by James Kaplan
   “neurotic, depressed”: Ibid., pp. 243–44.
   he lavished two and a half hours: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 250.
   CHAPTER 8
   The day before: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 231.
   “became drunk and abusive”: Bogdanovich, Who the Hell’s in It, p. 418.
   “seems to be reaching back”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, pp. 337–38.
   “He threw a huge Christmas party”: Granata, Sessions with Sinatra, p. 106.
   “he rarely socialized”: Ibid.
   “Once in a while he did invite”: Ibid., pp. 106–7.
   “We also were guests”: Leonard Slatkin, in discussion with the author, May 2013.
   “During recording sessions”: Granata, Sessions with Sinatra, pp. 133–34.
   “It’s a temptation”: Ibid., p. 134.
   For all his brilliance: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 252.
   “Nelson said to me once”: Ibid.
   “During their first several”: Levinson, September in the Rain, p. 135.
   “Boy, would I see”: Rosemary Riddle Acerra, in discussion with the author, Oct. 2012.
   “when Frank would walk”: Levinson, September in the Rain, p. 135.
   “I think he never”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, ibid.
   “an affable leading man”: Variety, Feb. 18, 1957.
   “the taciturn harboring”: Ibid., p. 54.
   “Dean’s mother and his father”: Jerry Lewis, in discussion with the author, June 1999.
   “If you make believe”: Lewis and Kaplan, Dean and Me, pp. 33–34.
   “Sinatra was enthralled”: Tosches, Dino, p. 267.
   “took it all so fucking seriously”: Ibid., p. 322.
   his increasing commitments: Bob Thomas, syndicated column, Oct. 1, 1957.
   And unlike Frank, Dean: Tosches, Dino, p. 311.
   “When Marlon Brando said”: Transcribed from a private recording.
   Amid much similar hilarity: Harrison Carroll, syndicated column, Aug. 16, 1957.
   When the lowly local paper: Deseret News, Sept. 16, 1957.
   “intimates”: Wire-service report, Sept. 16, 1957.
   “Everybody’s a critic”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 231.
   “After the screening”: Ibid., p. 235.
   After leaving El Rancho: James Bacon, syndicated column, Dec. 10, 1957.
   “it was a jolt”: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 132.
   In fact, he hadn’t: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 238.
   “I understand that Sinatra”: United Press, Sept. 15, 1957.
   “There was a circusy atmosphere”: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 133.
   “no comment”: Wire-service report, Sept. 16, 1957.
   “I’m not one of those”: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, Sept. 19, 1957.
   “I had never thought much”: Bacall, By Myself, p. 304.
   “The house had been so quiet”: Ibid., pp. 372–73.
   “If the session was”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 289.
   “Billy May was the most”: Ibid., p. 290.
   “Recording with Billy May”: Granata, Sessions with Sinatra, pp. 134–35.
   “I figured”: Ibid., p. 136.
   “After the success”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 287.
   “Upon learning this”: Ibid., p. 286.
   “When you hired the band”: Granata, Sessions with Sinatra, p. 136.
   In the years since: Lewisohn, Tune In, p. 396.
   “Invited to look on”: Ibid., pp. 396–97.
   “The only Edsel”: Clooney, Girl Singer, pp. 161–62.
   “When Frank started in”: Ibid., p. 161.
   “a drab mixture”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 144.
   “If I fall on my face”: Havers, Sinatra, p. 230.
   Frank adored the idea: Ibid., pp. 231–32.
   “And that’s when”: Ibid., pp. 232–33.
   “There was a total frenzy”: Ibid., p. 233.
   “A Sinatra album”: Jonathan Schwartz interview, July 11, 2013.
   “Sinatra has bounced back”: “The Frank Sinatra Show, Season 1, Episode 1,” TV.com, www.tv.com/shows/the-frank-sinatra-show/bob-hope-kim-novak-and-peggy-lee-56545.
   “When he was singing”: Ibid.
   “There’s no disputing”: Havers, Sinatra, p. 233.
   “We prefer the Sinatra”: Jack O’Brian, syndicated column, Oct. 19, 1957.
   “What is wrong”: Charles Mercer, syndicated column, Dec. 6, 1957.
   “I couldn’t escape”: Kelley, His Way, p. 252.
   “It fosters almost totally”: Associated Press, Oct. 28, 1957.
   “I admire that man”: Havers, Sinatra, p. 233; Associated Press, Oct. 29, 1957.
