Showing posts with label Frank Sinatra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Sinatra. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

The dark history of Frank Sinatra’s mansion

The 8,000-square-foot mansion sits on a three-and-a-half acre estate in the heart of the Chatsworth Nature Preserve. It has a splendid view of the San Fernando Valley, the Los Angeles foothills and the surrounding mountains. It also features gardens, terraces and an outdoor pool.SCOTT EVERTS PARA SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 

The dark history of Frank Sinatra’s mansion: The Rat Pack’s gambling and alleged encounters between Marilyn Monroe and John F. Kennedy 

Farralone was the name of the legendary singer’s home. It was designed by architect William Pereira with the assistance of his then-student, Frank Gehry. The house has just gone on sale for more than $8 million


Miquel Echarri
MIQUEL ECHARRI
NOV 16, 2024 - 23:15 COT

Poker was played there until the early hours of the morning, while million-dollar rounds of bourbon and French champagne were served. The host — Frank Sinatra — and famous guests, such as Dean Martin, Angie Dickinson, Sammy Davis Jr. and Joey Bishop, all partook in the activities.

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra: the audacious partnership that rocketed them to another planet



Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra

Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra: the audacious partnership that rocketed them to another planet

Jones was behind many inflection points in American music, but it all began with a brotherhood with Ol’ Blue Eyes

Andrew Lawrence

Tuesday 5 November 2024


In 1958 Quincy Jones was working in Paris when he received a call on behalf of the princess of Monaco. Grace Kelly had convinced the principality to host a fundraising concert for the United Nations Refugee Fund and booked Frank Sinatra to perform – but she needed Jones’s help finding Sinatra a backing orchestra.

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Inside the Terry O’Neill Retrospective at Fotografiska New York

Terry O'Neill at Fotografiska

The Rolling Stones outside St. George’s Church in Hanover Square, London, 17th January 1964. Clockwise from bottom left: Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman, Keith Richards and Brian Jones (1942 – 1969).


Inside the Terry O’Neill Retrospectiveat Fotografiska New York

It’s never been easier to feel close to your favorite star—all it takes is a few clicks to find a selfie on their Instagram. But before social media, and even the days of peak paparazzi, Terry O’Neill defined the concept of the celebrity story in photographs you can find at Stars, a new exhibition celebrating a half-century of the photographer’s legacy at Fotografiska New York. “I remember my parents talking about stars in the mid-seventies,” says Fotografiska chair Yoram Roth. “They may as well have been talking about Bible characters. These were people who were so unknown to them that every snippet of information was passed around like scripture. To see a photo in a glossy magazine weekly or monthly made you feel like you had access to something that we now take for granted.” Just before the show’s opening, Roth made time to walk us through some of O’Neill’s most iconic images of Faye Dunaway, Mick Jagger, Elizabeth Taylor, and David Bowie.

Friday, March 5, 2021

‘I had to leave Hollywood to save myself’ / Kim Novak on art, bipolar, Hitchcock and happiness

Kim Novak
 

Interview

‘I had to leave Hollywood to save myself’: Kim Novak on art, bipolar, Hitchcock and happiness

Simon Hattenstone

Kim Novak starred in Vertigo – voted the best film ever made – but knew she was too fragile for fame. She talks about her tough childhood, the sensitive side of Sinatra and starting again in her forties


Simon Hattenstone
Monday 15 February 2021

K

im Novak apologises for the mess. And, to be fair, the studio at her Oregon home is fabulously messy. Behind her are a couple of canvases she has been working on; to the left and right, all sorts of all sorts. At the back of the room, her rescue dog, Patches, lies on a sofa, half snoozing, half listening. Occasionally, Sadie Ann, her husband’s pudelpointer, wanders in, sniffs around and leaves.

