The actor of Frank Sinatra

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Also known as: Francis Albert Sinatra
Quick Facts
In full:
Francis Albert Sinatra
Born:
December 12, 1915, Hoboken, New Jersey, U.S.
Died:
May 14, 1998, Los Angeles, California (aged 82)
Awards And Honors:
Grammy Award (1995)
Kennedy Center Honors (1983)
Grammy Award (1966)
Grammy Award (1965)
Grammy Award (1959)
Grammy Award (1958)
Academy Award (1954)
Academy Award (1954): Actor in a Supporting Role
Special Award of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (1946)
Cecil B. DeMille Award (1971)
Golden Globe Award (1958): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
Golden Globe Award (1954): Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (1946): Promoting International Understanding
Grammy Award (1996): Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance
Grammy Award (1995): Grammy Legend Award
Grammy Award (1967): Record of the Year
Grammy Award (1967): Album of the Year
Grammy Award (1967): Best Vocal Performance, Male
Grammy Award (1966): Lifetime Achievement Award
Grammy Award (1966): Album of the Year
Grammy Award (1966): Best Vocal Performance, Male
Grammy Award (1960): Album of the Year
Grammy Award (1960): Best Vocal Performance, Male
Grammy Award (1959): Best Album Cover
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award (1971)
Notable Family Members:
spouse Ava Gardner
spouse Mia Farrow
daughter Nancy Sinatra
Married To:
Ava Gardner (1951–1957)
Mia Farrow (1966–1968)
Barbara Marx (married 1976)
Nancy Barbato Sinatra (1939–1951)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"Marriage on the Rocks" (1965)
"Pal Joey" (1957)
"Cannonball Run II" (1984)
"The List of Adrian Messenger" (1963)
"Ocean's Eleven" (1960)
"Von Ryan's Express" (1965)
"From Here to Eternity" (1953)
"Cast a Giant Shadow" (1966)
"Sergeants 3" (1962)
"The Pride and the Passion" (1957)
"It Happened in Brooklyn" (1947)
"Step Lively" (1944)
"Suddenly" (1954)
"Young at Heart" (1954)
"Producers' Showcase" (1955)
"The Detective" (1968)
"The Colgate Comedy Hour" (1954)
"4 for Texas" (1963)
"On the Town" (1949)
"Magnum, P.I." (1987)
"High Society" (1956)
"Come Blow Your Horn" (1963)
"Who's the Boss?" (1989)
"None But the Brave" (1965)
"Can-Can" (1960)
"The Tender Trap" (1955)
"The Miracle of the Bells" (1948)
"The Naked Runner" (1967)
"Till the Clouds Roll By" (1946)
"Guys and Dolls" (1955)
"Dirty Dingus Magee" (1970)
"The Manchurian Candidate" (1962)
"Kings Go Forth" (1958)
"The Devil at 4 O'Clock" (1961)
"The First Deadly Sin" (1980)
"Pepe" (1960)
"Meet Danny Wilson" (1952)
"Take Me Out to the Ball Game" (1949)
"Johnny Concho" (1956)
"Some Came Running" (1958)
"Around the World in 80 Days" (1956)
"Double Dynamite" (1951)
"Lady in Cement" (1968)
"A Hole in the Head" (1959)
"The Man with the Golden Arm" (1955)
"Anchors Aweigh" (1945)
"Assault on a Queen" (1966)
"Laugh-In" (1977–1978)
"Tony Rome" (1967)
"The Joker Is Wild" (1957)
"The Kissing Bandit" (1948)
"Higher and Higher" (1943)
"Not as a Stranger" (1955)
"Never So Few" (1959)
"Robin and the 7 Hoods" (1964)
"Reveille with Beverly" (1943)
Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
"None But the Brave" (1965)
"The Frank Sinatra Show" (1957)
Albums:
"Songs for Swingin' Lovers!" (1956)
"I Remember Tommy" (1963)
"Come Dance with Me!" (1959)
"Some Nice Things I've Missed" (1974)
"Ol' Blue Eyes Is Back" (1973)
"Frank Sinatra Conducts Tone Poems of Color" (1956)
"High Society" (1956)
"L.A. Is My Lady" (1984)
"Come Swing with Me!" (1961)
"The Voice of Frank Sinatra" (1947)
"Sinatra '65" (1965)
"Songs for Young Lovers" (1954)
"Swing Easy!" (1954)
"In the Wee Small Hours" (1955)
"Only the Lonely" (1958)
"Nice 'n' Easy" (1960)
"Swing Along with Me" (1961)
"Sinatra-Basie: An Historic Musical First" (1962)
"Strangers in the Night" (1966)
"She Shot Me Down" (1981)
"Come Fly with Me" (1958)
"Sinatra at the Sands" (1966)
"A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra" (1957)
"The Concert Sinatra" (1963)
"The Voice" (1955)
"Guys and Dolls" (1964)
"That's Life" (1966)
"Days of Wine and Roses, Moon River and Other Academy Award Winners" (1964)
"Robin and the 7 Hoods" (1964)
"Close to You and More" (1957)
"Can-Can [Original Soundtrack]" (1960)
"The Sinatra Family Wish You a Merry Christmas" (1968)
"No One Cares" (1959)
"My Kind of Broadway" (1965)
"My Way" (1969)
"Sinatra Sings Great Songs from Great Britain" (1962)
"A Man and His Music" (1986)
"Duets II" (1994)
"Requested by You" (1953)
"Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim" (1967)
"Sinatra & Company" (1971)
"The World We Knew" (1967)
"September of My Years" (1965)
"Duets" (1993)
"Sinatra's Swingin' Session!!! And More" (1961)
"All Alone" (1962)
"Watertown" (1969)
"Trilogy: Past, Present & Future" (1979)
"Frank Sinatra Conducts Music from Pictures and Plays" (1961)
"Point of No Return" (1961)
"It Might as Well Be Swing" (1964)
"Swing and Dance with Frank Sinatra" (1950)
"Moonlight Sinatra" (1965)
"America, I Hear You Singing" (1964)
"Rat Pack Collection" (1998)
"Ring-a-Ding Ding!" (1961)
"Francis A. & Edward K." (1967)
"A Man Alone: The Words & Music of McKuen" (1969)
"Pal Joey [Original Soundtrack]" (1957)
"Sinatra & Strings" (1962)
"Where Are You?" (1957)
"Sinatra & Sextet: Live in Paris" (1962)
"Sinatra and Swingin' Brass" (1962)
"Sinatra's Sinatra: A Collection of Frank's Favorites" (1963)
"Cycles" (1968)
"The Main Event: Live" (1974)
"A Swingin' Affair!" (1957)
"Softly, As I Leave You" (1964)

