Frank Sinatra

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  • FRANK SINATRA


    Information from IMDb


    Date of Birth
    12 December 1915, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA


    Date of Death
    14 May 1998, Los Angeles, California, USA (heart & kidney disease; bladder cancer)


    Birth Name
    Francis Albert Sinatra


    Nickname
    The Voice
    Chairman of the Board (of Show Business)
    Ol' Blue Eyes
    Swoonatra
    The Sultan of Swoon
    La Voz


    Height
    5' 7" (1.70 m)


    Spouse
    Barbara Marx (11 July 1976 - 14 May 1998) (his death)
    Mia Farrow (19 July 1966 - 16 August 1968) (divorced)
    Ava Gardner (7 November 1951 - 5 July 1957) (divorced)
    Nancy Barbato (4 February 1939 - 29 October 1951) (divorced) 3 children


    Trade Mark
    Crooning voice


    Black fedora


    Blue eyes


    Sports coat


    Always wore a three piece suit or tuxedo


    Use of 1950's slang


    Trivia
    Some three decades late, the Hungarian-born actress Eva Bartok claimed that her daughter, Deana, born in 1957 during Bartok's marriage to the actor Curd Jürgens, was actually fathered by Sinatra, during a brief affair that he and Bartok had had following his breakup in 1956 with the sultry Ava Gardner. Sinatra never acknowledged paternity.


    Thought by many to be the finest American popular singer of our time.


    Father of Nancy Sinatra, Tina Sinatra, and Frank Sinatra Jr..


    Inspired the Johnny Fontaine character in The Godfather (1972).


    Member (leader) of the "Rat Pack" - Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop. All appeared in Ocean's Eleven (1960) and Sergeants 3 (1962).


    Interred at Desert Memorial Park, Cathedral City, California, USA. Specific Interment Location: B-8, #151.


    According to Mia Farrow's biography, 'What Falls Away', he offered to have Woody Allen's legs broken when he was found to be having an affair with her adopted daughter, Soon-Yi Previn.


    Reportedly kept a picture of Ava Gardner on his mirror long after their break up.


    Former father-in-law of Tommy Sands. His daughter Nancy Sinatra and Sands were married on 11 September 1960 and divorced in 1965.


    One-time son-in-law of John Farrow and Maureen O'Sullivan.


    Brother-in-law of John Charles Farrow, Prudence Farrow, Stephanie Farrow and Tisa Farrow.


    A provision in his will is that if anyone contests it, they are automatically disinherited.


    The epitaph on his headstone reads "The best is yet to come."


    At his funeral, friends and family members placed items in his coffin that had personal references. These are reported to include ten dimes, several Tootsie Roll candies, a pack of Black Jack chewing gum, a roll of wild cherry Life Savers candy, a ring engraved with the word "Dream", a mini bottle of Jack Daniels whiskey, a pack of Camel cigarettes and a Zippo cigarette lighter.


    Godfather of singer Nikka Costa.


    Permanently injured one of his fingers while shooting a fight scene in The Manchurian Candidate (1962). In the scene, Sinatra threw a Karate chop and his hand went through a solid wooden table, breaking several bones in his little finger. The footage was left in the final cut.


    Was, at one time, part owner of the Sands Hotel/Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, and the Cal-Neva Lodge in Lake Tahoe. As the name implies, the latter was bisected by the California-Nevada borderline.


    Named Humanitarian of the Year by the Variety Clubs of America in 1983.


    A forcep delivery at his birth left permanent scars on his cheek and ruptured an eardrum. The latter is the reason most often given for his being exempted from service during World War II.


    Became estranged with Dean Martin during the final years of their lives, ever since Dean quit 'The Together Again Tour'.


    An accomplished amateur painter, he not only recorded the Grammy-winning album "Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely" (Capitol: 1958), but designed the cover art, as well.


    Had numerous #1 albums, and seven #1 singles (or more, depending on whether you include the songs he sang fronting a big-band): "Five Minutes More", "Leanin' the Blues", "Mam'selle", "Oh! What It Seemed To Be" "Strangers in the Night", "All Or Nothing At All" with the Harry James Band, and "Somethin' Stupid", shared with his daughter Nancy Sinatra. He also has four #1 hits singing as the front singer of the Tommy Dorsey Band, although he was not directly credited as the artist. These include "I'll Never Smile Again", "Dolores", "There Are Such Things", "In The Blue Of Evening".


    Received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the 1971 Academy Awards for his many contributions to charity over the years. Bob Hope, who hosted the Oscars that year, remarked, "It's interesting how Sinatra announced his retirement, and they gave him a humanitarian award". Sinatra himself hosted or co-hosted the Academy Awards four different times, in 1963, 1969, 1975 and 1985.


    While filming a kidnapping scene for the film Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964), he learned that his son, singer Frank Sinatra Jr., had been kidnapped from his hotel room in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. For obvious reasons, the scene was never used in the completed film.


    His album "Frank Sinatra Conducts Tone Poems of Color" (Capitol: 1955) not only was rare in the sense that he conduced an orchestra as opposed to singing, but was also the first album to be recorded at the Capitol [Records] Tower, today a prominent landmark at Hollywood and Vine in Los Angeles.


    In 1960, when he was in the process of forming his own label, Reprise Records, he pointed out the Capitol Tower to a friend, saying, "See that? I helped build that. Now, it's time to build one of my own." A few years later, referring to his label's success, he stated, "We may not be a Cadillac yet, but we ain't no Bug [Volkswagen], neither."


    While filming a funeral scene in Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964), he learned that his close friend and benefactor, President John F. Kennedy, had been killed in Dallas earlier that day.


    Named Entertainer of the Century in 2000.


    Served as a mentor to performer Harry Connick Jr., whom he referred to as "The Kid".


    Inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1980.


    Was originally signed on to play Billy Bigelow in Carousel (1956), but he walked off the set on the first day of filming after he found out that they were going to shoot each scene twice, using two different lens sizes, and was quoted as saying "I was paid to make one movie, not two".


    Second cousin of composer/arranger/conductor Raymond Sinatra. Ray Sinatra's father was a cousin of his father.


    Mentioned in the Marillion song "Sugar Mice" (from their 1987 album "Clutching at Straws").


    His death is referred to in the Badly Drawn Boy song "You Were Right".


    Was best friends with Dean Martin. Of all the members of the Rat Pack, he considered Dean his closest confidant and best friend.


    On 14 May 1998, his last day of life, his family drove him to the hospital, frantically running stop signs and red lights. However, traffic was unusually light at that time, since many Americans were at home watching the final episode of the TV show "Seinfeld" (1990).


