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Sinatra

Page 123

by James Kaplan

“Is this Frank Sinatra”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 304.

  “The development apparently”: United Press, Dec. 10, 1963.

  “Hello, Dad”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 304.

  The FBI agents had already: Torrence, discussion.

  “I don’t understand why you”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 305.

  “Frank was shaken”: Ibid.

  In the interim: Nancy Sinatra, My Father, p. 175.

  “So, you know, Frank”: “205: Plan B.”

  “That’s exactly what”: Ibid.; Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 311.

  “She was very upset”: Server, Ava Gardner, pp. 429–30.

  The FBI agreed: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 105.

  In the meantime, Sinatra: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 204.

  Hart and his staff: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 311.

  Hart took the money: Nancy Sinatra, My Father, p. 176; Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 106.

  “a mix of barely contained”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 100.

  “had refused any sedatives”: Ibid., p. 103.

  At 9:26 p.m.: Nancy Sinatra, My Father, p. 176.

  This time, Irwin directed: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 106.

  “This is John Adams”: Associated Press, Feb. 21, 1964.

  Junior wasn’t with him: Nancy Sinatra, American Legend, p. 181.

  The kidnapper then directed: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 205.

  Texaco station: Associated Press, Feb. 21, 1969.

  As a squad of FBI: Nancy Sinatra, American Legend, p. 181.

  When Keenan called John Irwin: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 306.

  When Irwin told him: Nancy Sinatra, My Father, p. 176.

  “Junior was now highly”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 306.

  “Something has gone wrong”: Ibid.

  “I’m going to bring”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 106.

  “I cried the whole way”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 307.

  “When I got back”: Ibid.

  “the look on his face”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 107.

  Heading south from Canoga: Ibid.

  In his agitated state: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 308.

  Every time a car: Ibid.

  Everyone who had read: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 205; United Press, Dec. 11, 1963.

  “Call Bobby Kennedy!”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 308.

  “Any news yet”: United Press, Dec. 11, 1963.

  “Mrs. Sinatra”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 308.

  “Hi, Ma”: Ibid.

  “Tomorrow is my birthday”: United Press, Dec. 11, 1963.

  “Frankie wolfed down”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 108.

  “It was a big bag”: Torrence, discussion.

  “My brother broke open”: Nancy Sinatra, My Father, p. 179.

  Keenan claimed they beat: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 310.

  “The next day, the police”: Torrence, discussion.

  “Virtually everything I had”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, pp. 308–9.

  “Thank God it’s over”: Wilson, Sinatra, p. 208.

  He traded repartee: Associated Press, Dec. 16, 1963.

  “Do you know why”: Kelley, His Way, p. 331.

  CHAPTER 21

  “Our world felt”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, pp. 108–9.

  “Dear Frank”: Nancy Sinatra, American Legend, p. 183.

  While he was placing: Associated Press, Jan. 20, 1964.

  As Osborne re-explained: Associated Press, Jan. 20, 1964; Associated Press wirephoto, Jan. 21, 1964.

  “I guess I overestimated”: United Press, Jan. 20, 1964.

  Jack Warner had tried: Roger Fristoe, “Calamity Jane,” www.tcm.com/this-month/article.html?isPreview=&id=966029%7C628438&name=Calamity-Jane [website is no longer active].

  “I hate that fucking song”: Furia, Skylark, p. 220.

  “Moon River” was a late: Ibid.

  “several hundred screaming”: Lewisohn, Complete Beatles Chronicle, pp. 92–93.

  “It’s anybody’s guess”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SY9PoR7-XGA.

  “It was ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ ”: Billboard, May 4, 1974.

  “4 for Texas…is one”: Time, Jan. 10, 1964.

  “behaves like a pasha”: New York Times, Dec. 26, 1963.

  to gild the lily: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, Jan. 14, 1964.

  “He knew that if anything”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, pp. 309–10.

  “He missed Sam Giancana”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 209.

  “Café owner Jilly”: Earl Wilson, syndicated column, June 20, 1963.

  “You may have seen”: Walter Winchell, syndicated column, June 23, 1963.

  “His speech was right out of”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, pp. 209–10.

  “Frank was a lonely guy”: Monty Alexander, in discussion with the author, Jan. 2006.

  “I liked Jilly”: Betsy Hammes, in discussion with the author, June 2011.

  namely his father’s: Earl Wilson, syndicated column, Jan. 11, 1964; Louis Sobol, syndicated column, Jan. 21, 1964.

