Rat Pack Confidential: Frank, Dean, Sammy, Peter, Joey and the Last Great Show Biz Party
Rat Pack Confidential: Frank, Dean, Sammy, Peter, Joey and the Last Great Show Biz Party book cover

Rat Pack Confidential: Frank, Dean, Sammy, Peter, Joey and the Last Great Show Biz Party

Paperback – July 20, 1999

Price
$18.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
368
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385495769
Dimensions
5.49 x 0.75 x 8.18 inches
Weight
11.5 ounces

Description

Acclaim for Shawn Levy's King of Comedy: The Life and Art of Jerry Lewis: "Superb....Levy's ambitious (and entirely successful) biography is a model of what a celebrity bio ought to be--smart, knowing, insightful, often funny, full of fascinating insiders' stories, always respectful but never worshipful." --Los Angeles Times Book Review "Among the finest, most show business-savvy screen biographies ever written." --Boston Phoenix "One of the great, clear-eyed showbiz biographies of our time--a book worthy of comparison to the genre masterpiece, John Lahr's Notes on a Cowardly Lion. " --Boxoffice From the Inside Flap e first time, the full story of what happened when Frank brought his best pals to party in a land called VegasJanuary 1960. Las Vegas is at its smooth, cool peak. The Strip is a jet-age theme park, and the greatest singer in the history of American popular music summons a group of friends there to make a movie. One is an insouciant singer of Italian songs, ex-partner to the most popular film comedian of the day. One is a short, black, Jewish, one-eyed, singing, dancing wonder. One is an upper-crust British pretty boy turned degenerate B-movie star actor, brother-in-law to an ascendant politician. And one is a stiff-shouldered comic with the quintessential Borscht Belt emceex92s knack for needling one-liners. The architectonically sleek marquee of the Sands Hotel announces their presence simply by listing their names: FRANK SINATRA. DEAN MARTIN. SAMMY DAVIS, JR. PETER LAWFORD. JOEY BISHOP. Around them an entire cast gathers: actors, comics, singers, songwriters, g For the first time, the full story of what happened when Frank brought his best pals to party in a land called Vegas January 1960. Las Vegas is at its smooth, cool peak. The Strip is a jet-age theme park, and the greatest singer in the history of American popular music summons a group of friends there to make a movie. One is an insouciant singer of Italian songs, ex-partner to the most popular film comedian of the day. One is a short, black, Jewish, one-eyed, singing, dancing wonder. One is an upper-crust British pretty boy turned degenerate B-movie star actor, brother-in-law to an ascendant politician. And one is a stiff-shouldered comic with the quintessential Borscht Belt emcee's knack for needling one-liners. The architectonically sleek marquee of the Sands Hotel announces their presence simply by listing their names: FRANK SINATRA. DEAN MARTIN. SAMMY DAVIS, JR. PETER LAWFORD. JOEY BISHOP. Around them an entire cast gathers: actors, comics, singers, songwriters, gangsters, politicians, and women, as well as thousands of starstruck everyday folks who fork over pocketfuls of money for the privilege of basking in their presence. They call themselves The Clan. But to an awed world, they are known as The Rat Pack. They had it all. Fame. Gorgeous women. A fabulouse playground of a city and all the money in the world. The backing of fearsome crime lords and the blessing of the President of the United States. But the dark side-over the thin line between pleasure and debauchery, between swinging self-confidence and brutal arrogance-took its toll. In four years, their great ride was over, and showbiz was never the same. Acclaimed Jerry Lewis biographer Shawn Levy has written adazzling portrait of a time when neon brightness cast sordid shadows. It was Frank's World, and we just lived in it. SHAWN LEVY is the author of six previous books, including the New York Times bestseller Paul Newman: A Life .xa0 He served as film critic of The Oregonian from 1997 to 2012 and is a former senior editor of American Film and a former associate editor of Box Office . His work has appeared in the New York Times , the Los Angeles Times , the San Francisco Chronicle , The Guardian , The Independent, Film Comment, Movieline, and Sight and Sound , among many other publications. He lives in Portland, Oregon. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. This was Frank's baby.Onstage, Dean, singing almost straight, then pissing away anything like real feeling with jokes.In the wings, Sammy, Peter, Joey.Out front, a mob scene: Marilyn, Little Caesar, Kirk, Shirl, Mr. Benny, that Swedish kid that Sammy was so crazy for, that senator and his tubby kid brother, a few broads without addresses, a few guys without real names . . .Famous faces at ringside for the cameras, infamous ones in the shadows in the back, plus a hundred or so civilians as bait for the rest of the world--suckers with money to blow and dames to blow it with them until it ran out.In the casino, every schmuck that couldn't pay or beg or muscle his way in was betting his rent money just to feel as big as the ones who could.The joint was packed; the rest of town might as well have been dark.And for what? A movie, a party, a floating crap game, a day's work, a hustle, a joke: They'd make millions and all they had to do was show up, have a good time, pretend to give a damn, and, almost as an afterthought, sing.Sometimes it seemed like Dean had the right idea: "You wanna hear the whole song, buy the record . . ." But there was something in the music, wasn't there? With the right band and the right number, it was like flying--and like you could drag everybody up there with you.So let Dean do jokes, and Sammy--Sammy would start numbers and they'd stomp all over them and he'd like it.But when Frank sang, it would be straight. It could be New Year's Eve, the very stroke of midnight, the middle of Times Square, and he would stop time, stop their hearts beating, and remind them where the power was.It was in his voice.It was his.When they finally had enough and dropped the curtain, they would wander out into the casino.Some act'd be up there on the little stage in the lounge, and maybe they'd go over and screw around; Sammy liked that the best--more eyes on him, always more eyes.What Dean and Frank liked was dealing. They had points in the joint, and who was gonna stop them from horsing around at a table: It was their money, right? Dean actually knew what he was doing. He'd push aside a blackjack dealer and do a little fancy shuffling and start dealing around the layout: his rules."You got five?xa0xa0You hold. That's a winner."Nineteen?xa0xa0Hit. Twenty-six?xa0xa0Another winner." He'd shovel out chips and make sure that everyone took care of the real dealer, who'd stand there looking nervous over at big Carl Cohen, the casino manager, who normally didn't go for clowning.But Carl would be quiet. He'd lose a couple hundred during this monkey show, sure, but he'd get it all back and more: There were crowds five or ten deep just waiting to get at the tables. Besides, Dean was like family; he'd worked sneak joints back in Ohio before the war with Carl's kid brother. The big guy could afford to be a little bit indulgent.Which wasn't the case with Lewis Milestone, the poor director saddled with making a movie in the middle of it. Every morning he came to work in an amusement park that his boss owned and woke his boss up and tried to get him to jump through hoops for a few hours, and you had to look deep into his dark old eyes to see what he really thought about it.This movie wasn't some work of art, this wasn't All Quiet on the Western Front with poetic butterflies and mud and a moral. This was a sure thing, a money machine, a way to bring the party to the people who could only read about it in the papers. Hell, the only reason they hired him in the first place was that Jack Warner insisted on a pro and Peter guaranteed that the old guy--who was making Lassie shows, for chrissakes--would