
By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Frank Sinatra, the self-described saloon singer and
actor who became one of the most popular
American entertainers of the 20th century, died on Thursday at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in
Los Angeles. He was 82.
The cause was a heart attack, said his publicist, Susan Reynolds.
Widely held to be the greatest singer in American pop history, Sinatra
was also the first modern pop
superstar. He defined that role in the early 1940s when his first solo
appearances provoked the kind
of mass pandemonium that later greeted Elvis Presley and the Beatles.
During a show business career that spanned more than 50 years and comprised
recordings, film and
television as well as countless performances in nightclubs, concert halls
and sports arenas, Sinatra
stood as a singular mirror of the American psyche.
His evolution from the idealistic crooner of the early 1940s to the sophisticated
swinger of the '50s
and '60s seemed to personify the country's loss of innocence. During World
War II, Sinatra's tender
romanticism served as the dreamy emotional link between millions of women
and their husbands and
boyfriends fighting overseas. Reinventing himself in the '50s, the starry-eyed
boy next door turned
into the cosmopolitan man of the world, a bruised romantic with a tough-guy
streak and a song for
every emotional season.
In a series of brilliant conceptual albums, he codified a musical vocabulary
of adult relationships with
which millions identified. The haunted voice heard on a jukebox in the
wee small hours of the morning
lamenting the end of a love affair was the same voice that jubilantly invited
the world to "come fly with
me" to exotic realms in a never-ending party.
Sinatra appeared in more than 50 films, and won an Academy Award as best
supporting actor for his
portrayal of the feisty misfit soldier Maggio in "From Here to Eternity"
(1953). As an actor, he could
communicate the same complex mixture of emotional honesty, vulnerability
and cockiness that he
projected as a singer, but he often chose his roles indifferently or unwisely.
It was as a singer that he exerted the strongest cultural influence. Following
his idol Bing Crosby, who
had pioneered the use of the microphone, Sinatra transformed popular singing
by infusing lyrics with a
personal, intimate point of view that conveyed a steady current of eroticism.
The skinny blue-eyed crooner, quickly nicknamed the Voice, made hordes
of bobby-soxers swoon
in the 1940s with an extraordinarily smooth and flexible baritone that
he wielded with matchless skill.
His mastery of long-lined phrasing inspired imitations by many other male
crooners, notably Dick
Haymes, Vic Damone and Tony Bennett in the 1940s and '50s and most recently
the pop-jazz star
Harry Connick Jr.
After the voice lost its velvety youthfulness, Sinatra's interpretations
grew more personal and
idiosyncratic, so that each performance became a direct expression of his
personality and his mood
of the moment. In expressing anger, petulance and bravado -- attitudes
that had largely been
excluded from the acceptable vocabulary of pop feeling -- Sinatra paved
the way for the unfettered
vocal aggression of rock singers.
The changes in Sinatra's vocal timbre coincided with a precipitous career
descent in the late 1940s
and early '50s. But in 1953, Sinatra made one of the most spectacular career
comebacks in show
business history, re-emerging as a coarser-voiced, jazzier interpreter
of popular standards who put a
more aggressive personal stamp on his songs.
Almost singlehandedly, he helped lead a revival of vocalized swing music
that took American pop to
a new level of musical sophistication.
Coinciding with the rise of the long-playing record album, his 1950s recordings
---- along with Ella
Fitzgerald's "songbook" albums saluting individual composers -- were instrumental
in establishing a
canon of American pop song literature.
With Nelson Riddle, his most talented arranger, Sinatra defined the criteria
for sound, style and song
selection in pop recording during the pre-Beatles era. The aggressive uptempo
style of Sinatra's
mature years spawned a genre of punchy, rhythmic belting associated with
Las Vegas, which he was
instrumental in establishing and popularizing as an entertainment capital.
By the late 1950s, Sinatra had become so much the personification of American
show business
success that his life and his art became emblematic of the temper of the
times. Except perhaps for
Hugh Hefner, the founder of Playboy magazine, nobody did more to create
a male ideal in the 1950s.
