodrama, "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962), a film that eerily foreshadowed the assassination of JFK a year later. After clowning his way through "Robin and the Seven Hoods" (1964) with the Rat Pack, Sinatra hit box-office gold with the WWII action-adventure "Von Ryan's Express" (1965) and made his directorial debut with "None but the Brave" (1965), another wartime actioner. That same year, he won an Emmy for his televised special "Frank Sinatra: A Man and His Music" (NBC, 1965), then picked up a pair of Grammys two years later for his hugely popular album Strangers in the Night. In addition to his victories as an entertainer, Sinatra had become a winner in the business world as well. In addition to his earlier arrangement with the Sands - which had earned him $100,000 for each week he performed - and his holdings in Cal Neva, he had made shrewd investments in such areas as charter airlines, music publishing, radio, restaurants and real estate.
A successful marriage, however, remained an elusive goal for Sinatra, who was still in love with his ex-wife Gardner, the one woman he could never tame. He raised eyebrows and sent the tabloids into a printing frenzy with his 1966 marriage to waifish ingénue Mia Farrow, nearly 30 years his junior. The unlikely union ended soon after the actress angered Sinatra by choosing the lead role in director Roman Polanski's "Rosemary's Baby" (1968) over a supporting part in his police-drama "The Detective" (1968). Farrow was served with divorce papers while shooting the classic horror movie - which went on to become a cultural phenomenon, while "The Detective" performed respectably at the box office before ultimately fading into obscurity. By the end of the decade Sinatra began to wind down his career as a film star with B-movie efforts like the private eye thrillers "Tony Rome" (1967) and its sequel "Lady in Cement" (1968). His music endeavors still provided him with hits, such as the 1969 anthem "My Way." Written by Paul Anka specifically for Sinatra, it told the story of a man looking back on his eventful life with no regrets. It was a sentiment the 52-year-old entertainer could identify with. His fans felt the same and it soon became the song most identified with Sinatra throughout the remainder of his career.
The time and tastes were definitely changing and after starring in the Western comedy "Dirty Dingus Magee" (1970), Sinatra would not be seen in a feature film for a decade. Showing outward signs of fatigue for the first time, he dramatically announced his retirement at the end of a 1971 concert. In 1973, Sinatra returned and released another hit album appropriately titled Ol' Blue Eyes is Back. Without skipping a beat, he was selling out massive concerts at venues like Madison Square Garden and once again performing in Las Vegas. Eventually he resumed his film career - however briefly - with a highly-praised performance in the crime-thriller "The First Deadly Sin" (1980), opposite Faye Dunaway. Having embraced the Republican Party in the years after his falling out with JFK, Sinatra was an avid supporter of former film star Ronald Reagan during the 1980 Presidential election, stumping just as hard for the Gipper as he had for Kennedy. Outside of politics, though, Sinatra continued to do what he did best - break concert attendance and sales records, release popular albums like Trilogy: Past Present Future and L.A. is My Lady and score TV ratings gold with an appearance in a 1987 episode of the hit series "Magnum, P.I." (CBS, 1980-88).
Sinatra's youngest daughter, Tina Sinatra, later produced the biographical TV miniseries "Sinatra" (CBS, 1992). Starring Phillip Casnoff as the eponymous crooner, Gina Gershon as first wife Nancy, Marcia Gaye Hardin as Ava Gardner and Nina Siemaszko as Mia Farrow, it benefited from the full cooperation of the Sinatra clan. Although his voice had long since lost its lustrous sheen, he thrilled longtime fans and reached a new audience with the 1993 album Duets, which boasted collaborations with a diverse array of musical all-stars, including Barbara Streisand, Gloria Estefan and U2's Bono. A follow-up to the immensely successful album was quickly released the next year to nearly equal fanfare. Back in the public eye to a degree he had not enjoyed in years, Sinatra continued to tour around the world, although his failing health and fading memory were causes of concern for family members like his fourth and final wife, Barbara Marx. A dangerous fall on stage in 1994 preceded his final concert appearances at Japan's Fukuoka Dome in December of that year. After being presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award by Bono at the 1994 Grammy ceremony, Sinatra sang publicly for the last time before a select crowd at a private function in February of 1995.