    Writer of several songs including "This Love of Mine" and "I'm a Fool to Want You.".


    Divorced his third wife Mia Farrow after she refused to quit filming the classic thriller Rosemary's Baby (1968) in order to co-star with him in Rat Pack crime drama The Detective (1968). He had the divorce papers delivered to her on set.


    In On the Town (1949), he co-sang "New York, New York". Years later, he used the song "Theme From New York, New York" (first performed by friend Liza Minnelli, and commonly referred to as simply "New York, New York") as a showstopper in his live performances.In his "Concert For The Americas"(1982) he combined the 2 songs,using the first verse of the earlier song.


    Played the Stage Manager in a musical version of "Our Town" on a TV special in 1955, with Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint playing George and Emily. In that production, he introduced what would become another of his well-known signature songs: "Love and Marriage."


    Turned down the lead role in The Pajama Game (1957), which would have paired him up with Janis Paige, who played the role on Broadway. As a result, Paige lost out on playing the part to Doris Day, who was considered a bigger box- office draw.


    Godfather to Quinn Gonzalez


    Was the first choice to play the title role in Dirty Harry (1971), but broke his finger before shooting started and had to bow out of the production.


    When Bela Lugosi died virtually penniless, Sinatra quietly paid for his funeral.


    Grandfather of singer A.J. Lambert.


    He was voted the 59th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.


    He was known for his mercurial personality, as all those who were close to him knew, he could be as sweet as a person could be one minute and equally as nasty and violent in the next moment. Some theorized that he was bipolar.


    Turned down the role of Paul Kersey in Death Wish (1974). It was eventually given to Charles Bronson, and was the role that made him an international superstar.


    He was drafted into the Army during World War II but got a 4F because of a damaged eardrum, something that was apparent at birth after a complicated delivery using forceps.


    The only member of the "Rat Pack" to win an Academy Award


    He and the other members of the Rat Pack were banned from Marilyn Monroe's funeral by Joe DiMaggio


    While on a tour in 1974 which included Australia, Sinatra became enraged by his treatment by members of the Australian press. After a brief scuffle at the airport, he appeared on stage and delivered a hateful tirade against the press, calling them "bums and parasites," and calling the female reporters "buck-and-a-half hookers." In retaliation, the aviation union refused to refuel or otherwise maintain his private jet until he apologized. He never did. He was spirited away in the night after intervention by a high-level union leader.


    Though he had a lot of affairs during his marriage with his first wife Nancy, it was his relationship with Ava Gardner that finally led to a divorce.


    Was broke by 1951. Ava Gardner had to pay his plane ticket, so he could accompany her to Africa, where she shot Mogambo (1953).


    His heritage was entirely Italian.


    Owned an extensive collection of electric toy trains. He had coveted electric trains as a boy and set up a track that wove through the path of his career. The train started at a replica of the Hoboken train station.


    Was offered the role of "Don Altobello" in The Godfather: Part III (1990). Even though he had been a vocal critic of the first "Godfather" film, which featured a character based on him, he was intrigued by the offer, reportedly because the first two "Godfather" films had been so successful. Ultimately, he declined the offer and The part was played by Eli Wallach, whom Sinatra competed with for the role of Maggio in From Here to Eternity (1953).


    Called "Something", written by George Harrison and performed by The Beatles, one of his favorite songs.


    Was such a big fan of Chicago's song, "Colour My World" that he offered to write a second stanza to it.


    In 1963, his son, Frank Sinatra Jr. was kidnapped. The kidnappers told Frank Sr. to call them from pay phones. During one call, he ran out of coins, and briefly feared that the loss had cost him his son (the kidnappers gave him another chance). He paid the $250,000 ransom, Frank Jr. was returned, and the kidnappers were eventually caught. However, as a result of the payphone scare, Sinatra swore never to be caught without dimes again, and carried a roll of dimes with him constantly until his death.


    Was in line to star in Dirty Harry (1971) as was noted in several trade papers at the time. Irvin Kershner was slated to direct, but Sinatra had to back out of the project because of some trouble with a broken bone in his hand, although it has been suggested that he wanted to act in something lighter after the recent death of his father.


    Sinatra saw Steve McQueen in his western TV series "Wanted: Dead or Alive" (1958) and requested him to take Sammy Davis Jr.'s role in Never So Few (1959). Davis had said in an interview he thought he was bigger than Sinatra in the entertainment world at that time. Since Davis' role in the film was originally written as a sidekick, it had to be re-written somewhat for McQueen. During filming they got along so well that Sinatra wanted McQueen to appear in Ocean's Eleven (1960) as the cowboy Louis Jackson. McQueen was all for it but was convinced otherwise by critic Hedda Hopper, who told him it would not be a wise career move to be known as a Sinatra flunky. McQueen passed on the film, and although there were no hard feelings his brief friendship with Sinatra came to an end.


    Godfather of Lorna Luft.


    Was considered for the role of Nicky Arnstein in Funny Girl (1968). This was vetoed by Barbra Streisand, as she didn't like him. The role was eventually played by Omar Sharif.


    Lee J. Cobb credited Sinatra with saving his life after his career was nearly ruined by his defiance of the House Un-American Activities Committee investigating Communist "subversion" in the film industry. Cobb had defied HUAC for two years, after being named as a supposed Communist by Larry Parks in 1951. During those two years, Cobb's once flourishing career floundered and his wife had to be institutionalized after having a mental breakdown. Finally he agreed to testify as a "friendly" witness, appearing before HUAC in 1953. At the conclusion of his testimony, he praised the committee. Soon after his appearance there he had a massive heart attack. Sinatra--who barely knew Cobb--got him a part in his film The Miracle of the Bells (1948) when no other studio would hire Cobb. In addition, knowing that Cobb was broke, Sinatra paid his hospital bills, then had Cobb stay with him before renting him a luxurious apartment. Cobb believes that Sinatra identified with him as a troubled artist down on his luck, as Sinatra's own career had been in a severe tailspin before he resurrected himself by winning an Oscar for From Here to Eternity (1953). Cobb later said that if it wasn't for Sinatra, he didn't think he would have come through that period alive. Sinatra told Cobb he thought that Cobb was "robbed" when he failed to win the Oscar for his performance as Johnny Friendly in On the Waterfront (1954) (ironically, Sinatra originally had been scheduled to star in the picture, which was filmed in his hometown of Hoboken, NJ, but producer Sam Spiegel gave the role to Marlon Brando when he realized he could raise $1 million in financing for the picture by using Brando versus $500,000 if Sinatra was the star).