   In a piece headlined: Variety, Nov. 6, 1957.
   All kinds of stars: “The Short Happy Ad Career of Ernest Hemingway,” Knopf Notes, www.knopfnotes.com/articles/the-short-happy-ad-career-of-ernest-hemingway [website is no longer active].
   “The ‘live’ Frank Sinatra”: Jack O’Brian, syndicated column, Dec. 2, 1957.
   Variety primly declared: Variety, Dec. 4, 1957.
   “Frank Sinatra hasn’t worked”: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, Dec. 15, 1957.
   “For starters”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 348.
   “She was thrown”: Ibid., p. 349.
   CHAPTER 9
   “Today”: New York Times, Jan. 6, 1958.
   “Frank got paid”: Ed Walters, in conversation with the author, Sept. 2013.
   “I would rather be a don”: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 183.
   “By the thirties and forties”: Seymour M. Hersh, Dark Side of Camelot, p. 138.
   “a high, almost girlish voice”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 101.
   “I thought he was”: Robert Wagner, in discussion with the author, Nov. 2013.
   “He really was”: Betsy Duncan Hammes, in discussion with the author, June 2011.
   “He could give you”: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 253.
   “He had a look”: Gloria Franks, in discussion with the author, June 2011.
   Frank sang at a charity event: Giancana and Renner, Mafia Princess, p. 86.
   At some point in the mid-1950s: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 136.
   “He even hired”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 100.
   The main topic of discussion: Ibid., pp. 104–5.
   “Gross Casino wins”: United Press, May 8, 1957.
   That $651,284, as it turned out: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 93.
   “At least part of the reason”: United Press, May 8, 1957.
   “Pieces of the hotel”: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 86.
   “If mob figures”: Kraft, Vegas at Odds, pp. 17–18.
   “But it wasn’t the facilities”: Rose, Agency, p. 181.
   “Get off my stage”: Lewis and Kaplan, Dean and Me, p. 60.
   “unwavering demand”: Baggelaar, Images of America, p. 88.
   Top-billed talent: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 84.
   “There wasn’t nothing”: Ibid., p. 88.
   At the end of December: Finstad, Natasha, p. 244.
   “The affection”: Hollywood Roundup, syndicated column, Jan. 5, 1958.
   As late as the ninth: Wire-service report, Jan. 9, 1958.
   Woodfield claimed: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, pp. 239–40.
   He paid for the lost: Havers, Sinatra, p. 239.
   “As a singer, there’s no one”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 246.
   “As a couple we were”: Bacall, By Myself, p. 377.
   “I recall a wire-service man”: Ibid., p. 379.
   “Sinatra counseled Tony Curtis”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 238.
   “had a lovely Christmas eve”: Bacall, By Myself, pp. 377–78.
   “Don’t cut the corners”: Kaplan, Frank, p. 643.
   “in the deep freeze”: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, Jan. 23, 1958.
   “almost as though nothing”: Bacall, By Myself, p. 379.
   “wildly attentive”: Ibid., p. 380.
   “thought it a ‘great idea’ ”: Ibid., pp. 380–81.
   based solely on his ability: K
untz and Kuntz, Sinatra Files, p. 113.
   “The Fontainebleau”: Walter Winchell, syndicated column, March 19, 1958.
   In the meantime: Bob Thomas, syndicated column, March 12, 1958.
   “Why don’t you ask him”: Bacall, By Myself, p. 381.
   “I saw enormous black letters”: Ibid., pp. 381–82.
   “We had one person”: Ibid., p. 383.
   “He looked right at me”: Ibid., p. 384.
   In early May: Levinson, September in the Rain, p. 140.
   Ironically, Sinatra initially planned: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 246.
   “While the orchestrations”: Granata, Sessions with Sinatra, p. 139.
   “We had so many”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 245.
   “to contemplate the luxury”: Riddle, Arranged by Nelson Riddle, p. 48.
   “I’d be painting”: Nelson Riddle, interview by Jonathan Schwartz, 1982.
   “The Frank Sinatra that”: Only the Lonely liner notes.
   Nat King Cole had thrown down: Ashley Kahn, “ ‘Lush Life,’ a Self-Portrait in Song,” www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7200812.
   “Put it aside”: Private recording of “Lush Life” outtakes.
   “I felt only relief”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 246.