For years, Sinatra seemed the embodiment of the hard-drinking, hedonistic
swinger who could have
his pick of women and who was the leader of a party-loving entourage.
That personality and wardrobe, borrowed in part from his friend Jimmy Van
Heusen, the talented
songwriter and man about town who liked to insouciantly sling his raincoat
over his shoulder, was, in
turn, imitated by many other show business figures. It was a style Sinatra
never entirely abandoned.
Even in his later years, he would often stroll onto the stage with a drink
in his hand.
On a deeper level, Sinatra's career and public image touched many aspects
of American cultural life.
For millions, his ascent from humble Italian-American roots in Hoboken,
N.J., was a symbol of
ethnic achievement. And more than most entertainers, he used his influence
to support political
candidates. His change of allegiance from pro-Roosevelt Democrat in the
1940s to pro-Reagan
Republican in the 1980s paralleled a seismic shift in American politics.
By the end of his career, Sinatra's annual income was estimated in the
tens of millions of dollars, from
concerts, record albums, real estate ventures and holdings in several companies,
including a
missile-parts concern, a private airline, Reprise Records (which he founded),
Artanis (Sinatra spelled
backward) Productions and Sinatra Enterprises.
Sinatra left his imprint on scores of popular songs and was the background
voice, it seemed, for the
romances of most Americans, from the earliest to the second time around.
Among the standards he recorded at least three times were "All or Nothing
at All," "Angel Eyes,"
"Autumn in New York," "I Concentrate on You," "I Get a Kick Out of You,"
"I'll Be Seeing You,"
"I'll Never Smile Again," "I've Got a Crush on You," "I've Got You Under
My Skin," "Nancy (With
the Laughing Face)," "Night and Day," "One for My Baby," "September Song"
and "Stormy
Weather."
His personal signature songs included "Put Your Dreams Away" (his 1945
theme) and later "Young
at Heart" (1954), "All the Way" (1957), "It Was a Very Good Year" (1965),
"Strangers in the Night"
(1966), "My Way" (1969) and "New York, New York" (1980).
For decades, his private life, with its many romances, feuds, brawls and
associations with gangsters,
was grist for the gossip columns. But he also had a reputation for spontaneous
generosity, for helping
singers who were starting out and for supporting friends who were in need.
And over the years he
gave millions of dollars to various philanthropies.
Sinatra was born in Hoboken on Dec. 12, 1915, the only child of Martin
Sinatra, a boilermaker and
sometime boxer from Catania, Sicily, and his wife, Natalie Garavante, who
was nicknamed Dolly.
The young Francis Albert Sinatra, who attended Dave E. Rue Junior High
School and Demarest
High in Hoboken, decided to become a singer either after attending a Bing
Crosby concert or seeing
a Crosby film sometime in 1931 or 1932.
His mother encouraged his ambition, allowing him to drop out of high school.
In 1935, after two years of local club dates, he joined three other young
men from Hoboken who
called themselves the Three Flashes. The quartet renamed itself the Hoboken
Four and won first
prize on "Major Bowes's Original Amateur Hour."
After several months with the group, Sinatra decided to go it alone, and
in the late 1930s he had his
first important nightclub engagement, at the Rustic Cabin, a roadhouse
in Alpine, N.J. Local radio
exposure brought him to the attention of Harry James, the trumpet player
who had recently left Benny
Goodman to form his own band. James signed Sinatra for $75 a week, and
the singer made his first
concert appearance with the James band in June 1939 and his first recording
the next month.
Early that year, he married his longtime sweetheart, Nancy Barbato. They
would have three children:
Nancy, who was born in 1940; Franklin Wayne (later shortened to Frank Jr.),
born in 1944, and
Christina (Tina), born in 1948.
Six months after Sinatra signed with Harry James, Tommy Dorsey invited
him to join his band, which
was far more popular. Released without protest from his contract by James,
Sinatra remained with
Dorsey from January 1940 until September 1942. His first successful record
with the band was
"Polka Dots and Moonbeams." Six months after joining Dorsey, he scored
his first No. 1 hit, "I'll
Never Smile Again," a dreamy ballad he sang with the Pied Pipers, the vocal
group then led by Jo
Stafford.