do whatever they told him.But, still, they didn't want to make a career out of it. So come the morning, they let Millie run them around in circles for a little bit, even if they hadn't gone to sleep yet on account of last night was, as they liked to say, a gasser.Or at least everyone but Frank let him do it. Frank was the boss, after all, and picture or no picture, he was going to work when he felt like it. He used to say that he only had one take in him, like he was an artist about it. The truth was he only had one take he gave a shit about, and if they wanted that one in the movie, then they'd have to wait until he was ready to give it.So Sammy, a Salty Dog or two down the hatch, would show up on the set at 9:00 or 10:00 in the morning, and Dean and Peter would show up at 9:00 or 10:00 in the morning, and Joey--who was lucky to be here at all, let's face it--would be there at 7:00 or whenever they said so, showered and alert.But Frank: 4:30 in the afternoon, maybe 5:00; and twice, twice, before lunch; and most days not at all.They worked on the picture twenty-five days in Vegas; Frank showed up nine.Oh, it was his show, all right.In the early evenings, between a few hours of the movie and going back out onstage, the steam room. Frank had it built--the first one on the Strip--and when he was in town it was off limits to anyone else. They'd drink in there and make phone calls and give each other the needle: the only time they could all be together and alone.Some other people were allowed in: the ultimate VIP room. This Rickles would take these incredible liberties with Frank and Frank would kill himself.xa0xa0Sammy would take one humiliation after another--"You can't wear a white towel. Here's a brown towel for you!"--and act like he was killing himself. Actors from the movie. Business guys. Other guys who didn't say who they were. This was an inner inner circle. Men capable of all sorts of acts of power would sit like convent girls just for the pleasure of having been allowed inside. Compared to this, the show and the movie were, well, for anyone. But not just anyone was welcome. This was a group that Frank handpicked, gliding through the world, sizing people up, then giving them the golden tap on the shoulder and bringing them in.Talent, money, power: None of these was quite enough. You had to have something Frank had, or something that he wanted to have more of. You were a cool, leonine Italian, or a dazzling black ball of fire, or a British sophisticate with powerful relatives, or a Jewish wiseguy who could brush off the world with a shrug. You were an Irish millionaire senator or a psychotic Mafia lord. You were the acme, the original, one of a kind, and Frank wanted you up close to study. He gathered everyone around him and sat in the middle and saw little parts of himself, little things he could fix or steal--Dr. Frankenstein building a hip new kind of superman.Frankenstein, though, or Nosferatu?xa0xa0Because, though everyone got rich, got famous, got laid, Frank got more. They made movies; Frank was the producer. They cut records; Frank owned the company. They played Vegas and Tahoe; it was Frank's hotel. Everyone did good work; Frank was Michelangelo.They called him the Leader; they asked him to be their best man; they named their kids after him, their daughters, even. And when it all spun out of control, when the precious, delicate balance came undone, when the merry-go-round stopped with a jerk, everyone got thrown on their ass--or worse--except Frank, who stood there in the middle, unfazed.Divorce, drugs, bankruptcy, death, irrelevancy: Every single one of them took a major hit.Frank didn't get so much as a scratch.But that would all be later. That would be after the golden time, when, for a while, no matter what they did, it would sell. No matter how many broads, no matter how much booze, no matter who they got mad at or cozied up to, it had reached a point where Frank could simply do no wrong.The press knew the story. They didn't write it, but they knew it. They didn't rat him out because they needed him more than he needed them, and except for a few he'd chosen as whipping boys, they lined up to do whatever he wanted them to do.He was drinking with this one or that one or fucking this one or that one--who was gonna talk? And anyone he wanted around him, the same thing: You hiding from the G?xa0xa0You don't need to hide around Frank. You got a wife back home who reads the gossip page?xa0xa0Frank'll see that you're not in it. You running for president?xa0xa0Frank'll throw a little juice your way and make sure everything looks on the up-and-up.Up close, the whole thing was not to be believed. You wanna talk about rebellion?xa0xa0Those rock 'n' roll punks had no idea what a real rebel did in private. They couldn't begin to understand the power and the appetites and how little you had to care. La Dolce Vita nothing: This bunch made Nero look like a Cub Scout.But outside, from far away, it didn't look like ego or license or indulgence. It looked like a big, beautiful party in the desert, with laughs and music and cars and clothes and incredible women, and no one ever ran out of money, and no one ever got tired, and no one had to answer to anyone, and no one ever grew old, and you would just die unless you could be there--even if the closest you ever got was a movie theater or a record player.Wherever they went, they drew a crowd. And not just yokels, but Friars and sex symbols and made men and the president himself. They made Vegas Vegas, Miami Miami, and Palm Springs Palm Springs. And they made and broke people like they were pieces of toast.For a while, everything took a backseat. For a while, the whole world was like a gyroscope, spinning so fast that it looked like it was standing still, with Frank and his cronies smack-dab in the middle of it, smiling at you, making you think you could do anything.The world wasn't big enough for them to bother with so they made it bigger and took it over.And instead of resenting it, people loved it.And there was never anything like it before or since. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • For the first time, the full story of what happened when Frank brought his best pals to party in a land called Vegas
  • January 1960. Las Vegas is at its smooth, cool peak. The Strip is a jet-age theme park, and the greatest singer in the history of American popular music summons a group of friends there to make a movie. One is an insouciant singer of Italian songs, ex-partner to the most popular film comedian of the day. One is a short, black, Jewish, one-eyed, singing, dancing wonder. One is an upper-crust British pretty boy turned degenerate B-movie star actor, brother-in-law to an ascendant politician. And one is a stiff-shouldered comic with the quintessential Borscht Belt emcee’s knack for needling one-liners. The architectonically sleek marquee of the Sands Hotel announces their presence simply by listing their names: FRANK SINATRA. DEAN MARTIN. SAMMY DAVIS, JR. PETER LAWFORD. JOEY BISHOP. Around them an entire cast gathers: actors, comics, singers, songwriters, gangsters, politicians, and women, as well as thousands of starstruck everyday folks who fork over pocketfuls of money for the privilege of basking in their presence. They call themselves The Clan. But to an awed world, they are known as The Rat Pack.They had it all. Fame. Gorgeous women. A fabulouse playground of a city and all the money in the world. The backing of fearsome crime lords and the blessing of the President of the United States. But the dark side–over the thin line between pleasure and debauchery, between swinging self-confidence and brutal arrogance–took its toll. In four years, their great ride was over, and showbiz was never the same. Acclaimed Jerry Lewis biographer Shawn Levy has written a dazzling portrait of a time when neon brightness cast sordid shadows. It was Frank’s World, and we just lived in it.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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An impulse buy - great read, great history