   CHAPTER 10
   that his marriage plans: Vernon Scott, syndicated column, May 3, 1958.
   that there had been a rift: Harrison Carroll, syndicated column, May 7, 1958.
   that he had had a severe: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 247.
   No one subbed: Wire-service report, March 27, 1958.
   A prominent New York specialist: Wire-service report, June 1, 1958.
   “He laughed when”: Wire-service report, June 3, 1958.
   Whatever hopes: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, April 17, 1958.
   Frank and Lauren Bacall had split: Bacall, By Myself, p. 384.
   To the detriment: See Kilgallen, syndicated column, Sept. 30, 1964.
   but the far less interesting: Reading Eagle, May 22, 1952.
   Rumor had it that: Erskine Johnson, syndicated column, July 11, 1958.
   In early June: Earl Wilson, syndicated column, June 16, 1958.
   “she took the dog back”: Server, Ava Gardner, pp. 354–55.
   “re-engagement”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 198.
   “To set those nosey minds”: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, June 30, 1958.
   “Even though I was only”: Jones, Q, p. 130.
   “I didn’t know what”: Quincy Jones, in discussion with the author, Feb. 2013.
   “I was curious to see”: Jones, Q, p. 131.
   “I was still mouthing”: Ibid.
   “It’s a big oblong room”: Jones, discussion.
   “Never once a breach of taste”: Britt, Frank Sinatra: A Celebration, p. 121.
   “One of the reasons”: Art Buchwald, syndicated column, July 1, 1958.
   “Ella Fitzgerald is the only”: Private 1959 interview, courtesy of Ed O’Brien.
   The crowd went nuts: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 248.
   “Make yourself comfortable”: Rickles, Rickles’ Book, p. 64.
   On the other hand: Life, Feb. 3, 1958.
   “Remember the good old days”: Wire-service report, June 22, 1958.
   “What’s New?”: Levinson, September in the Rain, p. 140.
   In the middle of July: Redlands Daily Facts, July 16, 1958.
   As the resort’s name indicated: Van Meter, Last Good Time, p. 175.
   It was an ideal hideaway: Ibid.
   Around this time: Denton and Morris, The Money and the Power, p. 184.
   “The principal owner”: Nasaw, Patriarch, p. 719.
   Wingy Grober was the front: Denton and Morris, The Money and the Power, p. 184.
   “There was nothing very remarkable”: Nasaw, Patriarch, pp. 719–20.
   Robert F. Kennedy was the chief counsel: Seymour M. Hersh, Dark Side of Camelot, p. 135.
   He and Bobby Kennedy argued: Ibid.
   “Committee counsel Robert F. Kennedy”: Wire-service report, July 7, 1958.
   after MCA muscled Tony Randall: McDougal, Last Mogul, p. 236.
   Dean was to play Bama: Kelley, His Way, p. 226.
   “Nothing so exciting”: Time, Aug. 25, 1958.
   “This place is worse”: Ibid.
   “but back of the sound-killing glass”: Ibid.
   The clerk cried: Ibid.
   “The violent displays”: Santopietro, Sinatra in Hollywood, p. 254.
   “He did not return”: Ibid.
   “Outside Frank’s door”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 250.
   “We were virtual prisoners”: Ibid.
   “on the lam”: MacLaine, My Lucky Stars, pp. 64–65.
   “One evening during a night shoot”: Ibid.
   “some gambling joints”: Ibid., pp. 65–66.
   “I wore sunglasses”: Ibid., pp. 68–69.
   “Frank Sinatra was met”: Kuntz and Kuntz, Sinatra Files, p. 113.
   “We wouldn’t talk”: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 244.
   “If people wanted”: Tosches, Dino, p. 322.
   Accordingly, the new: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 251.
   the album hit number 1: O’Brien and Sayers, Sinatra, p. 260.
   “Of course, he’s prone”: Minnelli, I Remember It Well, p. 339.
   “He cannot communicate”: Tosches, Dino, p. 263.
   “Dean doesn’t have”: Ibid., pp. 263–64.
   Jerry Lewis, like Frank: Lewis and Kaplan, Dean and Me, p. 20.
   In September, Frank: American Weekly, May 31, 1959.
   “But within minutes”: United Press, Oct. 19, 1958.
   The Daily Express ran: Wire-service report, Oct. 20, 1958.
   Sinatra sent a friend: American Weekly, May 31, 1959.
   “I’m here in London”: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 252.
   The photographer was taken: Associated Press, Nov. 5, 1958.