Determined to be the first singer since Bing Crosby to have a successful
solo career, he split from
Dorsey, who held him to a contract that gave the band leader 43 percent
of the singer's income for
the next decade. Eventually Sinatra, with his record label, Columbia, and
his booking agency, MCA,
bought out the contract.
In addition to "I'll Never Smile Again," Sinatra left behind several classic
early recordings with
Dorsey. They included "Star Dust" (1940, with the Pied Pipers), "This Love
of Mine" (1941) and
"There Are Such Things" (1942, with the Pied Pipers).
Sinatra's last concert with Dorsey was in September 1942. Three months
later, he made history at
the age of 27 with his first solo appearance at the Paramount Theater in
New York City. Billed as an
"extra added attraction" on a program headlined by Benny Goodman, Sinatra
appeared on Dec. 30
and evoked a public hysteria that made headlines. Within weeks he had signed
lucrative contracts
with Columbia Records, R.K.O. Pictures and the radio program "Your Hit
Parade."
The adulation reached a high point on Oct. 12, 1944, the opening day of
a three-week return
engagement at the Paramount, when 30,000 fans -- most of them bobby-soxers
-- formed a frenzied
mob in Times Square.
"It was the war years, and there was a great loneliness," Sinatra, who
was kept from the draft by a
punctured eardrum, recounted later.
"I was the boy in every corner drugstore who'd gone off, drafted to the war. That was all."
From 1943 to 1945, he was the lead singer on "Your Hit Parade" and at the
same time began
recording for Columbia. Because of a musicians' strike, the accompaniment
on his first several
recording sessions for the label was a vocal chorus called the Bobby Tucker
Singers, instead of an
orchestra. In June 1943, however, Columbia rereleased a recording he had
made in September
1939 with Harry James. The recording, "All or Nothing at All," which had
sold 8,000 copies in its
first release, sold over a million.
Once the musicians' strike was settled in November 1944, Sinatra began
recording with Axel
Stordahl, who had been a trombonist and lead arranger with Tommy Dorsey.
Stordahl's sweet
string-laced settings for Sinatra's recordings silhouetted a yearning voice
that one writer compared to
"worn velveteen."
Until Sinatra left Columbia for Capitol Records in 1953, Stordahl remained
his principal arranger. He
also brilliantly exploited the songs of Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne, who
tailored many of their ballads
to Sinatra's voice and style.
Sinatra's first movie appearance was in 1940, singing with the Dorsey band
in "Las Vegas Nights."
He made his movie acting debut in 1943, in "Higher and Higher," an innocuous
bit of froth that was
described by Bosley Crowther, a New York Times movie critic, as "a slapdash
setting for the
incredibly unctuous readings of the Voice." The film was followed by "Step
Lively" (1944) and
"Anchors Aweigh" (1945), the first of three movies in which Sinatra played
Gene Kelly's sidekick. In
these early films, Sinatra, often wearing a sailor suit and projecting
a skinny soulfulness, played a
wide-eyed innocent who was shy with women.
In 1945, he also made "The House I Live In," a 10-minute patriotic plea
for racial and religious
tolerance that won him a special Academy Award. Like his mother, Sinatra
was an ardent Democrat
and supporter of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal. He visited
the White House in
1944 and campaigned for Roosevelt in his bid for a fourth term as President.
Sinatra's popularity remained at a peak through 1946, when he had 15 hit singles.
Then it began a gradual slide that steepened after 1948 and hit bottom
in 1952. As early as
November 1947, an appearance at the Capitol Theater in New York drew disappointing
attendance.
Only 4 Sinatra singles made the Top 10 in 1947, and the number dropped
to one in 1948.