I picked up 'Rat Pack Confidential' in the airport, looking for a way to kill time on a couple of upcoming flights. This book filled those needs and more. It's a very compelling read...a finely crafted and expertly researched work on the makings - and subsequent unmakings - of the Rat Pack.
There are excellent portraits of the main protagonsists - Sinatra, Davis Jr., Martin, Lawford and Bishop - and Shawn Levy draws a vivd portrait of Las Vegas at the beginning of the 60s. Levy's research brings up five distinct personalities...despite the perceptions of 'clanishness' that the public held about the Rat Pack, these were each very unique individuals.
Levy weaves together a series of threads to make up the core of the book, and one month after finishing it, there are three that linger in my mind...
1. Sinatra's 'using' of Peter Lawford as an inroad to JFK. [Sinatra derisely referred to Lawford as 'the brother-in-Lawford.'] Once Lawford was of no use to him anymore, Sinatra discarded him & Lawford never really fully recovered.
2. Sinatra's desperate attempts to curry favor with JFK, and the Kennedy Administation's efforts to keep him (and the Rat Pack) at arm's length.
3. Marilyn Monroe - caught in a downward spiral, her eerie presence haunts the latter-half of the book as powerful men use (and abuse) her.
I went into this book expecting a breezy show-biz-type read and was very pleasantly surprised about the serious matter of much of the material: the development of Las Vegas; Presidential politics; Mafia intrigue; and lives destroyed by excess. Great stuff.
85 people found this helpful
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Enjoyable retelling of familiar stories.