Novak, who turned 88 two days ago, is so much more than a Hollywood legend. The star of Hitchcock’s Vertigo is a wonderful artist, a mental health activist (she is proudly bipolar), an anti-bullying campaigner, a vet’s assistant and one of the greatest life forces I’ve spoken to.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Celebrities and pets on the French Riviera


Pablo Picasso

Brigitte Bardot sunbathes with her pup, Audrey Hepburn sits on a frog, and the moment Grace Kelly and Prince Rainier first met - alongside a tiger. Celebrities and pets on the French Riviera

  • Stunning private photos of actors, artists and writers and their furry - and not-so-furry - friends on the Cote d'Azur appear in new book
  • Photographer Edward Quinn lived among the rich and famous in the 50s and 60s
  • Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dali are seen in rare pictures
The Cote d’Azur, also known as the French Riviera, was a star-studded playground of celebrities from show business, the art and business world in the middle of the last century. 
Irish photographer Edward Quinn lived and worked there.
Described as a ‘cocktail’ photographer, Quinn charmed the stars vacationing on the strikingly beautiful Mediterranean coastline of the southeast corner of France. They willingly let him photograph them while on holiday, where they brought their furry and no-so-furry friends along or made new ones.  Below are some of the exquisite photographs from the new coffee table book Celebrity Pets on the French Riviera in the 50s and 60s publishes by teNeues publishers.
Bathing beauties: French film star Brigitte Bardot sunbathes with her black spaniel, Clown, in 1956 on the French Riviera. Clown was a present from her then husband, film director Roger Vadim. This was the year that the film And God Created Woman launched Bardot to international fame as a sex symbol. Thirty-four years old at the time, she divorced Vadim the following year.

Black and white period: Pablo Picasso loved dogs and owned many but his Dalmatian Perro appeared on canvas in some of his later paintings. He lived in a sumptuous 19th century house, Villa La Californie, in the hills above Cannes with an uninterrupted view of the sea. This photo was taken in 1961

Hold that tiger: American movie star Grace Kelly met Prince Rainier III of Monaco in 1955 for the first time in the private zoo of Rainier’s palace. The photographer, Quinn, suggested that the couple stroll through the zoo as an ice-breaker between the self-conscious couple.The meeting had been arranged by Paris-Match, the French news weekly magazine. Exhausted by a European tour, it is rumored that Grace unsuccessfully tried to cancel this meeting. She returned to Hollywood and their relationship quickly evolved through correspondence. They married the following year.

Leap frog: Audrey Hepburn was in Monaco for the movie Monte Carlo Baby at the very beginning of her film career in 1951. It was here in Monte Carlo that she was spotted on the set of the film outside of the Hotel de Paris and chosen to play the role of Gigi that shot her to international stardom.

Grrrreat: Film star Elizabeth Taylor was in Cannes in 1957 for the Cannes Film Festival with her then third husband, producer Mike Todd. She is the only one laughing in a close encounter with a large lion cub. On the far left is Art Buchwald, famous New York Herald columnist at the time. Todd’s film Around the World in 80 Days won an Oscar for Best Picture that year

Member of the wedding: Bardot relaxes between shooting the film Voulez-vous danser avec moi? (Come Dance With Me) in Nice, 1959. She is pictured with her beloved dog, Guapa, a rescue dog she adopted that had been abused by children in Spain. Guapa, meaning ‘Pretty girl’, became Bardot’s adored dog for the next fifteen years

Giddyup: Frank Sinatra arrived by carriage in Monte Carlo in 1958 where he performed at a charity Gala Evening at the Sporting d’Eté (Sporting Club) for the UN Refugee Children. His album, Come Fly with Me, came out that year and was nominated for Album of the Year along with five other Grammy nominations at the inaugural Grammy Awards in 1959

Ay, Chihuahua! Jayne Mansfield hugs her Chihuahua while taking a dip in Cannes in 1958. She was on the Riviera with her second husband Mickey Hargitay attending the Cannes Film Festival. The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield, an x-rated ‘documentary’ that followed her wild and sexy adventures through Rome, Cannes, Paris, New York and Los Angeles came out in 1968, a year after her death in a car accident in 1967

Splendid: Film actress Natalie Wood arrived in Cannes in 1962, with her Splendor in the Grass co-star and boyfriend of the hour, actor Warren Beatty. The couple stayed at the Carlton Hotel in Cannes. A dachshund watches their arrival

Winging it: Spanish Catalan Surrealist painter Salvador Dali kept a summer home in Portlligat, Cadaques, a small village on the coast of Spain south of the Riviera. The famous artist gathered the fallen feathers from the swans that lived on the shoreline in front of his house and used them for his experimental painting work with a sea urchin. 1957

Spotted: Italian film star Claudia Cardinale, Italian film director Luchino Visconti and Hollywood movie star Burt Lancaster presented their movie Il Gattopardo at the Cannes Film Festival in 1963 in the company of a large cheetah. The film’s title translated to The Leopard and was nominated for an Oscar

