10 hours ago with 40 notes

frankiemachines:

13-14/100: Frank Sinatra

1 day ago with 51 notes
frankiemachines:

17/100: Frank Sinatra
1 day ago with 46 notes

fuckyeahthevoice:

Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis, Jr. perform at the Sands Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, 1963

1 day ago with 100 notes
frankiemachines:

19/100: Frank Sinatra
2 days ago with 96 notes
22/100: Marlon Brando 3 days ago with 34 notes
fuckyeahthevoice:

Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner, early 1950s
3 days ago with 86 notes
fuckyeahthevoice:

Frank Sinatra reads over some sheet music at a rehearsal at the Sands Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, 1954
5 days ago with 16 notes
frankiemachines:

02/100: Frank Sinatra
1 week ago with 25 notes
frankiemachines:

05/100: Frank Sinatra
1 week ago with 178 notes
frankiemachines:

04/100: Frank Sinatra
1 week ago with 226 notes
2 weeks ago with 47 notes
fuckyeahthevoice:

We have lost part of our capacity to self-reflect because Frank is gone. His music helped us understand our own lives more clearly because he was authentically honest about himself. I am so sad for all of us who are now without him. -Shirley MacLaine 
Rest in Peace, Francis Albert “Frank” Sinatra (December 12, 1915-May 14, 1998)
2 weeks ago with 701 notes
fuckyeahthevoice:

The kid with the high-pitched voice that came out of the throat wrapped in the floppy bow tie is going to be 50 this year — and Frank Sinatra remains the most controversial, powerful and surprising entertainer around. He is a man who will angrily throw an over-cooked hamburger at his valet or an ashtray at an inept assistant — and yet never fires anyone from his huge staff of aides and hangers-on. He will spend 10 minutes of his nightclub act attacking a woman columnist so venomously that the audience gasps — and will send $100,000 to a Los Angeles college with the strict instructions that the gift not be made public. He sneers “Charley Brown shoes” at people he thinks are squares and always says “Thank you” when someone asks for his autograph. He is the legendary ladies’ man — and he says he has flunked out with women. He cannot read music, yet he has taken popular singing and made of it an art. He is the finest living singer of popular songs, an astonishingly good actor, an ambitious director, and a shrewd businessman. -Life’s intro to their extensive 1965 piece on Sinatra at 50
2 weeks ago with 59 notes
fuckyeahthevoice:

Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner, 1953
2 weeks ago with 148 notes