  It would stay there: Bronson, Billboard Book of Number One Hits, p. 143.

  he could fly there: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, Feb. 12, 1964.

  “The attendant publicity”: Variety, Jan. 15, 1964.

  “FRANKIE JR.”: Associated Press, Dec. 22, 1963.

  “I was in jail”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 311.

  Keenan was represented: United Press, Feb. 12, 1964.

  “This was a planned contractual”: Ibid.

  “An apple doesn’t fall far”: Ibid.

  “There is a vacant seat”: Associated Press, Feb. 12, 1964.

  “cut two million”: United Press, Feb. 12, 1964.

  “There are a lot of kids”: Variety, Jan. 15, 1964.

  “The Beatles looked like”: Associated Press, Feb. 13, 1964.

  On Friday the fourteenth: Titusville (Md.) Herald, Feb. 15, 1964.

  “Because, Mrs. Root”: Associated Press, Feb. 15, 1964.

  “Indeed,” Mrs. Root said: United Press, Feb. 15, 1964.

  “SINATRA JR. DESPERATELY”: Los Angeles Times, Feb. 16, 1964.

  “From now on, I’m working”: Associated Press, Feb. 18, 1964.

  “I’m afraid I made up”: United Press, Feb. 25, 1964.

  “I didn’t want to get killed”: Associated Press, Feb. 29, 1964.

  “This is the strangest”: United Press, March 7, 1964.

  Judge East handed: Ibid.; Associated Press, March 9, 1964.

  Irwin would eventually: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 313.

  All three were remanded: Associated Press, March 9, 1964.

  “The report that came back”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 313.

  According to a former servant: Ibid., pp. 315–16.

  “Frankie was utterly blameless”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, p. 111.

  In July, after legal: Associated Press, July 30, 1964.

  “I feel sorry for anyone”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 315.

  All charges against: Associated Press, June 30, 1965.

  And he was relatively: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 161.

  “He really knew”: Tony Bill, in discussion with the author, May 2006.

  For the duration: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 162.

  In front of the house: Jones, Q, p. 179.

  “Frank was getting itchy”: Kelley, His Way, p. 333.

  “The water was quite shallow”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, pp. 210–11.

  “kind of a beer-drinkin’ ”: Bill, discussion.

  Before that fateful: Richmond, Fever, p. 269.

  “It was a sun-drenched”: Kelley, His Way, pp. 334–35.

  After a wave swept: Nancy Sinatra, American Legend, p. 189.

  As Jilly raced: Ibid.

  Frank was then taken: Ibid.

  “He looked up at me”: Kelley, His Way, p. 336.

/>   “It was like, ‘Hey’ ”: Bill, discussion.

  “SINATRA NEARLY”: Associated Press, May 11, 1964.

  “was rescued in a matter”: United Press, May 11, 1964.

  Two other people: Ibid.

  “Brad Dexter, an actor”: Associated Press, May 11, 1964.

  “It was such a strange”: Kelley, His Way, p. 336.

  “Frank appeared uptight”: Ibid., pp. 336–37.

  “It could be that Mr. S”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 212.

  “tried to treat”: Ibid.

  “Oh, I just got a little”: Kelley, His Way, p. 336.

  “Frank would go get”: Dick Bakalyan, in discussion with the author, Jan. 2007.

  over a hundred times: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 411.

  “He said, ‘Hey, Q’ ”: Quincy Jones, in discussion with the author, Feb. 2013; Jones, Q, p. 179.

  “In the middle of our”: Jones, discussion.

  “It started out with seven”: Jones, Q, p. 180.

  “Partied our brains”: Jones, discussion.

  Quincy quickly got to work: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 410.

  “At around 6:30”: Jones, Q, p. 180.

  “He was a brother”: Ibid.

  “I’m not crazy”: Jones, discussion.

  “Frank was my style”: Jones, Q, p. 179.

  The publishers then passed: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 413.

  “Frank was lazy”: Jones, discussion.

  as recently as December: Alex Freman, Phoenix (Ariz.) Republic, Dec. 1, 1963.

  The Manhattan Post Office forwarded: Furia, Skylark, p. 230.

  “When he told me that Tony”: United Press, March 13, 1963.

  And he had the last laugh: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 412.