Elizabeth Taylor with her miniature poodle in the summer of 1957 when she and Mike Todd rented the sumptuous Mediterranean style Villa Florentina, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat. Liz would return to La Florentina in 1967 with Richard Burton ten years later




Sunday, July 15, 2018

Nancy Sinatra Sr dies aged 101






Frank and Nancy Sinatra leave a Hollywood nightclub in 1946.
 Frank and Nancy Sinatra leave a Hollywood nightclub in 1946. Photograph: AP


Nancy Sinatra Sr dies aged 101

Nancy Barbato was the first of the singer’s four wives and the mother of his three children

Associated Press
Saturday 14 July 2018

Nancy Sinatra Sr, the childhood sweetheart of Frank Sinatra who became the first of his four wives and the mother of his three children, has died. She was 101.
Her daughter, Nancy Sinatra Jr, tweeted that her mother died Friday and a posting on her web page said she died at 6:02 p.m. but didn’t indicate where she died.
“She was a blessing and the light of my life,” her daughter said.

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Ronan Farrow has Woody’s wit and Sinatra’s charm

Mia Farrow’s son Ronan, photographed in 2011, graduated from Yale Law School and went on to work for the State Department under Hillary Clinton.



Ronan Farrow has Woody’s wit and Sinatra’s charm
By Kate Storey
October 7, 2013 | 9:03pm


When Ronan Farrow was working on global youth issues for the State Department in Washington, DC, two years ago, he managed to find some free time for voice lessons.
In between trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan and reporting to then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, he’d stop by the DC home of his voice teacher, Rebekah Eden, to practice his scales and even play around writing lyrics.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Mia Farrow / All Her Gifts