    Is one of only five actors/actresses to have both a #1 single and an Oscar for acting. The others are Cher, Barbra Streisand, Jamie Foxx, and Bing Crosby.


    Made no further public appearances after suffering a heart attack in January 1997.


    Campaigned for Ronald Reagan in the 1980 and 1984 presidential elections.


    Was active in Democratic Party politics from the 1944 presidential election until the late 1960s. In 1970 he supported Ronald Reagan's re-election campaign for Governor of California, and in 1972 he attended the Republican National Convention for the first time.


    Underwent major surgery for intestinal cancer in 1986.


    He was instrumental in reuniting Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin after their decades of estrangement. During an appearance on Lewis' annual telethon for Muscular Dystrophy, Sinatra said that he had a friend who wanted to say hello; then, he escorted Martin onto the stage to a flabbergasted Lewis. The two remained reunited until Martin's death.


    On 20 May 1998, his funeral service was held at the Catholic Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills, California. Stars in attendance included Kirk Douglas, Gregory Peck, Robert Wagner, Jack Lemmon, Sidney Poitier, Jack Nicholson, Nancy Davis, Jerry Lewis, Wayne Newton, Johnny Carson, Milton Berle, Bruce Springsteen, Debbie Reynolds, Liza Minnelli, Bob Dylan, Tom Selleck, Tony Bennett, Mickey Rooney, Shirley MacLaine, Robert Stack, Mia Farrow, Bob Newhart, Don Rickles, Sophia Loren, Diahann Carroll, Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gormé, Joey Bishop, Tony Danza, Quincy Jones, Dom DeLuise, Tim Conway, Cuba Gooding Jr., Anthony Quinn, Tony Curtis, Jack Paar, Angie Dickinson, Paul Anka, Ben Vereen, Ed McMahon, Johnny Mathis, Red Buttons, Marlo Thomas, Phil Donahue, Suzanne Pleshette, Lorna Luft, Ann Miller, 'Dionne Warwick, Mamie Van Doren, Suzanne Somers, James Darren and of course, his children, 'Frank Sinatra Jr', Tina Sinatra, and Nancy Sinatra. Over a thousand Sinatra fans lined the streets outside the church during the funeral, and gave him one final round of applause as his flower-draped coffin was carried out of the church. Overhead, a skywriting plane flying created a giant heart in the sky. Ironically, Sinatra had attended Gary Cooper's funeral at the same church, almost to the day of his own, some 37 years before.


    Suffered from dementia in his final years.


    He asked to sing at Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey's 1978 funeral in St. Paul, MN. The officiating minister refused. The job went to Metropolitan Opera baritone Robert Merrill.


    Has sold over 250 million records worldwide.


    Was in talks to appear in The Verdict (1982).


    Was the godfather of Linda Thorson's son Trevor.


    Although the song Sinatra is most identified with is his hit "My Way", he originally didn't want to record it because he thought the song was "self-serving and indulgent.".


    Got the role of Pvt. Maggio in From Here to Eternity (1953) after Eli Wallach passed on it to do a Tennessee Williams play on stage, according to Wallach on a June 20th broadcast of "Morning Sedition" on "Air America Radio.".


    Weighed over 13 pounds at birth, and had to be delivered by forceps; as a result, one of his ears was nearly severed. Showing no signs of life, he was held by his grandmother under cold, running water; and suddenly he began to breathe, and cry. His mother - a Practical nurse - and his father - a Hoboken tavern owner - had been hoping for a girl, and had already chosen the name Frances. So they gave him the masculine form of the name: Francis.


    Was a great admirer of John F. Kennedy, campaigning for him in the 1960 presidential election and organizing his inauguration ball on 20 January 1961. In August 1962, Kennedy decided not to stay with Sinatra in Palm Springs, due to recent allegations of Mafia ties, and instead stayed with Bing Crosby - Sinatra's original rival and an active Republican.


    Briefly lost the ability to sing after his vocal chords hemorrhaged in 1953. When his voice returned, it had an extra dimension which many fans believed made his singing better than before.


    Elected to the New Jersey Hall of Fame in 2007 for his services to the entertainment industry (inaugural election). Official induction ceremonies held in May 2008.


    Mentioned in the song "Hey Manhattan!" by Paddy McAloon (aka "Prefab Sprout").


    Mentioned in the song "Its My Life" by Bon Jovi.


    Pictured on a 42¢ USA commemorative postage stamp issued 13 May 2008, one day before the 10th anniversary of his death.


    In 1981 he was heavily criticized for performing a ten-day gig in South Africa. Jesse Jackson and the United Nations special committee on Apartheid publicly condemned Sinatra for "collaboratng with the apartheid regime.".


    He had a longstanding dislike of Marlon Brando from the time they starred in Guys and Dolls (1955/I). Sinatra always felt he should have played Brando's part, with Gene Kelly in the other role. Sinatra nicknamed Brando "Mr Mumbles" while Brando called him "Mr Baldy".


    Was the favorite singer of and a big influence to The Doors front man, Jim Morrison.


    Once appeared as a head-and-shoulders shot on MasterCard credit card.


    When Sinatra first met Mia Farrow in 1964, he was 48 and she was 19, a fact that prompted Dean Martin to quip that he owned a bottle of Scotch older than Farrow.


    The film, Von Ryan's Express (1965), was his most successful of the 1960s, grossing over $17 million US dollars in 1965.


    All the films he produced made a profit.


    His only job as film director was the anti-war film None But the Brave, which was the first Japanese and American co-production. The studios involved were Warner Bros. and Toho Studios.


    Has a 62 year span of top-ten albums on Billboard -- from The Voice of Frank Sinatra which reached No. 1 in 1946 to Nothing But the Best, which reached No. 2 in 2008.


    His father's name was Martin Anthony Sinatra. His mother's name was Natalie 'Dolly' Garavente, a midwife.


    He is credited as co writer of 7 songs including "This Love Of Mine" (1941) and " Mr. Success" (1958).


    All of his single recordings in 1943 which included "Oh What A Beautiful Morning"/ "People Will Say We're In Love" were recorded a cappella with The Bobby Tucker Singers because of a musician's strike.


    He was awarded 3 Stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Motion Pictures at 1600 Vine Street, for Recording at 1737 Vine Street, and for Television at 6538 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.


    Frank Capra claimed that Sinatra had the potential to be the best actor there ever was. He once told Frank to quit his musical career and concentrate solely on acting and that if he did he would go down as the greatest actor who ever lived.


    He and Paul Newman are the only people to win an Honorary Oscar, a Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award and a competitive Oscar.