It's January 1960, a time of shiny suits and narrow ties, the space race, JFK and rumbles in the jungle. Gray clouds may be gathering ninety miles off the coast of Florida but a full blown storm is already roaring through the City of Las Vegas, way out West.

Frank Sinatra has swept into the neon playground to make a movie called 'Ocean's Eleven' and to do more than his fair share of hell raising while he's at it. Joined by his Hollywood pals Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop, the glamorous quintet of singers, dancers and comics are officially known as 'The Clan' and somewhat less respectfully as 'The Rat Pack'.

Just for laughs, the boys have also decided to treat the guests of the Sands Casino to a series of adlib stage shows. With the playful celebs filming by day and clowning in the Sands 'Copa Room' by night, the whole crazy get-together is being referred to as 'The Summit' by members of the international media who simply can't get enough of the eminently newsworthy goings-on.

And it's into this heady mix of thundering showbands, cigar smoke, tuxedos and riotous laughter that author Shawn Levy takes us on a personally guided tour. Not only do we get to enjoy the legendary club act but we also get to take a peek behind the big velvet curtain to catch a glimpse of the private partying that went on after hours. And boy, oh boy ... if only those red, blue and yellow 'feature walls' of the Sands were still standing, what a story they could tell. But we do have an excellent substitute in the form of Mr Levy who, provides a whiz-bang recap of the Rat Pack's life and times over the 300 plus pages that follow.