All Her Gifts
by ELLEN COPPERFIELD
When Frank Sinatra began to pursue Mia Farrow, he spent money as fast as he could earn it, so fast he was constantly teetering on the verge of collapse  but he was still Frank Sinatra. No woman was unavailable to him. If he saw a particularly attractive woman with a date, he'd send a friend to pry the girl away.
Mia's father John introduced his daughter to Frank Sinatra at the age of eleven. John Farrow was sleeping with Frank's first wife, Ava Gardner. The affair had separated her dad from her mother, the actress Maureen O'Sullivan. John Farrow told Frank to stay away from his daughter.
Farrow was a Hollywood girl, although due to a childhood bout of polio, extremely inexperienced in matters of sex. When Frank spotted her watching him on set, he sent someone over to ask how old Mia was. She was nineteen. When Mia approached him, she dropped her purse, and everything came spilling out, including her retainer. She had never even heard him sing.
A Chicago reporter once asked Ava Gardner what she saw in Sinatra, calling him "a 119 pound has-been." She told him, "Well, I'll tell you  nineteen pounds is cock."
with her cat Malcolm
Their first date ended up as a screening of his directorial debut, None But the Brave. It was a terrible picture, but Frank's move was to hold her hand. He immediately invited her to Palm Springs. When she tried to beg off, he sent a plane for her. Mia kept her cat on a leash during the trip. They slept together that second night, Mia's first time and Frank's one millionth. The premature ejaculation that had often bothered him never was a problem with Mia Farrow. Faking an orgasm was soon as easy as opening her eyes.
For Christmas, he gave her a diamond koala bear. Next Christmas, her present, wrapped neatly, was a gold cigarette case she kept joints in. It was inscribed, "Mia, Mia, with love, Francis."
Kitty Kelley's biography of Sinatra argues that it was Mia who controlled Frank. It is possible that Frank and his friends willfully mistook Mia's wonderment at being with "Frank Sinatra" as a kind of sinister infatuation. I suppose it is also possible, as Kelley alleges, that "she was extremely manipulative for such a young woman."
Things settled into a familiar routine  at first, Mia was not welcome with Frank's friends. For awhile, she understood his discretion. In her memoir What Falls Away, she writes, "After a while he moved my horse to Palm Springs and I rode in the desert. I discovered an oasis, a place that had been a water stop for covered wagons, where Salvador enjoyed splashing in the muddy pond and where I would visit an ancient Native American man who lived in a log cabin, thickly shaded by palm trees. He would always give me a glass of bitter, warm beer and recite beautiful Indian prayers. I was never able to persuade Frank to get on a horse."
riding her horse Salvador
In the days before Frank's fiftieth birthday party, Mia became so angry at being disinvited she threw an ashtray at his head. When he came home, she had cut off all her hair in anguish. After one fight, he gave her a yellow Thunderbird.
Few knew about their relationship, and then everyone did. Some of Frank's buddies were astonished by his change of heart when it came to dating a younger woman. When he saw Billy Wilder's Love in the Afternoon, he harangued Wilder's wife about the film. "He was quite vehement about it," Wilder told Kelley. "So vehement he made my wife cry. He said he didn't like the picture because he thought it was immoral for an elderly man to make love in the afternoon to a young girl."
with Salvador Dali
Mia's Australian-born, womanizing father had died of a heart attack in 1963. An available replacement was Salvador Dali. When she married Frank, Dali's wedding gift consisted of an owl, parts of a frog, and a moon rock. When she cut her hair, Dali told her it constituted "a mythical suicide."
wedding day 1966
Mia sampled a variety of drugs, usually to Frank's considerable annoyance. Her favorite was LSD. She called Frank "Charlie Brown." He stuck to whiskey, consuming a bottle of Jack Daniel's in a single sitting. He referred to Mia as "Angel Face." He was forty-eight years old. When Frank threw Mia a 20th birthday party with hundreds of guests, she became so unhappy she started to cry.
Mia despised Las Vegas. When Frank performed there, she slept with her head on the table. Frank was accustomed to having a variety of women in his life, many of whom were documented by FBI surveillance. Mia also took a younger companion, eventually astonished at how little her new man drank! Frank still found himself unsure. When he introduced Mia to Shirley MacLaine, asking for her opinion, Shirley told him, "What do you say about someone who looks like a twelve year old boy?" Frank began taking testerone shots in order to perform in the bedroom.
in Miami 1967
When Marilyn Monroe was in the throes of her pill addiction, Frank gave her a white poodle she named Maf, as in Mafia.
They came back to each other for good when Frank showed her a $85,000 engagement ring. Panic had driven him to it, the idea of being truly alone. Marriage was what she wanted. He told her, she recalled in What Falls Away, "I have respect for life in any form. I believe in nature, in the birds, the sea, the sky, in everything I can see. If these things are what you mean by God, then I believe in God. But I don't believe in a personal God to whom I look for comfort or for a natural on the next roll of the dice. I'm for anything that gets you through the night, be it prayer, tranquilizers, or a bottle of Jack Daniel's."
After Jackie Mason did a few jokes about the age difference between the two, a thug punched him in the face and broke his jaw.
Frank oscillated between two crowds, the kind of people who hung Picassos and Renoirs on their walls, and his Vegas friends, more likely to put their fist through a wall than to notice what was on it. He was seamless in both social circles, Mia was the judged or judging one. A infamous boat trip to Hyannisport was covered by the press as if was the Super Bowl. It was impossible to hear the person next to you because of the persistent sound of helicopters. "You look like a girl of thirteen or fourteen," Claudette Colbert sniveled at her.
They honeymooned in London. When the wives of Frank's friends came over to take Mia shopping, she hid in the bathroom. The night before her wedding to Frank at the Sands, he had a prostitute sent over. The night before he'd fucked a former flame. Hours before the ceremony, he gave Ava Gardner the news and told her he would always love her. Mia told her friends it felt something like an adoption.
photo by Bill Eppridge
Frank was strongly against Mia starring in Rosemary's Baby. He told her that he couldn't see her in the part, that it sounded like "some kinky devil shit" to him. There were other differences  Frank was a lifelong Democrat, and Mia was against the Vietnam War. She sent a bird in a golden cage to A Dandy In Aspic co-star Laurence Harvey, viewing the animal as herself. Frank believed in nature, the birds, the sky...
Other men made Frank insanely jealous. Publicity photos with Laurence Harvey for Aspicfreaked him out completely, even though Mia never so much as exchanged a kiss with a man. If he didn't want her to be cast in a particular role, his mob cronies would make a threatening call to the producer. When he heard that Mia shared an intimate dance with his archenemy Robert Kennedy, Frank flipped out. He began cheating on her with the actress Lee Remick, and he could not get the image of her and Kennedy out of his mind.
Frank's control was temporarily replaced by Polanski's directorial obsessions. Although Mia only weighed 98 pounds, Roman wanted her to lose more weight for the last scenes in Rosemary's Baby. Polanski and Cassavetes spent most of the shoot fighting over Polanski's directing style, the man's insistence on shooting multiple takes. Polanski was really into The Mamas and the Papas; Frank demanded Mia bail on the production ofRosemary's Baby, envious of the time it took away from him. She refused. Upon signing the divorce papers the moment they arrived unexpectedly at the New York set, Mia began spending her weekends with Roman and his wife Sharon Tate.
with John Cassavetes
When Robert Vaughn was on the $10,000 Pyramid, he gave the clue for Frank Sinatra by telling his partner, "Mia Farrow's father." She got it in one. To be fair, Frank did use the same aftershave as Mia's dad.
Despite the divorce, Mia still hoped for some kind of reconciliation. Frank ran hot and cold; one minute he was screaming at her to put on a sweater to hide her thin arms, the next he was giving her an antique music box. Her relationship with Frank raised her profile as an actress, allowing her to demand $100,000 per film. When it became wholly apparent Rosemary's Baby was going to launch Mia's acting career into the stratosphere, he grew incensed at her.
Mia and the Beatles minus Ringo
Mia flew to meet a friend in New Delhi, far enough from Sinatra to forget all about him. She later wrote of this time, "I tried to meditate for the recommended twelve hours a day, but I rarely came close." Lepers tried to touch her hair, the water was far from safe to drink. The Beatles suddenly arrived at her ashram. Paul and John wrote a song for her sister. She became friendly with their girlfriends, realizing how long it had been since she had talked to people her own age.
Mia shot a Joseph Losey/Elizabeth Taylor flick, Secret Ceremony, in London, living by herself in the Grosvenor Square apartment where she and Frank had spent their honeymoon. Her secretary told her, "If you kill yourself, I'll never forgive you." The flat brought back too many bad memories, so she moved to a rented home in the country near George and Ringo. She spoke to Frank from time-to-time on the phone, and eventually she realized it was over between them.
She kept the yellow Thunderbird, silver place settings, a few jewels. She began adopting animals out of desperation. She bought her mother a ring at Cartier. She took in eleven cats, and later, fifteen children. She gave the diamond koala bear away.
Ellen Copperfield is the senior contributor to This Recording. She is a writer living in San Francisco. You can find an archive of her writing on This Recording here. She last wrote in these pages about the adolescence of Barbra Streisand.
"Long Vows" - Band of Horses (mp3)
"Heartbreak on the 101" - Band of Horses (mp3)
Mirage Rock is the new album from Band Horses, and it will be released worldwide on September 18th.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Gay Talese / Frank Sinatra Has a Cold