    Died the same month as Phil Hartman, who often impersonated him on "Saturday Night Live" (1975).


    While recording the gold "Sinatra Christmas Album" at Cherokee Recording Studios in 1975, he met and shared studio space with glam rocker David Bowie.


    On May 10, 1964, Film Star Brad Dexter (Magnificent Seven, etc.) saved both Frank Sinatra's Life and the Life of Ruth Koch (wife of Producer Howard Koch), during production of the World War II film, None But the Brave, in Kaui, Hawaii. They were swimming at a beach when they were swept out to sea by the outgoing tide and nearly drowned in high billowing waves. Sinatra's co-star Dexter swam out and rescued them together and were not able to reach shore for nearly 45 minutes. In the waves, Sinatra reportedly became separated and murmured "Its all over...please take care of my kids...Im going to die..." Towards the end, both Sinatra and Koch had fallen unconscious for several minutes before two surfers arrived to help Dexter take them to shore. Dexter was later awarded a Red Cross medal for his bravery.


    Like most members of The Rat Pack, Sinatra was known to much prefer the labels "The Clan" and "The Summit".


    His version of "New York, New York" is played at Yankee Stadium after every Yankee home win. Liza Minnelli's version is played after every Yankee home loss.


    Throughout his life, Frank Sinatra was a strong supporter of Jewish causes. Sinatra stepped forward in the early 1940s, when big names were needed to rouse America into saving Europe's remaining Jews, and he sang at an "Action for Palestine" rally (1947). He sat on the board of trustees of the Simon Wiesenthal Center; and he donated over $1 million to Jerusalem 's Hebrew University, which honored him by dedicating the Frank Sinatra International Student Center. As the result of his support for the Jewish State, his movies and records were banned in some Arab countries.


    While visiting Capitol Records in 1960, he refused to pay the 50 cent entry fee at the parking garage. The attendant had his car towed.


    Hated giving autographs.


    In his memoir, "Mr. S.: My Life With Frank Sinatra", the legend's valet, George Jacobs, said that Sinatra cried when he heard that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King had been assassinated, one of the few times he had seen his employer in tears.


    Sinatra's valet George Jacobs said that his employer had derogatory nicknames for many of his friends, including "Sheeny" for Cary Grant, "Shanty" for Gene Kelly, "Jew" for Jerry Lewis, "The African Queen" for Johnny Mathis, and "Wop" for Dean Martin. His private plane was called "El Dago".


    Became a friend of Laurence Harvey, with whom he co-starred in The Manchurian Candidate (1962). According to Sinatra's valet, George Jacobs, Sinatra called him "Ladyboy" in recognition of Harvey's bisexuality. In an interview about the film that was included in the video recording, Sinatra expressed his sorrow that "Larry" was no longer alive.


    Was friends with fellow singer Rosemary Clooney. Two members of her family went on to appear in remakes of Sinatra films. Her nephew George Clooney appeared in Ocean's Eleven (2001) and its sequels, in Sinatra's role, while her son Miguel Ferrer appeared in a supporting role in The Manchurian Candidate (2004). Ferrer also voiced Danny Ocean in a "Robot Chicken" (2005) parody.


    In his 1947 film It Happened in Brooklyn (1947), Frank introduced the now-standard, "Time After Time", which charted at #17 in 1947. It was later re-recorded, by Frank, in 1959 as the B-side to "French Foreign Legion". In 1960, Frankie Ford's rendition of the song charted at #75 US. Interestingly, that version fared much better than all, in Brooklyn, reaching NYC's Top 10. In 1966. Chris Montez's version peaked at #36 US.


    Mini Biography-1
    Growing up on the streets of Hoboken, New Jersey, made Frank Sinatra determined to work hard to get ahead. Starting out as a saloon singer in musty little dives (he carried his own P.A. system), he eventually got work as a band singer, first with The Hoboken Four then with Harry James, then Tommy Dorsey. With the help of George Evans (Sinatra's genius press agent), his image was shaped into that of a street thug and punk who was saved by his first wife, Nancy. In 1942 he started his solo career, instantly finding fame as the king of the bobbysoxers - the young women and girls who were his fans - becoming the most popular singer of the era among teenage music fans. About that time his film career was also starting in earnest, striking box-office gold early on with a lead role in Anchors Aweigh (1945), a Best Picture nominee at the 1946 Academy Awards. Sinatra was awarded a special Oscar for his part in a short film against intolerance, The House I Live In (1946). His career on a high, Sinatra went from strength-to-strength on record, on stage and on screen, peaking in 1949, once again with Gene Kelly, in the MGM musical On the Town (1949) and Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949). A controversial public affair with screen siren Ava Gardner broke up his marriage to Nancy Barbato. Record sales dwindled in the early 1950s and although Sinatra continued to act, now, appearing in more dramatic fare such as Meet Danny Wilson (1951), a vocal cord haemorrhage all but ended his career. He fought back, winning the coveted role of Maggio in From Here to Eternity (1953). He won an Oscar for best supporting actor and followed this with a scintillating performance as a deranged assassin in Suddenly (1954) and arguably a career best performance and Academy Award nomination for Best Actor in the powerful drama The Man With the Golden Arm (1955). Known as "One-Take Charlie" for his approach to acting that strove for spontaneity and energy, rather than perfection, he was an instinctive actor who was best at playing parts that mirrored his own personality. He continued to give strong and memorable performances in such films as Guys and Dolls (1955), The Joker is Wild (1957) and Some Came Running (1958). In the 1960s Sinatra became mildly prolific as a producer bringing such films as A Hole in the Head (1959), Sergeants 3 (1963) and Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964) to the big screen. Lighter roles along side Rat Pack buddies Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr were lucrative, especially the famed Ocean's 11 (1960), however, Sinatra alternated such projects with more stern offerings, namely The Manchurian Candidate, arguably Sinatra's finest picture, and his directorial debut, None But the Brave, which was the first Japanese/American co-production. That same year Von Ryan's Express (1965) was a box office sensation. In 1967 Sinatra returned to familiar territory in Sidney J. Furie's The Naked Runner (1967), one again playing as assassin in his only film to be shot in the U.K. and in Germany. That same year he starred as private investigator Tony Rome (1967), a role he reprised in the sequel, Lady in Cement (1968). He also starred with Lee Remick in The Detective (1968) a film daring for its time and a major box office success. After appearing in the comic western Dirty Dingus Magee (1970) Sinatra refrained from acting for a further seven years until producing the made-for-TV movie Contract on Cherry Street (1977). Based on the novel by William J. Rosenberg, this fable of vigilante cops turning vigilante against the mob boasted a stellar cast and was a ratings success. Sinatra returned to the big screen in The First Deadly Sin (1980) once again playing a New York detective with a moving, understated performance that was a fitting coda to his career as a leading man. He made one more appearance on the big screen with a cameo in Cannonball Run II (1984) and a final acting performance in Magnum P.I. in 1987 as a retired detective seeking vengeance on the killers of his granddaughter in an episode entitled Laura.
    IMDb Mini Biography By: David Montgomery <[email protected]>