Mere days after his gala 80th birthday celebration, Sinatra was dealt a devastating emotional blow by the death of longtime friend and collaborator Dean Martin. His final years were spent in seclusion as both a mild heart attack and stroke further contributed to his rapidly declining health. On May 14, 1998, Sinatra reluctantly relinquished his hold on a life he had lived to the fullest when he suffered a heart attack at the age of 82. Encouraged by Barbara to keep fighting, Sinatra's reported final words revealed a man who saw even the Grim Reaper as an adversary to overcome - "I'm losing." The icon's death sent the country into a nationwide period of shock and mourning not seen since the passing of Elvis Presley and John Lennon. That following night, the lights on the Las Vegas Strip were dimmed in his honor, while luminaries as varied as President Bill Clinton and pop star Elton John expressed their profound respect and appreciation for the great entertainer. Following a private ceremony attended by the likes of Gregory Peck, Tony Bennett, Tony Curtis, Kirk Douglas and Sophia Loren, Sinatra was buried near his parents in a small cemetery in Cathedral City, CA, near his compound in Rancho Mirage.
Truly a towering figure in American culture, Sinatra would never completely leave the public consciousness. His iconic status ensured that the legend would live on through his music and films. In addition of books written about the man and his life, movie projects like "The Rat Pack" (HBO, 1998), which cast Ray Liotta as the Chairman, made a respectable bid to capture the style and swagger of the group's heyday. Director Ron Underwood's telepic "Stealing Sinatra" (Showtime, 2003) was an off-kilter look at the 1965 kidnapping of the entertainer's son Frank Sinatra, Jr. from the P.O.V. of the bumbling criminals (David Arquette and William H Macy). A more formal tribute came in 2008, when the U.S. Postal Service issued a 42-cent postage stamp in Sinatra's honor, depicting "Ol' Blue Eyes" in a signature image from the 1950s.
By Bryce Coleman
Filmography
Director (Feature Film)
Cast (Feature Film)
Producer (Feature Film)
Music (Feature Film)
Misc. Crew (Feature Film)
Director (Special)
Cast (Special)
Producer (Special)
Music (Special)
Misc. Crew (Special)
Cast (Short)
Misc. Crew (Short)
Music (TV Mini-Series)
Life Events
1915
Weighed close to 15 pounds at birth; appeared stillborn until his grandmother held him under a cold water faucet
1935
Attatched himself to the 'Three Flashes' trio; on September 8th, they appeared as the 'Hoboken Four' on radio's "Major Bowes' Amateur Hour", winning that night with 40,000 people calling in--the then-largest vote in the show's history; toured with the quartet for six months
1940
Hired away by Tommy Dorsey for $100 a week; recorded more than 80 songs with Dorsey's orchestra, including "Stardust", "This Love of Mine" and "I'll Never Smile Again"
1941
Screen debut in "Las Vegas Nights" (as singer with Tommy Dorsey Band)
1943
Feature acting debut, "Higher and Higher"
1943
First solo hit, a recording of the Cole Porter standard, "Night and Day"
1945
First of three films with Gene Kelly, "Anchors Aweigh"
1945
Won a Special Academy Award for "The House I Live In", a progressive short about racial tolerance
1949
Acted opposite Kelly in what is considered Sinatra's best film of the decade, "On the Town", co-directed by Kelly and Stanley Donen
1953
Signed to recording contract by Capitol Records (date approximate)
1953
Begged executives at Columbia Pictures to play the key supporting role of Maggio in an all-star production of "From Here to Eternity"; agreed to play the part for only $8000; won Best Supporting Actor Oscar
1955
Co-starred with Marlon Brando and Vivian Blaine in film version of "Guys and Dolls"
1955
Earned Best Actor Oscar nomination for Otto Preminger's "The Man With the Golden Arm"
1955
Played the Stage Manager in TV adaptation of "Our Town" (NBC), intorduced the song "Love and Marriage"
1956
Co-starred with Grace Kelly and Bing Crosby in "High Society", a musicalized version of "The Philadelphia Story" with songs by Cole Porter
1956