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Sinatra appeared in several films throughout the 1940s, the best among them being the musicals in which he costarred with dancer Gene Kelly. Of these, Anchors Aweigh (1945) and Take Me Out to the Ballgame (1949) are pleasant diversions, whereas On the Town (1949) ranks among the greatest of film musicals. It was acting, rather than music, that precipitated Sinatra’s comeback in 1953. He pleaded with Columbia Pictures president Harry Cohn for the role of the scrappy, tragic soldier, Maggio, in From Here to Eternity (1953), and he agreed to work for scale. His performance was universally praised and earned him an Oscar for best supporting actor. Sinatra went on to become one of the top film stars of the 1950s and ’60s, and he delivered fine performances in quality films such as Suddenly (1954), Young at Heart (1954), The Man with the Golden Arm (1955; Academy Award nomination for best actor), Guys and Dolls (1955), The Joker Is Wild (1957), Pal Joey (1957), and Some Came Running (1958). The political thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962) is perhaps Sinatra’s greatest film and features his best performance. With the possible exception of Bing Crosby, no other American entertainer achieved such a level of respect and popularity as both singer and actor. Although it is said that Sinatra stopped taking films seriously after The Manchurian Candidate, owing to his ongoing frustration with the tedious filmmaking process, his motion-picture résumé remains impressive. In later years, he was memorable in The Detective (1968), and in his final starring vehicle, The First Deadly Sin (1980).

The Capitol years

In 1953 Sinatra’s musical style took a dramatic turn. He signed with Capitol Records and, throughout the next nine years, issued a series of recordings widely regarded as his finest body of work. He is credited (though perhaps not accurately so) with inventing the “concept album”—an LP collection of songs built around a single theme or mood. His new approach also demanded new arrangements, and the in-house arrangers at Capitol were among the best. He worked with veteran big-band musician Billy May on outstanding up-tempo albums such as Come Fly with Me (1958) and Come Dance with Me! (1959), and with the arranger-composer Gordon Jenkins, whose lush string arrangements heightened the melancholy atmosphere of Where Are You? (1957) and No One Cares (1959).

As excellent as the albums with May and Jenkins were, however, Sinatra’s collaboration with arranger Nelson Riddle was truly a legendary musical partnership. Riddle, a former big-band trombonist who had arranged for artists such as Nat King Cole and Ella Mae Morse, scored some of Sinatra’s first Capitol sessions in 1953, initiating a collaboration that would extend over two decades and hundreds of recordings. Riddle was, in Sinatra’s words, “the greatest arranger in the world,” and critics agreed. With an instinctive sense for the proper musical setting, Riddle employed everything from quartets to 50-piece orchestras for ballad arrangements that were often characterized by a dominant solo instrument (particularly a mournful trombone), and by Riddle’s “private melodies,” which served as counterpoint to Sinatra’s highly personal approach. For swing tunes, Riddle developed his trademark “heartbeat rhythm,” a steady, driving beat, slightly slower than most swing charts, and meant to emulate “the pulse rate of the human heart after a brisk walk,” in Riddle’s words. Virtually all of the albums the Sinatra-Riddle team made for Capitol—such as In the Wee Small Hours (1955), Songs for Swingin’ Lovers! (1956), and Only the Lonely (1958)—are masterpieces.

Despite the importance of the Capitol arrangers in determining Sinatra’s new sound, the resulting albums were still very much dominated by the singer himself. Sinatra’s voice, which Riddle often described as having the warm timbre of a cello, had deepened and grown in power; gone was the whispery crooning of the Columbia days. His failed marriage to Gardner infused his ballad singing with a heretofore unseen emotional urgency and plaintive quality, although he eschewed anything that approached heart-on-the-sleeve histrionics. He attacked swing numbers with abandon and displayed his jazz influences with an uncanny sense of syncopation and an innate knowledge of “blue notes,” which he incorporated into the melody line. Two of his most heralded recordings—“I’ve Got You Under My Skin” (1956) and “One for My Baby” (1958), both arranged by Riddle—illustrate well his varied approach to moods and tempos.