Sinatra's doing 82nd birthday his way
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Sinatra launched his singing career after winning an amateur-hour contest on the radio
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December 12, 1997
Web posted at: 11:50 p.m. EST (0450 GMT)
BEVERLY HILLS, California (CNN) -- It may be hard for the
girls who once swooned to Frank Sinatra's voice to believe
how time has raced: Ol' Blue Eyes will blow out the candles
on his 82nd birthday cake Friday.
The legendary entertainer was to spend the day at home in
Beverly Hills with his wife Barbara, whom he married in 1976.
His children -- Tina, Nancy and Frank Jr. -- and friends were
to join him for a party there Friday evening. Sinatra also
has a stepson, Robert Marx, who is Barbara's son from a
previous marriage.
"Frank will have a traditional birthday cake," said his
spokeswoman, Susan Reynolds.
A L S O :
Sinatra gets his way on the Web
His children also planned to appear Friday on CNN's "Larry
King Live," and his third wife, actress Mia Farrow, was to
send her best wishes from New York via video.
Music, movies made Sinatra a star
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Sinatra made more than 60 films
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Sinatra has been quoted as saying, "You gotta love livin'
baby, 'cause dyin's a pain in the ass."
And the humble son of Italian immigrants has made the most of
his life. By the time Sinatra was singing at war bond
rallies in 1943, he was already living the American dream.
Hoboken, New Jersey's native son entered the public eye after
winning first prize on radio's "Major Bowes Amateur Hour" in 1937. He already had formed a singing group, "The Hoboken Four." But his first love was a different kind of music: Opera. Daughter Nancy once told CNN's Larry King that her father, raised on opera, admired Pavarotti, and "really would like to have been like him." (
154K/14 sec. AIFF or WAV sound)
Instead, he made a generation of young female bobby soxers
swoon with his mellow voice.
He recorded more top-40 albums than any artist: 51, three
more than Elvis Presley. And during his singing heyday, he
compiled more top-10 albums than the Beatles. He holds an
unbeaten record on Billboard's charts, where a Sinatra song
was a fixture every week from 1955 to 1995.
Actress Anne Jeffreys said his sex appeal was, at first,
"invented by the publicity people ... then (swooning) became
the thing to do. But there was a reason behind it," she
said. "He had that appeal to women."
The singing sensation quickly became a matinee idol in films
such as "Step Lively."
Four reasons for Sinatra's popularity
Tom Dreesen, who toured with Sinatra for years, tallied the
reasons for his colleague's popularity: "Number one, young
women want to make love to you. Number two, older women want
to mother you. Number three, little kids wish you were their
dad. And number four, the guys want to hang out with you."
A vocal chord hemorrhage in 1952 nearly ended his music
career, but each time he had a setback, he revived his career
-- and expanded it.
He fought to win the role of Angelo Maggio in "From Here to
Eternity," which was released in 1953. His portrayal of the
young soldier won him an Oscar and a Golden Globe award for
best supporting actor.
He was nominated again for his performance as Frankie Machine
in "The Man with the Golden Arm," the controversial 1955 film
in which he played a heroin addict.
In all, he made more than 60 films, continually revitalizing
his singing career at the same time. Retirement did not come
easily. Although he maintained that a performance in 1971
would be his last, Sinatra went on singing tours through the
1980s, and, in 1990, released the albums "Duets."
His financial holdings -- earned from a variety of business ventures in addition to acting and singing -- are estimated to be worth at least $200 million. He has earned the title "Chairman of the Board of Show Business."
Family denies deathbed reports
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Sinatra has made few public appearances since his 80th birthday
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Public appearances since his 80th birthday have been rare.
He suffered a mild heart attack last January and was rushed
to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the third time in two months
Sinatra had been hospitalized.
His family flatly denies reports that he may be near death.
"He is doing very well, thank you very much," his wife has
said.
"The outpouring of love from his fans and his friends has
been spectacular, and we thank all of them so much."
A few years back, Sinatra summed up his life this way: "I
think my life is quite marvelous, and I'm very happy about
it. People seem to be appreciating what I'm doing and my
work, and I don't think I could ask for one damn thing more."
Correspondent Sherri Sylvester and Reuters contributed to this report.