    Mini Biography-2
    Growing up on the streets of Hoboken, New Jersey, made Frank Sinatra determined to work hard to get ahead. Starting out as a saloon singer in musty little dives (he carried his own P.A. system), he got his first major break in 1935 as part of The Hoboken Four on popular radio show Major Bowes Amateur Hour. In 1939 he signed with Harry James as lead singer of his big band before gaining the attention of Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra with whom he sang the first ever No. 1 song on Billboard, I'll Never Smile Again. That same year he married sweetheart Nancy Barbato with whom he had three children, Nancy, Tina and Frank, Jr. Sinatra's growing popularity led him to leave Dorsey in 1942 and starting in earnest a solo career, instantly finding fame as the number one singing star among teenage music fans of the era, especially the young women and girls known as The Bobbysoxers. Legendary appearances at the New York Paramount were sensational, namely the so-called Columbus Day Riot in 1944, when 35,000 blocked the streets outside the venue waiting to see their idol. About this time Sinatra's acting career was beginning in earnest and he struck box-office gold with a lead role in the acclaimed Anchors Aweigh (1945) alongside Gene Kelly. The following year Sinatra was awarded a special Oscar for his part in a short film against intolerance called The House I Live In (1946). His career on a high, Sinatra went from strength-to-strength, recording his first album, The Voice of Frank Sinatra, at Columbia and starring in several movies, peaking in 1949 with Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949) and On the Town (1949, co-starring in both with Gene Kelly. A torrid public affair with screen siren Ava Gardner broke up Sinatra's marriage and although a second marriage - to Gardner - followed in 1951, record sales began to dwindle and live appearances were failing to sell out, Sinatra's vocal chords hemorrhaging at one point live on stage as years of playing several shows in a single night took their toll. Sinatra continued to act, however, garnering good notice if hardly strong box office in the musical drama Meet Danny Wilson (1951) before fighting for, and winning, the coveted role of Maggio in From Here to Eternity (1953). He won an Oscar for Best Supporting actor and followed this with a scintillating performance as the deranged assassin John Baron in Suddenly (1954) and arguably a career best performance, and Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, in the powerful drama The Man With the Golden Arm (1955). On record Sinatra was also back on a high having signed with Capitol records and riding high on the charts with the album In the Wee Small Hours (1953) and the single Young at Heart (1954), the latter becoming so popular that a recently made film with Doris Day had its name changed to Young at Heart. Known as "One-Take Charlie" for his approach to acting that strove for spontaneity and energy, rather than perfection, he was an instinctive actor who was best at playing parts that mirrored his own personality. Throughout the 1950s Sinatra not only recorded a slew of critically and commercially successful albums, his acting career remained on a high as he gave strong and memorable performances in such films as Guys and Dolls (1955), The Joker is Wild (1957), Kings Go Forth (1957) and Some Came Running (1958). He also dabbled with producing in the 1950s, first bringing the western Johnny Concho to the big screen and, along with Frank Capra, A Hole in the Head (1959), in which he co-starred with Edward G. Robinson. Continuing this trend into the 1960s Sinatra produced such lucrative offerings as Ocean's 11 (1960), Sergeants 3 (1963) and Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964) as well as starting his own record label, Reprise Records, in 1961. Many of Sinatra's movie projects of the era were lighter offerings alongside Rat Pack pals Dean Martin and Sammy Davis, Jr., but alternating such projects with more stern offerings resulted in the stellar The Manchurian Candidate (1962), arguably Sinatra's best film. Sinatra turned 50 in 1965 and, in many ways, his career once again peaked, recording the album September of My Years which won the Grammy for album of the year and making his directorial debut with the anti-war film None but the Brave (1965). Von Ryan's Express (1965) was released the same year and was a box office sensation helping secure vast earnings for the floundering 20th Century Fox. In 1967 Sinatra returned to familiar territory in Sidney J. Furie's The Naked Runner (1967), once again playing an assassin in his only film to be shot in the U.K. and one of the few films to be shot inside Centre Point and post-war Leipzig in Berlin. That same year he starred as private investigator Tony Rome (1967), a role he reprised in the sequel Lady in Cement (1968). He also starred with Lee Remick in The Detective (1968) a film daring for its time and a major box office success. After appearing in the comic western Dirty Dingus Magee (1970) Sinatra refrained from acting for a further seven years until producing the made-for-TV movie Contract on Cherry Street (1977), based on the novel by William J. Rosenberg. Sinatra returned to the big screen in The First Deadly Sin (1980) once again playing a New York detective with a moving, understated performance that was a fitting coda to his career as a leading man. He made only one more appearance on the big screen with a cameo in Cannonball Run II (1984). His final acting performance in 1987 was as a retired detective seeking vengeance on the killers of his granddaughter in an episode of Magnum P.I. entitled Laura. On stage, Sinatra was as prolific as ever, playing both nationally and internationally to sold out crowds in stadiums and arenas. In 1993 Sinatra stepped back into Capitol studios to record his final albums, Duets and Duets II, both of which were highly successful, finding Sinatra an entirely new audience almost 60 years after he first tasted fame. Frank Sinatra passed away on May 14th 1998.
    IMDb Mini Biography By: Hugh McKenna <[email protected]>


    Personal Quotes
    I'm trying to figure out, Chairman of what Board? People come up to me and seriously say: "Well, what are you Chairman of?" And I can't answer them.


    I'm for anything that gets you through the night, be it prayer, tranquilizers or a bottle of Jack Daniels. But to me religion is a deeply personal thing in which man and God go it alone together, without the witch doctor in the middle.


    A friend is never an imposition.


    [his last words] I'm losing it.


    [Talking about Burt Reynolds] He is the one the ladies like to dance with and their husbands like to drink with. He is the larger-than-life actor of our times. He is gifted, talented, naughty and nice.


    A fella came up to me the other day with a nice story. He was in a bar somewhere and it was the quiet time of the night. Everybody's staring down at the sauce and one of my saloon songs comes on the jukebox, "One for My Baby", or something like that. After a while, a drunk at the end of the bar looks up and says, jerking his thumb toward the jukebox, "I wonder who he listens to?"


