Frank Sinatra received an unusual tribute this past Monday night in New York. It was at the former site of "Jilly's" restaurant. A group of the famous and non-famous gathered at the Russian Samovar restaurant on W. 52nd St. to help promote a new Sinatra book. For the night it was Jilly's again - the celebrity watering hole that was run by Frank Sinatra's longtime pal, Jilly Rizzo.
Attending from the 'famous' side were "Late Show With David Letterman" music director Paul Shaffer, singer/musicologist Michael Feinstein, and filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich. They turned out to celebrate the publication of the first volume of James Kaplan's Sinatra biography, "Frank: The Voice."
While partygoers took turns sitting in "Frank's booth," where the phenomenon allegedly held court, Bogdanovich, who actually knew Sinatra (and who gets a nice acknowledgment from Kaplan in the book's credits), called the work "brilliant" and said he'd written a review of it for Amazon.com.
Here is Peter's review;
"There has never been a book of this kind or quality about Frank Sinatra. Like the formidable novelist he is, James Kaplan has somehow managed to get inside the man and the legend, to such a degree that you feel you are living Sinatra’s life with him, almost day by day. Yet it is the fastest read.
From his violent, deforming, traumatic birth, through his Hoboken childhood with a super-dominating mother and a weak father, through the heady, unprecedented bobby-sox years, his young marriage to the virtually saint-like Nancy, their three kids, his numerous--almost serial--infidelities, through the tumultuous affair with Ava Gardner--detailed as never before--through the much-frowned-on divorce, the suicide attempts, rivetingly onward through the near total collapse of his career, and right up through the miraculous comeback with the Oscar for From Here to Eternity, this book tells it all with the freshness of the first time, in the most engrossing and evocative prose. There is compassion and candor, and a profound sense of real lives being lived.
Sinatra the musician has never been taken as seriously or chronicled with such sensitivity and depth; it has never been as clear how very much the singer had to do with all aspects of his recordings and performances. This is a warts-and-all work, with a staggering amount of research to back everything up, revealing Nancy Sr. in all her grace, and Frank in all his moods, but it is never salacious or malicious, only honest, forthright and civilized. Nobody can be prepared for the life of a phenomenon--which Sinatra was--the first show business phenomenon of the 20th century, long before Elvis or the Beatles, and far more complicated and multi-layered. Being very human, Frank did the best he could with it all, and James Kaplan has done a magnificently resonant chronicle of the first half of an incredible journey. It leaves you hungering for the second volume!" Peter Bogdanovich
To buy the book... or Frank's music visit THE MEMORY LANE SHOP.















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