There's a look back at the group's early days together with a collection of short biographies about each of its members and the story of how they all came together. Interesting background information is also supplied about the making of the movie as it was undertaken in both Las Vegas and LA. There's a humorous, if slightly cynical, description of the 'Summit' performances as well as some incisive probing into the internal dynamics of the Clan and how each personality played a clearly defined role.

Sinatra's preoccupation with power and control is effectively contrasted against Dean Martin's casual indifference while Peter Lawford is portrayed, yet again, as being a classic nice guy who finished last. Always a curious outsider who never really fitted-in, Lawford's eventual slide from the lofty heights of fame and fortune into the murky depths of virtual poverty and drug abuse represented a sad end for the former MGM star.

Martin also gets shoved in front of the X-Ray machine for a reasonably thorough going-over. A troubling tendency to dishonour agreements seems to have been Dino's primary short-coming.

In a refreshing change of pace, comedian Joey Bishop is given plenty of time to take a long overdue bow at center stage. Having remained a seemingly well balanced and stoic individual to this day, Bishop's particular brand of deadpan joking provided plenty of laughs and always acted as a pleasant counter point to Sinatra's intensity.

Particularly noteworthy is Levy's astute observation in regard to Frank's child-like attempts at doing impersonations - something at which Sammy Davis was a recognized master. And, indeed, it is Sammy's epic journey from the slums of Harlem to the absolute pinnacle of world stardom which is, by far, the most inspirational story contained in this book. What that man had to endure and overcome was utterly shameful. However, Sinatra's steadfast loyalty to Davis right to the end was commendable.

The author rounds out his trip down memory lane by following the individual lives of each key player up to the mid-1990s by which time we had said farewell to Peter, Sammy and Dean. In the year the book was published we also lost Frank. When Joey finally floats away to that big nightclub in the sky it will truly be the end of an era.

Many of the anecdotes and most of the quotes will be familiar to readers who have had an interest in the subject for some time. Still, as Levy clearly points out in his acknowledgements at the end of the book (which would have been much more useful at the beginning) he was not trying to split the atom or deliver a startling batch of revelations. The project was merely intended to articulate his personal observations of the Clan and the wider careers of its various members.

But his theory that the arrival of the Beatles somehow had a serious impact on the careers of such towering middle of the road performers as Sinatra and Martin is decidedly shaky. If anything, the 'British Invasion' may well have given these long established stars a substantial boost, certainly in the eyes of the adult public, as they provided a comforting thread of continuity in rapidly changing times. Of course, they had already stared-down the potential threat of Elvis Presley and his many imitators. It needs to be noted that Sinatra went on to score at least three gold records long after the Beatles had appeared on the scene. In fact, years after the Fab Four had gone their separate ways 'Old Blue Eyes' would come back with a vengeance and lob what may well have been his biggest ever hit(?) "New York, New York" into Top 40 charts across the globe.

In some ways, the 1970s saw the likes of Sinatra, Martin and Bob Hope reaching the very apex of their popular acclaim and, quite possibly, taking home the biggest pay checks of their entire careers. Apart from anything else, their additional talents as top flight TV hosts meant that they always had the edge over the generally inarticulate peddlers of rock 'n roll ditties. It was only the on-set of old age that forced these Herculean figures into retirement.

'Rat Pack Confidential' is essentially a collection of highlights from previously published books. However, Levy has cobbled the whole thing together with considerable panache and added an all-important touch of humor to the final mix.
42 people found this helpful
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Wording like cheap breakfast syrup ... you can only take so much

I have read almost every book on Frank Sinatra and The Rat Pack of note. I thought this one would be my favorite when I ordered it ... but it turned out to be very hard to get through because of the flowery language. It was written in a far too glamourizing tone which completely turned me off and made it hard to get through. Syruppy language and metaphores pepper this book's chapters which takes away from the facts of the book because while reading it, I can't help but think, 'Oh puuuuleeeeze' way too often at the author's use of wording.