Frank Sinatra
by Lobuster

In the winter of 1965, writer Gay Talese arrived in Los Angeles with an assignment from Esquire to profile Frank Sinatra. The legendary singer was approaching fifty, under the weather, out of sorts, and unwilling to be interviewed. So Talese remained in L.A., hoping Sinatra might recover and reconsider, and he began talking to many of the people around Sinatra -- his friends, his associates, his family, his countless hangers-on -- and observing the man himself wherever he could. The result, "Frank Sinatra Has a Cold," ran in April 1966 and became one of the most celebrated magazine stories ever published, a pioneering example of what came to be called New Journalism -- a work of rigorously faithful fact enlivened with the kind of vivid storytelling that had previously been reserved for fiction. The piece conjures a deeply rich portrait of one of the era's most guarded figures and tells a larger story about entertainment, celebrity, and America itself. We're very pleased to republish it here.





Frank Sinatra Has a Cold
By Gay Talese

FRANK SINATRA, holding a glass of bourbon in one hand and a cigarette in the other, stood in a dark corner of the bar between two attractive but fading blondes who sat waiting for him to say something. But he said nothing; he had been silent during much of the evening, except now in this private club in Beverly Hills he seemed even more distant, staring out through the smoke and semidarkness into a large room beyond the bar where dozens of young couples sat huddled around small tables or twisted in the center of the floor to the clamorous clang of folk-rock music blaring from the stereo. The two blondes knew, as did Sinatra's four male friends who stood nearby, that it was a bad idea to force conversation upon him when he was in this mood of sullen silence, a mood that had hardly been uncommon during this first week of November, a month before his fiftieth birthday.