Rat Pack Confidential. Shawn Levy. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Shawn Levy
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007383597
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       RAT PACK CONFIDENTIAL

      SHAWN LEVY

       Frank, Dean, Sammy, Peter, Joey & the Last Great Showbiz Party

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       Dedication

       For my mom, Mickie Levy, who arranged for me to see Frank at the 500 Club when I was still in Utero …

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Dedication

       I‘m not going to stooge for anyone

       Part 3

       Much, much, much

       Some things you don’t want to know

       The only singer

       Worthless bums and whores

       The place was on fire

       Almost the end of frankie-boy

       The most exciting assignment of my life

       What they were really being paid for

       What we do is a rib

       I feel dirty

       I’m a whore for my music

       The Frank situation

       One of these days it’ll come out

       You and I will always be friends

       It always ended up as a threat

       He’s needed this for years

       Say goodbye

       Part 4

       I’ve got five good years left

       I don’t know what hit me

       ‘Scuse me while I disappear

       I wanna go home

       Part 5

       Not a moment too soon

       Adult male human behavior

       Bibliography

       Index

       Acknowledgments

       About the Author

       Also by the Author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

Part 1

      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