There's really nothing new in this book. It seems to be the same old stuff from the Kitty Kelly book and George Jenkins book phrased in an overly dramatic way. At first, I wondered if because I had consumed so many Rat Pack informational sources ... maybe there was just nothing new that could be added to the story I had come to know. But after a while, it seemed that the author just summarized all the other books/sources and re-written them in Page Six tabloid style phrasing.

'Imagine a time where the Martinis flowed free like the Salmon of Capistrano ...' mmmhmmm

Maybe it was just me, but I couldn't get through more than a few chapters before this book began to gather dust. I want to finish the book ... but I just can't make myself. Reading such flowery phrasing and wording is akin to sitting next to a couple at a bar who are sweet talking each other with sugary annoyance all night long.

My Life With Mr. S ... and even the way too long reference volume by Kitty Kelly will stand as being much better books in my opinion. There was just nothing new in this book other than the fact it annoyed me.
8 people found this helpful
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HOW DOES ONE MAKE DEAN AND FRANK DULL?

I WOULD GIVE THIS PIECE OF JUNK A MINUS 5 IF IT WAS POSSIBLE. THE AUTHOR IS PEDESTRIAN AND PEDANTIC. HE MEANDERS SLOWLY THROUGH THESE MEN AND ACTUALLY MAKES DEAN AND FRANK DULL. THAT TAKES A REAL ABSENCE OF SKILL.HE USES IS OWN ERRONEOUS INFO AS FACT. THERE ARE SO MANY BOOKS FAR SUPERIOR. HE OBVIOUSLY IS A SINATRA FAN WHICH IS FINE BUT PALLEY FRANK NEVER CAME CLOSE TO CROSBYS HEIGHTS OR RECORD SALES.FRANK ON HIS OWN LABEL DIDNT OUTSELL DEAN MARTIN EVER.DEAN WAS THE NUMBER ONE SELLER AT REPRISE ALWAYS.ALSO SINATRA WAS BIG IN THE USA , CROSBY WAS GOD IN THE USA AND THE WORLD. WATCH CROSBY VS. SINATRA IN THEIR TWO FILMS TOGETHER AND CROSBY WIPES THE FLOOR WITH FRANK AND -ALL THE CRITICS WROTE ABOUT THAT OFTEN.SINATRA WAS A PUNK AND ALWAYS A PUNK WHO NEEDED SYNCOPHANTS TO YES HIM. CROSBY WAS A MAN AND WENT HIS OWN WAY. LIKE BOGIE SAID OF SINATRA- HES A BOY WHO HAS NO MANNERS AND WILL NEVER GROW UP. DONT BOTHER WITH THIS BOOK. IT ISNT GOOD ENOUGH FOR TOILET PAPER.
8 people found this helpful
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Light fun and then the dark fall of the Rat Pack

Rat Pack Confidential gives a 101 level course of the group, highlighting the fun they had together makes movies and showing off at the Vegas clubs. It then chronicles the toubles they had together (Why did Sammy alientate himself from Frank?) and then their downfalls as indvidiuals (Dean's descent into alcoholism). Longer books could (and have been) written about each of them indivdiually, but this succinctly captures their spirit in both the glamour and their squalor. It accomplishes what it sets out to do.
8 people found this helpful
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It pulls it all together....with some REVELATIONS!