  “Beautiful. Beautiful”: “The Hollywood Palace, Season 1, Episode 24,” TV.com, www.tv.com/shows/the-hollywood-palace/host-dean-martin-the-rolling-stones-144861/recap.

  “were a stupid fad”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 216.

  “I thought, ‘Fuck you’ ”: http://entertainment.ca.msn.com/music/photos/rolling-stones-50th-anniversary?page=10 [website is no longer active].

  He made nice: Marcucci, Where or When.

  “an artless and obvious”: New York Times, Aug. 6, 1964.

  The picture did a little: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 160.

  “youth A&R man”: Cornyn, Exploding, p. 62.

  “Jimmy never cared”: Lee Herschberg, in discussion with the author, May 2006.

  “ ‘Listen, if you’re going’ ”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 420.

  To that end, Bowen: Ibid.

  “Nashville rock-style”: Ibid., p. 421.

  “heard two flutists”: Cornyn, Exploding, p. 63.

  “When we finished cutting”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 421.

  “Softly, as I Leave You,” with: O’Brien and Sayers, Sinatra, p. 266.

  The Beatles, and other alien sounds: Bronson, Billboard Book of Number One Hits, p. 154.

  “be in charge of”: Earl Wilson, syndicated column, Aug. 11, 1964.

  “Priding himself”: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 167.

  When the director failed: Kelley, His Way, p. 339.

  Sinatra took his posse: Ibid., p. 340.

  “Between takes”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, pp. 216–17.

  Romantically speaking: Harrison Carroll, syndicated column, June 25, 1964.

  “One weekend”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 217.

  “What are you being”: Kelley, His Way, p. 338.

  The makeup artist covered: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 442.

  He had planned to come: Ibid.

  She writes in her memoirs: Gardner, Ava, p. 287.

  He showed up for work: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, pp. 323–24.

  “Frank was affectionate”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 443.

  “She’s the only woman”: Ibid.; Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 324; Summers and Swan, Sinatra, p. 312.

  In early September: Kelley, His Way, p. 340.

  The next morning, in the lobby: Bob Thomas, syndicated column, Sept. 28, 1964.

  The following morning: Ibid.

  “spic faggot”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 219.

  “I’ll never go back”: Kelley, His Way, p. 341.

  Even Ava was beginning: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 448.

  Both Von Ryan: Aubrey Solomon, Twentieth Century Fox, p. 254; David Kamp, “When Liz Met Dick,” Vanity Fair, April 2011.

  Among the TV series: Lev, Twentieth Century-Fox, p. 258.

  Tough blonde: Newcomb, Encyclopedia of Television, p. 1,754.

  “He was an intelligent”: Lloyd Shearer feature on Mia Farrow, Jan. 3, 1965.

  “a mean and lecherous”: Server, Ava Gardner, p. 243.

  María de Lourdes Villiers Farrow: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 327.

  “I was the loner”: Bob Thomas, syndicated column, Dec. 13, 1964.

  “every once in a while,”: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 57.

  “I discovered that only”: Life, May 5, 1967.

  With the exception of a bit: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 48.

  Her first movie role: Ibid., pp. 78–79.

  “I want a big career”: Hedda Hopper, syndicated column, Sept. 13, 1964.

  Restless during a long: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 86.

  “I can say it now”: Levy, Rat Pack Confidential, p. 271.

  She also fails to note: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 326; Kelley, His Way, p. 342; Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 219.

  she told Life: Life, May 5, 1967.

  “googly eyes”: Kelley, His Way, p. 344.

  As she was watching: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 87.

  The lights went down: Ibid., p. 88.

  She has never listened: Ibid., p. 97.

  “Sometimes I think I’d like”: Kelley, His Way, p. 344.

  Who has a sense: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 89.

  She has a three-room: Ibid., p. 84.

  And, with honest: Ibid., p. 89.

  Thus she finds: Ibid., p. 90.

  “It wasn’t that Mia”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 226.

  Years later: Farrow, What Falls Away, pp. 96–97.

  “There was one of Ava”: Kelley, His Way, p. 346.

  He bought her: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 95.

  Thus, he had not been: Ibid., pp. 95–96.

  As late as 1988: “Sinatra, Van Heusen, and a Piano in the Desert,” The Jonathan Channel, July 23, 2014; Rob Fentress, e-mail to author, July 23, 2014.

  Sometimes, as they strolled: Farrow, What Falls Away, p. 96.