   When Frank arrived in Miami: Shaw, Sinatra, p. 254.
   the New Frontier paid her: Clarke, Get Happy, p. 329.
   “It’s a disheartening”: Billboard, March 31, 1958.
   In July, she clawed back: Frank, Judy, p. 444.
   She arrived ten days: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, Oct. 1, 1958.
   “Judy Garland has no”: Variety, Oct. 7, 1958.
   “go up there”: Robert Wagner, in discussion with the author, Nov. 2013.
   “put on a comedy routine”: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, Oct. 11, 1958.
   “Frank and Dean joked”: Wagner, discussion.
   “I’m just gonna sing”: MacLaine, My Lucky Stars, pp. 57–58.
   “He was as sharp”: Lewis and Kaplan, Dean and Me, p. 33.
   “Does Sinatra know”: Capra, Name Above the Title, p. 449.
   “Sinatra is a great singer”: Ibid., p. 455.
   “a performer first”: Ibid., p. 458.
   “Frank always worked well”: Santopietro, Sinatra in Hollywood, p. 264.
   “He really didn’t treat”: Eddie Hodges, in discussion with the author, Oct. 2013.
   “was the only woman”: MacLaine, My Lucky Stars, pp. 62–63.
   “the biggest new blue-chip”: Life, Dec. 22, 1958.
   “As soon as I go out”: Ibid.
   “He’s always had that”: Wagner, discussion.
   “the girls said that”: Kelley, His Way, p. 257.
   “The greatest indignity”: English, Havana Nocturne, p. 305.
   CHAPTER 11
   Metro originally offered: Spada, Peter Lawford, p. 212.
   “Frank, there were”: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 73.
   “Dear Dago”: Variety, Jan. 16, 1959.
   “Sinatra had a marvelous”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 187.
   Martin caught the 10:00 p.m.: Variety, Jan. 22, 1959.
   “Dean Martin, another”: Variety, Jan. 30 and Feb. 4, 1959.
   “Things are going”: Alec Wilder correspondence, New York Public Library.
   The Herald had sent a reporter: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 369.
   “She’s a
vid to grasp”: Stanley Kramer, “The Many Moods of Ava,” American Weekly, Jan. 24, 1960.
   He was like a rougher: Jack Eigen obituary, Milwaukee Journal, Jan. 26, 1983.
   “I love Frank”: Kelley, His Way, pp. 255–56.
   “Why is it that most stars”: “Sammy and Frankie Feuding over Chicago Radio Interview,” Jet, March 12, 1959.
   “Bigger than Frank?”: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 73; Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 482.
   “Who’s better than Sinatra”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 482.
   “That was it for Sammy”: Kelley, His Way, p. 256.
   “But by the time”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 372.
   “to a packed house”: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, Feb. 18, 1959.
   “Even when they were”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 372.
   “That was the unforgivable part”: Ibid.
   “Both Frank Sinatra”: Army Archerd, syndicated column, Variety, March 4, 1959.
   “one with a ‘we’re with you’ atmosphere”: Variety, March 11, 1959.
   The second week was projected: Ibid.
   “Sinatra has a revised act”: Ibid.
   “While listening to Norvo’s group”: Will Friedwald, liner notes, Frank Sinatra with the Red Norvo Quintet, Live in Australia, 1959.
   “she had come to think”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 374.
   “After one particularly”: Friedwald, liner notes, Frank Sinatra with the Red Norvo Quintet, Live in Australia, 1959.
   “I don’t think he ever”: Ibid.
   “The scene afterward”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 375.
   “He said, ‘Yeah, that’s’ ”: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 206.
   but not with his eleven-year-old: Eddie Hodges, in discussion with the author, Oct. 2013.
   “He yelled”: Ibid.
   George Jacobs maintains: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 129.
   “Let’s just say”: Ingham, Rough Guide to Frank Sinatra, p. 64.
   “had had an admitted”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 129.
   “I wish Mr. Kennedy”: Margaria Fichtner, “A National Treasure,” Chicago Tribune, March 15, 1989.
   “For Sinatra”: Brownstein, The Power and the Glitter, p. 159.
   “We’re going to sell Jack”: Thomas, Robert Kennedy, p. 48.
   “unsubstantiated, usually”: Nasaw, Patriarch, p. 80.
   “He had disposed of”: Ibid., pp. 719–20.
   “I was instructed to go”: Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 258.
   “Sheenie rag traders”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, pp. 117–18.