Although he had shown himself to have an engaging screen presence, his
film career had not made
him a top box-office star. From 1946 to 1949, he appeared in five MGM musicals
-- "Till the
Clouds Roll By" (1946) (in which he sang "Ol' Man River" in a white suit),
"It Happened in
Brooklyn" (1947), "The Kissing Bandit" (1948), "Take Me Out to the Ball
Game" (1949) and "On
the Town" (1949) -- and one R.K.O. film, "The Miracle of the Bells" (1948),
in which he was
miscast as a priest.
After two more unsuccessful pictures, "Double Dynamite" (1951) and "Meet
Danny Wilson" (1952),
his movie career all but evaporated.
Part of the public disenchantment came after the columnist Robert Ruark
denounced him in 1947 for
having socialized with the deported gangster Lucky Luciano in Cuba. The
suggestion that the singer
consorted with criminals made him a target of the conservative press, which
resented his
pro-Roosevelt political stance. For the rest of Sinatra's career, stories
of his relations with the
underworld dogged him, and he reacted angrily to the charges.
While his career was in decline in the late 1940's, his marriage to Nancy
Barbato also unraveled. In
1949, he had begun an affair with the movie star Ava Gardner. The relationship
became public the
next year, and on November 7, 1951, one week after his divorce was final,
he married her in
Philadelphia.
Passionate but stormy, the marriage lasted just less than two years. MGM
announced their
separation in October 1953, and they were divorced in 1957.
Those personal upheavals, including a suicide attempt, coincided with increasing
tension between
Sinatra and Columbia Records after Mitch Miller took the company's creative
reins in 1950.
In an ever more desperate search for a hit single, Sinatra let himself
be coerced into recording inferior
material, the most notorious example being "Mama Will Bark," a 1951 novelty
duet with the
television personality Dagmar that included dog imitations by Donald Baine.
Although his voice had begun to reflect the strain he was under, he still
made some powerful
recordings, including "April in Paris," the anguished "I'm a Fool to Want
You" and renditions of
"Castle Rock" and "The Birth of the Blues" that anticipated the swinging
Sinatra of the mid-50s.
Sinatra's phenomenal resurgence began in 1953 with the release of "From
Here to Eternity," Fred
Zinnemann's film version of James Jones's best-selling novel about American
G.I.'s in Hawaii on the
eve of World War II. His portrayal of Maggio, the combative Italian-American
soldier who is beaten
to death in a stockade, his spirit unbroken, won him rave reviews, an Oscar
and renewed public
sympathy.
In April 1953, Sinatra, then 37, had signed with Capitol Records. A cautious
deal, the contract was
for only one year, with no advance. Sinatra arrived at Capitol just when
his voice had lost most of its
youthful sheen, but the move proved fortunate. Only five years earlier,
the long-playing record had
been introduced, and the longer form encouraged Sinatra, who brought remarkable
introspective
depth to the interpretation of lyrics, to make cohesive album-length emotional
statements.
In his second recording session for Capitol, in late April 1953, Sinatra
was teamed with Nelson
Riddle, who became the most important of the several arrangers with whom
he worked during his
decade with the label. A trombonist who had also worked with Tommy Dorsey,
Riddle pioneered in
augmenting a big-band lineup with strings, and he was the master of an
elegant pop impressionism
that enhanced Sinatra's vocal image of urbane sophistication. On a series
of classic pop albums for
Capitol, the singer and arranger virtually reinvented swing music for a
more opulent era.
That process began with their first single release, "I've Got the World
on a String," which hit the pop
charts in the summer of 1953. It continued with the albums "Songs for Young
Lovers," released in
early 1954, and "Swing Easy," which came out six months later.
The collaboration hit its artistic peak with three albums. "In the Wee
Small Hours," a 16-cut
collection of classic torch songs sung in a quietly anguished baritone,
was released in the spring of
1955. "Songs for Swingin' Lovers," released a year later, defined Sinatra
in his adult "swinging"
mode. It included what many regard as his greatest recorded performance:
Cole Porter's "I've Got
You Under My Skin."
"Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely," released in the summer of 1958,
expanded on the
mournful, introspective tone of "Wee Small Hours" by adding shadings that
were at once jazzier and
more operatic. The album, which included his classic recording of "What's
New," inspired Linda
Ronstadt's hit 1983 album "What's New," which in turn spurred a revival
of interest in elegant '50s
pop styles.