    [when Dean Martin walked out on The Together Again Tour] You can't put a gun to his head. He just didn't want to do it.


    Nothing anybody's said or written about me ever bothers me, except when it does.


    [after the deaths of Sammy Davis Jr., Ava Gardner, Jilly Rizzo and Dean Martin] I'm next. I ain't scared, either. Everybody I ever knew is already over there.


    [on Elvis Presley in 1957] Sung, played and written for the most part by cretinous goons; and by means of its almost imbecilic reiterations and sly, lewd - in plain fact, dirty - lyrics it manages to be the martial music of every sideburned delinquent on the face of the Earth. This rancid-smelling aphrodisiac I deplore. His kind of music is deplorable, a rancid smelling aphrodisiac . . . it fosters almost totally negative and destructive reactions in young people.


    [on Ava Gardner] I love her, and God damn me for it.


    You better get busy living, because dying's a pain in the ass.


    [on Elvis Presley's death in 1977] There have been many accolades uttered about his talent and performances through the years, all of which I agree to wholeheartedly, I shall miss him dearly as a friend.


    There are moments when it's too quiet. Particularly late at night or early in the mornings. That's when you know there's something lacking in your life. You just know.


    Recording with Billy May is like having a bucket of cold water thrown into your face. Nelson Riddle will come to a session with all the arrangements carefully and neatly worked out beforehand. With Billy you sometimes don't get copies of the next number until you've finished the one before. Billy and Nelson both work best under pressure. Billy May is always driving while Nelson has more depth, and with Gordon Jenkins, it's just plain beautiful and simple.


    [on Marlon Brando] He is the most overrated actor in the world.


    No man's lifetime of work has better expressed the land of the free and the home of the brave. No man's lifetime of work has given proof to the world that our flag is still there. John Wayne is in truth a star-spangled man whom so proudly we hail.


    For over half a century, Mr. Wayne [John Wayne] has served honorably as America's symbol to the world of the highest morals and prudent standards of our society.


    [on Don Rickles] I like him. But that's because I have no taste.


    In Hoboken, when I was a kid, I lived in a plenty tough neighborhood. When somebody called me a "dirty little pig," there was only one thing to do: break his head. When I got older, I realized you shouldn't do it [get even] that way. I realized you've got to do it through education . . . maybe with a few exceptions.


    [1965] For my money, Tony Bennett is the best singer in the business. He excites me when I watch him. He moves me. He's the singer who gets across what the composer has in mind, and probably a little more.


    I detest bad manners. If people are polite, I am. They shouldn't try to get away with not being polite to me.


    I'm a performer. I'm better in the first take.


    Don't tell me. Suggest. But don't tell me.


    [on the resignation of US President Richard Nixon, Aug. 9, 1974] Any man can make a mistake.


    [on friend Peggy Lee] Her wonderful talent should be studied by all vocalists; her regal presence is pure elegance and charm.


    A well balanced girl is the one who has an empty head and a full sweater.


    That guy Heston has to watch it. If he's not careful, he'll get actors a good name. - On Charlton Heston


    I hate this song ['My Way'] - you sing it for eight years, you would hate it too! (Caesars Palace, 1978)


    [on Rat Pack buddy Sammy Davis Jr.] He goes to the refrigerator for a snack, opens the door, and when that light hits him, he does 45 minutes of his act!


    Rock 'n roll smells phony and false. It is sung, played and written for the most part by cretinous goons and by means of its almost imbecilic reiteration and sly, lewd, in plain fact, dirty lyrics .. manages to be the martial music of every side-burned delinquent on the face of the earth.


    Salary
    The Naked Runner (1967) $1,000,000
    The Manchurian Candidate (1962) $1,000,000
    The Pride and the Passion (1957) $10,000/week
    From Here to Eternity (1953) $8,000
    Meet Danny Wilson (1951) $25,000
    Everybody's Cheering (1949) $125,000
    The Miracle of the Bells (1948) $100,000
    Higher and Higher (1943) $25,000
    Reveille with Beverly (1943) $1,500
    The Gay City (1941) $15/day
    Major Bowes Amateur Theater of the Air (1935) $35.00


    Filmography
    Actor
    1987 Magnum, P.I. (TV series) – Laura (1987) … Retired Police Sergeant Michael Doheny
    1984 Cannonball Run II ...Frank
    1980 The First Deadly Sin ...Edward Delaney
    1977 Contract on Cherry Street (TV movie) ...Dep. Insp. Frank Hovannes
    1976 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (TV series) – Episode dated 12 November 1976 (1976) … Special Guest
    1970 Dirty Dingus Magee ..Dingus Billy Magee
    1968 Lady in Cement ...Tony Rome
    1968 The Detective ...Det. Sgt. Joe Leland
    1967 Tony Rome ...Tony Rome
    1967 The Naked Runner ...Sam Laker
    1966 Assault on a Queen ...Mark Brittain
    1966 Cast a Giant Shadow ...Vince Talmadge
    1965 Marriage on the Rocks ...Dan Edwards
    1965 Von Ryan's Express ...Col. Joseph L. Ryan
    1965 None But the Brave ...Chief Pharmacist Mate
    1964 Robin and the 7 Hoods ...Robbo
    1964 Paris When It Sizzles ...Singer (uncredited) (singing voice)
    1963 4 for Texas ...Zack Thomas
    1963 A New Kind of Love ..Singer behind opening credits
    1963 Come Blow Your Horn ...Alan Baker
    1963 The List of Adrian Messenger ...Cameo
    1962 The Manchurian Candidate ...Major Bennett Marco
    1962 The Road to Hong Kong ...The 'Twig' on Plutomium (uncredited)
    1962 Sergeants 3 ...First Sgt. Mike Merry
    1961 The Devil at 4 O'Clock ...Harry
    1960 Ocean's Eleven ...Danny Ocean
    1960 Can-Can ...François Durnais
    1959 Never So Few ...Capt. Tom Reynolds
    1959 A Hole in the Head ...Tony Manetta
    1958 Some Came Running ...Dave Hirsh
    1958 Kings Go Forth ...1st Lt. Sam Loggins
    1957-1958 The Frank Sinatra Show (TV series)
    Al Wesson / Host / Kerry Maul
    – The Brownstone Incident (1958) … Host/Al Wesson
    – Take Me to Hollywood (1957) … Kerry Maul
    1957 Pal Joey ...Joey Evans
    1957 The Joker Is Wild ...Joe E. Lewis
    1957 The Pride and the Passion ...Miguel
    1956 Around the World in Eighty Days ...Saloon Pianist
    1956 Johnny Concho ..Johnny Concho/Johnny Collins
    1956 High Society ...Mike Connor
    1956 Viva Las Vegas! ...Man at Slot Machine (uncredited)
    1955 The Man with the Golden Arm ...Frankie Machine
    1955 The Tender Trap ...Charlie Y. Reader
    1955/I Guys and Dolls ...Nathan Detroit
    1955 Producers' Showcase (TV series) – Our Town (1955) … Stage Manager
    1955 Not as a Stranger ...Alfred Boone
    1954 Young at Heart ...Barney Sloan
    1954 Suddenly ..John Baron
    1954 Red Skelton Revue (TV series) – Episode #1.5 (1954) … Guest Vocalist
    1954 The Colgate Comedy Hour (TV series) – Anything Goes (1954) … Harry Dane
    1953 From Here to Eternity ...Pvt. Angelo Maggio
    1951 Meet Danny Wilson ...Danny Wilson
    1951 Double Dynamite ...Johnny Dalton
    1949 On the Town ...Chip
    1949 Everybody's Cheering ...Dennis Ryan
    1948 The Kissing Bandit ...Ricardo
    1948 The Miracle of the Bells ...Father Paul
    1947 It Happened in Brooklyn ...Danny Webson Miller
    1945 Anchors Aweigh ...Clarence Doolittle
    1944 Step Lively ..Glenn Russell
    1944 The Shining Future (short)
    1943 Higher and Higher ..Frank
    1943 Reveille with Beverly ...Frank Sinatra
    1942 Ship Ahoy ...Singer in Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (uncredited)
    1941 The Gay City ...Singer in Tommy Dorsey's Band (uncredited)