First producing credit, "Johnny Concho" (also starred in title role)
1957
Portrayed nightclub performer Joe E Lewis in the biopic "The Joker Is Wild"
1959
Released "Come Dance with Me" (Capital), remained on charts for 140 weeks
1960
Co-starred in what is considered the epitome of 'The Rat Pack' films "Oceans Eleven"
1961
Left Capitol to form own record label, Reprise
1962
Starred in John Frankenheimer's political thriller "The Manchurian Candidate"
1963
Sold two-thirds of Reprise to Warner Bros. for more than $3 million capital gain
1965
Only directing credit, "None but the Brave" (also starred in and produced)
1966
Starred in the TV special, "Frank Sinatra: A Man and His Music", which received a Peabody Award; show also featured daughter Nancy
1967
Last Number 1 hit single, "Something Stupid", a duet with his daughter Nancy Sinatra (his first gold single)
1970
Last feature acting role for a decade, "Dirty Dingus Magee"
1971
Announced his retirement from show business; was back working again within two years
1974
Was one of the hosts/narrators of the compilation film "That's Entertainment"
1977
TV dramatic acting debut in the NBC movie "COntract on Cherry Street"
1980
Returned to films as star of "The First Deadly Sin"
1983
Honored with a tribute at Kennedy Center
1990
Last screen appearance in the documentary "Listen Up", a biographical portrait of composer-producer Quincy Jones
1990
Performed on the TV special, "Sinatra 75: The Best Is Yet to Come" (CBS)
1992
Was the subject of the five-hour TV miniseries, "Sinatra" (CBS), produced by daughter Tina
1995
Empire State Building glowed blue in honor of Ole Blue Eyes' 80th birthday
1995
ABC aired the tribute special "Sinatra: 80 Years My Way"
1997
Suffered "an uncomplicated heart attack" (January 9)
Photo Collections
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Promo
Family
Companions
Bibliography
Notes
In the annual theatre exhibitors' poll of the ten most popular boxoffice stars at the movies, Sinatra placed 10th in 1956, 5th in 1957, 10th in 1958, 7th in 1959, 8th in 1960 and 8th in 1962.
Presented by Austria with the Cross of Science and Arts (1984).
Received an honorary doctorate from Stevens Institute of Technology in 1985. It was Sinatra's first official return to the city of his birth since presented with the key to Hoboken in 1947.
His fabled fall and dramatic resurgence allegedly served as the basis for the Johnny Fontane character in Mario Puzo's novel "The Godfather" and its 1972 film adaptation.
"He created the art of intimate singing. He's taught us all how to sing psychologically. In the old days, singers used to belt songs so [fans] could hear you in the back row. Frank sings like he feels." --Tony Bennett in USA Today, December 10, 1990.
"It's not just the songs, but how he sings them. You believe the story when he sings. He sells a great lyric." --George Burns in USA Today, December 10, 1990
"No one can touch him." --Jim Morrison, lead singer of the legendary rock band The Doors.
"My first recollection of Frank's voice was coming out of a jukebox in a dark bar on a Sunday afternoon, when my mother and I went searching for my father, and I remember she said, 'Listen to that, that's Frank Sinatra. He's from Jersey.' It was a voice filled with bad attitude, life, beauty, excitement, a nasty sense of freedom, sex, and a sad knowledge of the ways of the world. Every song seemed to have as its postscript 'And if you don't like, here's a punch in the kisser.' But it was the deep blueness of Frank's voice that affected me the most, and, while his music became synonymous with black tie, good life, the best booze, women, sophistication, his blues voice was always the sound of hard luck and men late at night with the last ten dollars in their pockets trying to figure a way out. On behalf of all New Jersey, Frank, I want to say, 'Hail, brother, you sang out your soul.'" --Bruce Springsteen during a televised homage to Sinatra in honor his 80th birthday.
Presided over the Friars Club as the Abbot.
"He was the loneliest man I've ever known." --actor-producer Brad Dexter recalling Sinatra in GQ, November 1999.