How To Use Frank Sinatra In A Sentence
- Over the course of six decades, Frank Sinatra managed to be both the diamond and the rough.
- Showing what happens lucky you when you get caught between the moon and New York City, Twyla Tharp's Come Fly Away, her terpsichorean celebration of the music of Frank Sinatra, swept into Segerstrom Hall. James Scarborough: Come Fly Away, Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Costa Mesa, California
- But even the new Warners still had a very profitable record business consisting of the Warner Reprise label, in which Frank Sinatra held a 20 percent interest; and Atlantic Records, a label headed by Ahmet Ertegun, a Turkish entrepreneur who was a celebrated pop music producer. Dealings
- Showing what happens (lucky you) when you get caught between the moon and New York City, Twyla Tharp's Come Fly Away, her terpsichorean celebration of the music of Frank Sinatra (27 songs, with the classic arrangements), swept, timelessly hip, into Segerstrom Hall. James Scarborough: Come Fly Away, Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Costa Mesa, California
- But while Ol 'Blue Eyes may be copping the eternal nod, the Frank Sinatra industry is alive, well and ring-a-ding dinging. Tony Sachs: Forty Years On, Frank Sinatra's Great Lost Album Finally Surfaces
- He named his entourage the "Memphis Mafia," in emulation of Frank Sinatra's Rat Pack. When Italians Ruled the Airwaves
- Among the rich and the famous who came to mourn her, one figure stood out in the windswept cemetery - Frank Sinatra.
- Imagine if Laurence Harvey in the Manchurian Candidate had gone through with the plot,Frank Sinatra bought off, and Angela Lansbury in position to grind her foes to dust, then you have McCain,the Establishment Media,and a closet queened Republican Party unleashed. Think Progress » McCain Blasts Cheney Over Iraq Failures, Continues To Distance Himself From Escalation Plan
- Knokke's Casino represented for a Belgian singer like Brel the pinnacle of success, glamorous like Las Vegas was for Frank Sinatra.
- Blue Eyes may be copping the eternal nod, the Frank Sinatra industry is alive, well and ring-a-ding dinging. Tony Sachs: Forty Years On, Frank Sinatra's Great Lost Album Finally Surfaces