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited once, last by ethanedwards ().

  • Some stars were not just brilliant at one thing but more!
    Frank Sinatra, was such a person!
    Not only one of the world's greatest singers, but also a fine actor.
    He made many fine movies, and was in the soundtrack's
    of countless others.
    My favourite's being, Von Ryan's Express, From Here to Eternity,
    and the only film he made, (although in different scenes), with and for Duke's , Batjac,


    Cast a Giant Shadow 1966...Vince Talmadge.


    During the filming, it was reported that in the evenings,Sinatra and Duke,
    spent many an hour 'doing' the rounds of the nightclubs


    Sinatra and Duke, remained life long friends,
    although having many political fall outs!
    Sinatra was one of the only few visitors
    Duke had in the last days before he passed away.
    It was said, that after Sinatra stepped into Duke's room,
    he left a shaken man, tears clouding his eyes.


    .

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 12 times, last by ethanedwards ().

  • A great entertainer! I've always herd he had great ties with the Maffia! Anybody know anything about that? Was he ever involved in any shady activities?

  • A great entertainer! I've always herd he had great ties with the Maffia! Anybody know anything about that? Was he ever involved in any shady activities?



    Oh, I think he knew a few people in the mob. Supposedly he was friends with Sam Giancana who ran the Chicago mob in the 50's and 60's. Still, whether he did or did not, I always liked him, his music and most of his movies. My most favorite song of his is It Was A Very Good Year. My favorite movies of his are Von Ryans Express, Some Came Running, Sergeants 3, and Oceans Eleven, which is my absolute favorite. It was just a good, fun movie.

  • Oh Frank most definitely had mob ties. He was a very good friend of my boyfriend's, Harold Gibbons, the second vice president of the Teamsters Union. We had dinner together, usually at Jack London's in The Springs about once a month or so, and "attempted" golf once in a while at Tamarisk CC or my club, Mission Hills, (he was terrible, LOL). He was also a good friend of Peter Epstein who was involved too. I believe they met when Peter still had car dealerships in Chicago and one of the (we called them guys, not mob), got Frank to do some commercials for Peter.
    Peter moved his dealerships to LA, San Bernadino and The Springs.
    Frank's bodyguard, Jilly, lived next door to us. Pat Henry, his warm up guy, was next to Jilly. I loved Pat, he was so funny and a great guy. He and Frank played in a movie, (not so great), called LADY IN CEMENT, I think. Lots more to that, but it will be in the other book I am writing called MY Gibbons. Pretty sure Frank is mentioned in the Nixon tapes. He and Gibbons broke up for a while because of Nixon....Gibbons absolutely would not make the Teamster Executive Board unanimous behind Nixon for president. Sinatra thought Gibbons should support whomever he did. And yes, he was a brawler when he was drinking...that is what Jilly was for....getting him home before trouble started. Gibbon's chauffer was a GREAT friend of Mom Sinatra's. When we pulled into the Springs before I moved there, we always took George straight to Frank's compound and dropped him off....didn't see him until we were leaving and picked him up. The days before Frank's try at a comeback were very tense as he was greatly afraid he wouldn't be able to pull it off. We all chartered a plane to Vegas for it.....think it was at Caesar's. Anyway, it was obvious throughout the show that he was nervous, and he didn't do well. Back stage was NOT fun that night. But, later, he did MUCH better.
    Guess who Frank always said had "the best pipes in the business"? Vic Damone! Yep, but he had no stage presence. Sorry, did it again. KP KEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • I was always under the impression that Sinatra and Duke were not on friendly terms most of the times although their attitude towards each other mellowed later in life.

    Regards
    Robbie

  • When they were younger, I imagine they didn't gel at all....ESPECIALLY with Ward to influence Duke. I believe that, as they got a good bit older, not only did Frank mellow out some, but they both appreciated the other's art form. Frank really DID become a much nicer person even in just the short three years that I knew him. I think I scared him a bit, but then, that is for the MY Gibbons book, LOL! KPKEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • When they were younger, I imagine they didn't gel at all....ESPECIALLY with Ward to influence Duke. I believe that, as they got a good bit older, not only did Frank mellow out some, but they both appreciated the other's art form. Frank really DID become a much nicer person even in just the short three years that I knew him. I think I scared him a bit, but then, that is for the MY Gibbons book, LOL! KPKEITH


    Hey Keith,
    Here is a story posted back around 2003 on our board by a Girl named Jen , wondering if you ever heard it;


    "I've read a couple of different tidbits, which I will have to paraphrase from memory. At IMDb, it says that Duke was staying at a hotel in Las Vegas and Frank Sinatra was in the suite below him having a party and making a whole heckuva lot of noise. After repeated polite attempts to get them to be quiet, Duke went down to Sinatra's suite in person and, for lack of a better word, sucker-punched one of Sinatra's big beefy bodyguards and knocked him unconscious. After this incident, Sinatra and his cronies kept it down."