This was a book I almost didn't buy...and I am GLAD I did. I STRONGLY recommend it for anyone interested in the Rat Pack -- the male-bonded mega-and-not-so-mega entertainers Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop -- who epitomized Eisenhower/Kennedy era adult "cool" and were atop the show biz heap. If you've read other books on these folks and their era this pulls them all together (with a writing style that is fun, although at times a bit forced and annoying).
If you're a younger person and just want to learn about it, or in show biz and want to learn more, this is the perfect starting point. The reason: it's not just about entertainers but the sometimes insidious links between the entertainment, political, and organized crime worlds. A LOT has been written elsewhere about how Frank Sinatra used Peter Lawford for access to the Kennedys, and how he dropped him mercilessly when he was angered and was of no further use. The book also underlines the public images ("cool," talented, pretending to be drunk at times as part of an act that audiences lapped up) and the behind-the-scenes near-sleaziness of excess drink, sex and egotistical acting out. You also get to know the era's colorful cast of characters, including Marilyn Monroe.
These segments are gripping enough, but major revelations include: 1)Their reign didn't really last more than four full years. 2)Being in or being forced out of the Rat Pack could make or break a career (Davis and Lawford found this out). 3)While Sinatra and others tried being "cool" and individualistic, they seemingly role played (Sinatra was influenced by Humphrey Bogart; some others by the Bogart-influenced Sinatra) but ONE member TRULY did it HIS WAY...and that was Dean Martin. He stayed himself, not allowing himself to be ordered around by either Sinatra or Mafia-tied figures. In the end, you walk away realizing the underrated Martin was the era's true "cool" hero --and Lawford and Monroe its true victims. A WONDERFUL READ!
8 people found this helpful
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A "can't put it down" page-turner

I've seen some negative reviews of this book, but this is going to have to be one of those times where I shrug my shoulders and say "I know what I like, and I like this book."

The iconic photo of Sinatra, Martin, Davis, Lawford and Bishop in front of the Sands which graces the cover of the book...and a variant inside...forms the foundation for Levy's writing. The photo becomes a metaphor, a "Portrait of Dorian Gray"...eternally crackling with power, energy, vitality, as each subject in the photo succumbs to age, disease, despair and death, and the backdrop itself...the Sands...is razed to the ground.

I completed an Amazon review for Charles L. Granata's excellent book [[ASIN:1556525095 Sessions with Sinatra: Frank Sinatra and the Art of Recording]] yesterday, and as I'm writing this review, I am reminded of Rosmary Clooney's quote on the dust jacket of Granata's book: "It was always about the music."

It's a fascinating read...about power, the abuse of power, and how all of the power in the world fails to matter on the day we're scheduled to meet our maker.

Dean Martin...a guy who had it all, and seldom cared, and eventually stopped caring altogether after the death of his son, Dean Jr.

Sammy Davis Jr...a guy who faced the most insidious and disgusting forms of prejudice...a man who rescheduled his wedding so that his interracial marriage wouldn't cause problems for the JFK campaign...he kept his humor, grew his talent, but never really tasted the rewards that were due to him because he never fully won the battle against racial intolerance.

Peter Lawford...a guy who went from "romantic lead" in feature films to a guy who stopped bathing, shaving, wearing clean clothes or cleaning up the cat messes in his cluttered apartment. The day before he died, he drank champagne and laughed. The next day he hemorrhaged blood from his ears, nose, and mouth, and was gone.

Joey Bishop, the perennial second banana to end all second bananas, now more of an amusing footnote to history rather than a significant part of it.

And Frank...the Chairman, the Kingpin, the alpha and the omega, who had "that voice," who partied with the Kennedys when it was a means to their desired end and was unceremoniously kicked to the curb after they got what they wanted. If course, the same is said about Frank and his many romantic dalliances...Prince Charming on the night of the tryst, and a guy who forgot the woman's name and sent her packing the next morning.

I do believe that the music is what still matters. But there's no denying the fact that this is a fascinating read, a parable about how...as Levy puts it...age and physical deterioration ended Sinatra's life, but he won...he died, but he was not defeated.

Take it for what it is...the dirt on a group of legends who are no longer with us to offer their side of the story. And even if they did, would it really differ from what's printed on these pages?

A fun read...highly recommended.
7 people found this helpful
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Dickens's Nemesis

I read this book in 30 minutes. It is, unfortunately, that kind of book. It's pleasant enough, with an easy style that speeds along without airs or stuffiness and a fairly entertaining collage of slangy reworkings of everyone else's biographies. A great literary masterpiece of psychological analyzing it's not. The author comes off as ''one of the guys,'' with a conversational Bill Zehme-like approach that does not strain the brain cells. Levy tells the world that the Rat Pack was terrific, but if I were somebody reading my first Sinatra book I would not be convinced. The characters in this book are just that, characters, and the lack of depth and understanding makes some of the most fascinating men who ever lived unappealing and almost boring.There are very few even biographies about Sinatra, of course, and though this one tries (rather lazily) it is hardly an exception to the rule. The few fawning references to his singing are obviously uninformed and the unattractive view of the man is a careless reprint of ''His Way'' and plenty of tiresome scandal sheets. This book comes off fairly amusingly and intimately but with little meaning or importance - like the sort of conversation you might imagine going on in the Sands steamroom or a back table at Jilly's.