Sinatra's Capitol albums were among the first so-called concept albums
in the way they explored
different adult approaches to love and invoked varied aspects of the singer's
personality. These were
the fun-loving hedonist ("Songs for Swingin' Lovers" and its equally brilliant
1957 follow-up, "A
Swingin' Affair"), the romantic confidant ("Close to You," recorded with
the Hollywood String
Quartet), the jet-set playboy ("Come Fly With Me"), the romantic loner
("Where Are You?," "No
One Cares") and the hardened sensation-seeker ("Come Swing With Me").
In 1959, "Come Dance With Me!," a hard-swinging album arranged by Billy
May, won Sinatra his
first Grammy Awards, for album of the year and best male vocal performance,
and stayed on the
sales chart for 140 weeks, longer than any other Sinatra album.
Sinatra's career as a maker of hit singles was also rejuvenated. "Young
at Heart," which hit the pop
charts in February 1954, reached No. 2 on Billboard's pop singles chart,
and "Learnin' the Blues"
reached No. 1 the following year. His other significant hits from the late
1950s included "Love and
Marriage," (which was written for a television production of "Our Town,"
in which Sinatra played the
Stage Manager), "The Tender Trap" (1955), "Hey! Jealous Lover" (1956),
"All the Way" (1957)
and "Witchcraft" (1958).
During this period, the versatile team of Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn,
who had become
partners in 1954, functioned almost as Sinatra's house songwriters, supplying
both movie song hits
and the title songs for albums.
After "From Here to Eternity," Sinatra's movie career boomed, with the
roles many and varied. He
played the perennial gambler Nathan Detroit in the film adaptation of the
Broadway musical "Guys
and Dolls" (1955), a heroin addict in "The Man With the Golden Arm" the
same year and an Army
investigator tracking a would-be assassin in the political thriller "The
Manchurian Candidate" (1962).
His performance in "The Man With the Golden Arm" won him an Academy Award
nomination for
best actor.
In his better movie roles -- playing a would-be Presidential assassin in
"Suddenly" (1954), the
comedian Joe E. Lewis in "The Joker Is Wild" (1957) and a vulnerable intellectual
in "Some Came
Running" (1958) -- Sinatra conveyed an outsider's edgy volatility that
matched the film-noirish mood
of his more introspective albums.
His roles in the film musicals "High Society" (1956) and "Pal Joey" (1957)
as well as "Guys and
Dolls" effectively played off his scrappy, streetwise image.
Assessing Sinatra's film career, the critic David Thomson said he had a
"pervasive influence on
American acting: he glamorized the fatalistic outsider; he made his own
anger intriguing, and in the late
'50s especially he was one of our darkest male icons."
"Sinatra is a noir sound," he said, "like saxophones, foghorns, gunfire
and the quiet weeping of
women in the background."
Sinatra remained a top box office draw for nearly a decade, and his success
as both singer and actor
led the New York radio personality William B. Williams to nickname him
Chairman of the Board of
show business. The name stuck for the rest of his long career.
At a time when restraints on sexual and social behavior had begun to loosen
a bit, the high-living
Sinatra, who enjoyed gambling and womanizing, became in the popular press
the embodiment of the
swinger, a concept repeatedly invoked by his album titles.
In the '60s, Sinatra appeared to be America's quintessential middle-aged
playboy. "Ocean's Eleven"
(1960) was the first of three Sinatra films to feature the star surrounded
by the hard-drinking,
high-living clique -- nicknamed the Rat Pack, which included Dean Martin,
Peter Lawford, Sammy
Davis Jr. and Joey Bishop.
The group was an outgrowth of a social circle that had centered on Humphrey
Bogart, who died in
1957. The Rat Packers appeared together in three more lighthearted capers:
"Sergeants Three"
(1962), "Four for Texas" (1963) and "Robin and the Seven Hoods" (1964).