  “that stuffy, older crowd”: Kelley, His Way, p. 346.

  where he ordered her: Ibid., p. 344.

  “no one, absolutely”: Jacobs and Stadiem, Mr. S, p. 227.

  “Mia was a very clever”: Kelley, His Way, p. 345.

  Miller, who had desperately: United Press, Nov. 10, 1964.

  Frank would find: Gay Talese, “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold,” Esquire, April 1966.

  “Bill didn’t really”: Peggy Connelly, in discussion with the author, May 2006.

  “Bill always took”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 39.

  “And now, the mother”: Marcucci, Where or When; Shaw, Sinatra, p. 342.

  “Jack Entratter said”: Jones, discussion.

  “I can still hear”: Taraborrelli, Sinatra, p. 331.

  “the maddest, merriest”: Reuters, Dec. 1, 1964.

  “I have been meeting”: Bob Thomas, syndicated column, Dec. 13, 1964.

  “I don’t believe it”: Louella Parsons, syndicated column, Dec. 7, 1964.

  “an obvious blockbuster”: Variety, Dec. 2, 1964.

  “took us over to the table”: Havers, Sinatra, p. 289.

  CHAPTER 22

  “America in 1964”: Dwight Garner, “Cigarettes, Coffee, a Stop at the Liquor Store,” New York Times, Aug. 9, 2014, www.nytimes.com/2014/08/09/books/frank-oharas-lunch-poems-turn-50.html.

  He was speaking of far: “Number of Color T
V Households and Percentage of USA Homes with Color Television, 1964 to 1978,” Television History—The First 75 Years, www.tvhistory.tv/Color_Households_64-78.JPG.

  “It [rock ’n’ roll] belongs”: Variety, Nov. 6, 1964.

  “Look at that”: Havers, Sinatra, p. 291; O’Brien and Sayers, Sinatra, pp. 265–66.

  “Mia Farrow and Frank Sinatra”: Mike Connolly, syndicated column, Jan. 22, 1965.

  A $250 one-time membership fee: Time, April 23, 1965.

  (later raised to $1,000): Sports Illustrated, July 10, 1967.

  who was said to own: Time, Sept. 27, 1963.

  “has some of the most”: Time, April 23, 1965.

  “What in your profession”: Larry King, in discussion with the author, Nov. 2012.

  where, in the days: Lloyd Shearer feature on Mia Farrow, Jan. 3, 1965.

  “New York’s swinging”: Alex Freeman, syndicated column, Feb. 7, 1965.

  “I think they had”: Christopher Cerf, in discussion with the author, June 2006.

  after Hart’s untimely: United Press, Dec. 23, 1961.

  Once, in the summer of 1964: New York Times, May 25, 1964.

  “I’m sure we’d all had”: Cerf, discussion.

  “Provocative and engrossing”: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 165.

  “If the threat of Frank Sinatra”: New York Times, Feb. 25, 1965.

  “I’m well aware”: Peter Bart, New York Times, April 18, 1965.

  He might have been out: Billboard, Nov. 20, 1965.

  “Four years from now”: Show Business Illustrated, Sept. 5, 1961.

  he livened up: Daniel O’Brien, Frank Sinatra Film Guide, p. 172.

  She’d thought that her marriage: Nancy Sinatra, American Legend, p. 191.

  “He chewed up scenery”: Tony Bill, in discussion with the author, May 2006.

  “PJ’s and all those clubs”: Quincy Jones, in discussion with the author, Feb. 2013.

  He was enraged: Taraborrelli, Sinatra: Behind the Legend, p. 337.

  “I remember coming home”: Tina Sinatra, My Father’s Daughter, pp. 131–32.

  “He’s awful”: Jonathan Schwartz, in discussion with the author, Sept. 2011.

  “Gordon had his identity”: Friedwald, Sinatra!, p. 349.

  “Jenkins relied on the most”: Ibid., p. 348.

  “I could have stayed”: Stan Cornyn, in discussion with the author, Feb. 2006.

  “Tonight will not swing”: September of My Years liner notes.

  “the same seat”: David Bianculli, “CBS Replays Vintage Sinatra ‘48 Hours’ Airing Cronkite Interview & Profile from ’65,” New York Daily News, May 21, 1998, www.nydailynews.com/archives/entertainment/cbs-replays-vintage-sinatra-48-hours-airing-cronkite-interview-profile-65-article-1.786751.

 

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