    Chester :newyear:

  • Dang Gorch, and I thought we were almost friends. Chester7777 is the first one who friended me. I can't ask you big guys.....yall have to ask me. But then, I have to earn that, don't I. Well, as you say, I have been here about a week, only have about thirty some odd posts and most of them rambling ones at that, (some probably have 3 or 4 posts in one, LOL). But, they are all true......check out my albums on my profile and read the text for the pics. Had a super life, that is why the books. Everyone has always told me I should write about my life. I have always loved to write since I could, so........doing two. One on the Western slant, and the other on MY Gibbons for now. Dang, still wish Gibbons loved Westerns........I would have met them all! Instead, I got Sinatra, Bob Hope, and well, that is for another day.
    I really am a nice old lady, Gorch. So funny...scare the Billy Bejeesus...sounds like something Ward would say in the Searchers....Hmmm,it was wasn't it...on the way to the river to escape the Indians!? Well, it was something similar anyway. Answer me please Gorch...I did you! KP KEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • Well, Sue and Jim, I really can't say much about the incident with Frank's loud party and Duke's sucker punching anyone. Except....Frank before he got older ALWAYS had loud parties and never cared who they bothered. Duke, Ward and friends always had loud parties and never cared who they bothered. I am fairly certain that a lot of punches got thrown in a lot of places.....I mean, that was their fun. Jilly may have been the one to go down under Duke's punch, but I would be very surprised. As much as I love Duke and his legend, Jilly punched for real, LOL. Not too many people ever put Jilly down....in fact, I don't remember a story of that. I can't even imagine Duke trying.....Ward maybe, but Duke was smarter than Ward, LOL.......remember Ward is my favorite still!
    Talked to Ethan about the cottage and all because he sent me a message saying yall were already doing it, but still haven't gotten a message to Colorado Bob. Having a hard time getting to him. Still haven't learned it all yet, LOL. Oh, my friend Gorch, I have found that I have scared the "Billy BiJeesus" out of him! Dang, and he used to answer my posts, LOL!
    KP KEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • A possibility, but, well if it WAS Jilly, he was a funny kind of guy. Don't believe he would let that get out about him. I don't mean "funny" being the Ha Ha kind, LOL. KPKEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • Glad we got it all cleared up. In case some of you don't know, Gorch is a really cool guy who knows a whole lot more about some of this stuff than most of us do, LOL. KP KEITH Sit Tall in the Saddle

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • This John Wayne, Frank Sinatra story is quoted from IMDB as follows;


    "The evening before a shoot he was trying to get some sleep in a Las Vegas hotel. The suite directly below his was that of Frank Sinatra (never a good friend of Wayne), who was having a party. The noise kept Wayne awake, and each time he made a complaining phone call it quieted temporarily but each time eventually grew louder. Wayne at last appeared at Sinatra's door and told Frank to stop the noise. A Sinatra bodyguard of Wayne's size approached saying, "Nobody talks to Mr. Sinatra that way." Wayne looked at the man, turned as though to leave, then backhanded the bodyguard, who fell to the floor, where Wayne knocked him out by crashing a chair on top of him. The party noise stopped."


    It would be interesting to find out if there is any other references to this story anywhere else. Has anyone remember reading this anywhere else?


    Chester :newyear:

  • Doesn't sound real, but who knows.....all of my friends that could tell me for sure are dead. Will be talking to Henry Winkler soon and will ask him if he knows anyone still alive with an unpickled brain if they know about it. Pretty sure it wasn't Jilly....he wasn't as big as Duke. Now, it COULD have been Brad Dexter. He was big and barrel chested. He considerably advanced his acting and directing career when he saved Sinatra from drowning. And he had been known to put himself between Frank and any threatening fans...his size usually scared them off. Don't believe it would have with Duke, LOL! I knew Brad and his wife Mary who was very rich and extremely nice. We had dinner at their home in Holmby Hills, and Mary and I went out back to her beautiful herb garden for fresh herbs. Then, when my Mom and her friend flew out for the Dinah Shore Golf Classic at my club, Mission Hills, Brad and Mary let them use their ground floor condo right on the eighteenth hole. They stayed there 10 days. Brad and Mary met us there, handed over the keys, showed them everything all around the house and then showed us how they had stocked the fridge with delicacies if we decided to cook at home instead of going out....unreal. Anyone who is a golfer would know how nice that is to have! Uh Oh. Again, LOL. KPKEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

  • To use a quote from TMWSLV, "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." We all can imagine that story being true, but the chance of it turning out that way is slim. I have a feeling that if it really had happened that way, it would have been a well know story, not just a "I read or heard this" story.


    And Keith, if you're talking about Henry Winkler who played The Fonz on Happy Days, tell him we all said, HEYYYYYYY! :wink_smile:


    Mark

    "I couldn't go to sleep at night if the director didn't call 'cut'. "

  • Hi Mark,

    Yep, just print the legend, although after saying that, Ford made certain that twice, the legend was corrected although printed!

    Same Henry. He is one of the nicest most unassuming people you will ever meet....not at all like The Fonz, LOL. That really took acting ability for him to play that role! He directed a little pic called Cop and a Half with Burt Reynolds and a great little black kid...funny little movie. Anyway, his production manager, Don West, came to Tampa early as usual and got the boats he needed from me. I talked him into a membership since he would be using so many. We got to be good friends and had some meetings with Henry and Burt. They filmed a lot off my two pontoon boats and I gave them two captains that knew the areas and could help them find places to shoot.....didn't see my guys for three weeks, LOL,. They loved it, of course and got to go to all the staff parties. After all the film folks left, Don and his family stayed at the house he had rented on the water. They took out a pontoon boat one day, and I FINALLY heard from them via the Coast Guard......they were high and dry....forgot all about the tides, ran the batteries down with music so couldn't call in on the VHF radio. Long story, but in one of Tampa's tremendous rain and lightning storms, I rescued their whole group....took two trips in my boat, the What Next, which is in my album. There was a Russian director's wife on the boat, and her derreier was so large, we couldn't get it between my 200 Yamaha motor and the side of the boat. We pulled and pushed and she laughed the whole time! Long story. So, yep it is Henry, and I will say Hello for yall. If I can find Don, he may be able to help me with my book a lot. He has directed, acted and done production. Sit Tall in the Saddle, Mark, KPKEITH

    God, she reminds me of me! DUKE

    Edited once, last by Hawkswill: spelling ().