This was the other side
of Sinatra. As carefully as he plumbed his music, after 1960 he seemed
largely to be wasting his
acting talents by walking through his movies.
One of the Rat Pack's favorite playgrounds was Las Vegas, where Sinatra
was a pioneer entertainer.
In 1953, he bought a 2 percent interest in the Sands Hotel, and eventually
became a corporate vice
president.
He earned $100,000 a week in his frequent performances at the Sands and
used the hotel for
recording albums and making movies.
After supporting Adlai Stevenson's bid for the Presidency in 1956, Sinatra
worked avidly for John F.
Kennedy in 1960 and supervised the newly elected President's inaugural
gala in Washington in
January 1961. But his pro-Kennedy sentiments cooled after the President
canceled a weekend visit
to Sinatra's house because the singer had been host to the Chicago mob
boss Sam Giancana and his
associates. By the 1970's, Sinatra had turned to the right. He became a
supporter of Richard Nixon
and Ronald Reagan.
Sinatra's recording career entered a major new phase when he formed his
own record company,
Reprise, in late 1960. Since the new label overlapped his Capitol contract,
for about a year he
recorded for both labels. In 1963, he sold his record company to Warner
Brothers, retaining a
one-third interest. In association with Warner Brothers, he also set up
his own independent film
production company, Artanis.
Beginning with "Ring-A-Ding-Ding!" in 1961 and for the next 20 years, Sinatra
recorded more than
30 albums for Reprise. By this time, his voice had hardened and coarsened.
Except for "Francis
Albert Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim," a remarkable 1967 collaboration
with the Brazilian
songwriter, guitarist and singer in which he sang very softly, his ballad
singing tended toward the
stentorian, often with a noticeable edge of macho toughness. The coarsening
of his voice, however,
helped give his singing an extra rhythmic punch.
Increasingly, his albums had a self-consciously retrospective air. "I Remember
Tommy ..." (1961)
looked back to his days with the Dorsey band.
"Sinatra's Sinatra" (1963) consisted entirely of newly recorded Sinatra favorites.
His 50th birthday in 1965 was celebrated with the release of two deliberately
monumental albums,
"September of My Years" and "A Man and His Music," an anthology of his
career that he narrated
and sang. "September of My Years," whose title anthem of middle-aged nostalgia
was
custom-written by Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen and arranged by Gordon
Jenkins, won
Grammys for album of the year and best male vocal performance. Sinatra
scored a double triumph in
1966 when "A Man and His Music" was voted album of the year, and "Strangers
in the Night," his
first No. 1 single in 11 years, won record of the year. The string of hits
continued with a Top 5 hit,
"That's Life" (1966), and "Something Stupid" (1967), a duet with his daughter
Nancy.
In 1969 he had a substantial hit with "My Way," an adaptation of a French
ballad, "Mon Habitude,"
by Claude Francois, Jacques Revaux and Giles Thibaut, with English lyrics
by Paul Anka. Along with
"New York, New York," which he recorded for a three-disk set, "Trilogy:
Past, Present, Future"
(1980), it became one of the signature songs of his later years.
The moment when Sinatra and his style of music seemed the least fashionable
was in the late 1960s,
when the youthful rock counterculture dominated popular music. Sinatra
was no fan of rock-and-roll,
having once dismissed it as music "sung, played and written for the most
part by cretinous goons."
He did make tentative efforts to adapt to changing styles, trying his hand
at songs by Jim Croce,
Jimmy Webb, Neil Diamond, Neil Sedaka, John Denver, Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell,
Stevie Wonder,
Peter Allen, Billy Joel and the Beatles, among others. But even singing
soft rock, he never sounded
entirely comfortable.
His surprise marriage in 1966 to the actress Mia Farrow, then 20 (and 30
years his junior), seemed
in part to be a search for a youthful connection. They were divorced in
1968.
As a film actor, Sinatra continued to work steadily through the 1960s.
Besides his Rat Pack jaunts,
his films included "Come Blow Your Horn" (1963), "Von Ryan's Express" (1965),
"Tony Rome"
(1967), "The Detective" (1968) and "Dirty Dingus Magee" (1970).