It's primary failure is the gaping hole shared by too many other biographies - a relevant, intelligent explanation on why this person means so much to so many. There are bits of much-printed words on Frank Sinatra's immersion in a song, but they remain merely words, and the accounts of the others leave you wondering,''Now, WHY was this man a star?'' I've only skimmed a couple books on Dean, Sammy, and Brother-in-Lawford, because they simply don't appeal to or interest me terribly outside of their wonderful performances, but I can tell you, this is the usual mold of Sinatra biographies. Dense, extremely biased, uncomprehensive, and with the general habit of laughably dwelling on Mob goons and violent temper so they won't come off as an adoring fan in rose colored glasses. Their arguments topple when they come up against all the Sinatra fans in the world, so they pass them off as ignorant, blind, ill-informed worshippers. I am a fan, and it appears I know more about Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack than our esteemed biographer. Hardly an absolute must, it's worth reading only for the pleasant airiness of the author's writing style. Everything worth reading in this book can be found elsewhere. For a good view on Sammy, try ''In Black and White - The Life of Sammy Davis Jr.'', and ''Sinatra,'' by Earl Wilson, ''Sinatra-Twentieth Century Romantic,'' by Arnold Shaw, Nancy Sinatra's books, the Charles Granata and Will Friewald books, ''Sinatra'' by Richard Havers, and the autobiographies by Ava Gardner, Mia Farrow, Sammy Davis Jr., etc. all tell a far more intelligent and balanced story about The Leader.

Perhaps I, at fourteen years old, don't understand what cool was in 1960. But if the tawdry, tasteless show of plain stupid childish pleasure-seeking on display here is cool, leave me out. The Rat Pack shows, the Rat Pack movies, the true stories of the entertainers and always, always Sinatra's music are eternally cool. This is the tale of a brainless wannabe standing at the sidelines and recreating a world that HE finds attractive. ''The Summit,'' and Sinatra, deserve far better.
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Terrible Title...Great Book

Whoever titled this book ought to be shot. It sounds so inane. Nevertheless, the content is pretty darned good. A fascinating look at the Rise and long fall of Rat Pack, Levy constructs a fascinating, if not particularly deep book. The stories may be familar to many, but for someone who is not initmately familar with the Summit crew, it is a great intro. I've been a Frank guy for a long time, but now I know a bit more about the other packers. Levy is honest and straight forward. The stories about the Kennedys, the mob, the women, and oh yeah, the music are all here. The book is written in a style not unlike the boys--kind of all over the place, but it gets it right when the spotlight is on. It treats the subjects, all, with some degree with sympathy--with Peter and Sammy emerging with a great deal of sadness. A worthwhile and at times absorbing read. Levy is much less confident when he talks about the music--and is better when he deals with the stories. I enjoyed the last few chapters which deal with his analysis of the end. A well thought out thesis and about the last great American party. Well worth the 15 bucks.
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I rated it 4 star

I give it this rating because after I finished it, I was torn between liking it and hating it. I say that because there was always an illusion with the so called "Rat Pack" and I loved all the players in it. After I finished, I was almost sorry I read it because I realized how venerable they all were especially Sammy Davis, Jr., He always came off as a great entertainer, which he was, but his life left a lot to be desired. What with drugs and racial conflict he faced and how sad and lonely he really was. Frank Sinatra was an idol of mine since I was a child, I can say he was one of the great singers but his childish temper tantrums were more of the norm. Dean was a love of mine but I realized although he claimed drinking was an act, in reality it wasn't. I was surprised how he could not show genuine love for anyone. He was so aloof and although his act on stage was mostly funny, off stage he was quite a loner. So I guess a lot of illusions were shattered for me. The book was w ell written and on the whole I enjoyed the expereience.

RoseMarie Antonucci
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