In June 1971, Sinatra announced his retirement during a gala concert at
the Dorothy Chandler
Pavilion in Los Angeles, but it lasted only two years. He returned with
the album "Ol' Blue Eyes Is
Back," the title of which gave him his last show business nickname.
In 1976 he married for the fourth time, to Barbara Blakely Marx, who had
been married to Zeppo
Marx. She survives him, as do his daughters, his son and two grandchildren.
His recordings and films became less frequent. In 1980, after a six-year
hiatus, he released "Trilogy:
Past, Present, Future," a concept album in which a Gordon Jenkins oratorio
imagined the singer as an
intergalactic traveler. It was followed by the moody "She Shot Me Down"
(1981) and the jazzy
"L.A. Is My Lady" (1984).
Sinatra returned to film in 1977 with a television movie, "Contract on
Cherry Street," which was
poorly received, as was his last major Hollywood role, as an aging detective
in "The First Deadly
Sin" (1980). In 1984, he briefly appeared as himself in "Cannonball Run
2." For his 75th birthday in
1990, Capitol and Reprise each released extensive, elaborately packaged
Sinatra retrospectives.
Columbia had released a six-disk anthology four years earlier.
Sinatra worked vigorously for the 1980 Presidential campaign of his close
friend Ronald Reagan, and
produced and directed a three-hour inaugural gala that was shown in an
edited form on television in
1981. In 1985 he was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's
highest civilian award.
Even after he stopped making records and movies, Sinatra continued to give
concerts. In the early
1980's, he was paid $2 million for four concerts in Argentina and $2 million
for nine concerts in Sun
City, South Africa. Sun City appearances by Sinatra, who had always supported
civil rights causes,
drew sharp criticism from anti-apartheid groups.
In 1982, he signed a $16 million three-year contract with the Golden Nugget
Hotel in Atlantic City.
In 1988 and 1989, Sinatra was still listed in Forbes magazine as among
the 40 richest entertainers,
with an annual income estimated at $14 million in 1989 and $12 million
in 1988. But when he was
required to submit a financial statement to the Nevada Gaming Commission
for a renewal of his
gambling license in 1981, he claimed a surprisingly modest net worth of
just over $14 million.
Sinatra's life was rocked in 1986 by the publication of "His Way," Kitty
Kelley's best-selling
unauthorized biography, which focused on his volatile personality, his
personal feuds, his streak of
violence and his relationships over the years with organized-crime figures.
It was a harsh portrait that
nevertheless acknowledged Sinatra's role as a musical icon.
He toured the world in 1989 with Sammy Davis Jr. and Liza Minnelli in a
concert package billed as
"the ultimate event." It was one of the grander events in a rigorous touring
schedule that he maintained
into his late 70s. He toured with Shirley MacLaine in 1992. Increasingly,
during his performances in
later years, he resorted to using electronic prompters at the front of
the stage to read lyrics.
In 1993, at the age of 77, Sinatra had an astounding recording-career comeback
with "Frank Sinatra
Duets," a collection of 13 Sinatra standards rerecorded with such pop stars
as Barbra Streisand,
Tony Bennett, Aretha Franklin, Luther Vandross and Bono of the Irish rock
group U2. The record
was widely criticized for being an engineering stunt, since none of the
guest singers were actually in
the recording studio with Sinatra, who recorded his parts separately. The
record nevertheless sold
over two million copies in the United States. A year later, there was a
weaker follow-up using a
different roster of guests.
Sinatra's last concert was on Feb. 25, 1995, at the Palm Desert Marriott
Ballroom in Palm Desert,
Calif.
Assessing his own abilities in 1963, Sinatra sounded a note that was quintessentially
characteristic:
forlorn and tough. "Being an 18-karat manic-depressive, and having lived
a life of violent emotional
contradictions, I have an overacute capacity for sadness as well as elation,"
he said.
"Whatever else has been said about me personally is unimportant. When I
sing, I believe, I'm honest."
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SHAMEFUL DISCLAIMER |