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"The Night We Called It a Day" is a popular song and jazz standard. The music was written by Matt Dennis, the lyrics by Tom Adair.The song was published in 1941.. One early recording of the song is notable in that it was Frank Sinatra's first solo recording (Bluebird 11463 in 1942).
The Night We Called It a Day, also known as All the Way, [1] [2] [3] is a 2003 Australian-American comedy drama film directed by Paul Goldman, starring Dennis Hopper as Frank Sinatra and Melanie Griffith as Barbara Marx. It also features Portia de Rossi, Joel Edgerton, Rose Byrne and David Hemmings.
The Night We Called It a Day may refer to: "The Night We Called It a Day" (song), a popular song by Matt Dennis and Tom Adair; The Night We Called It a Day, a 2003 Australian movie about Frank Sinatra's trip to Australia; The Night We Called It a Day, the first album by Deepspace5; The reissue of the Frank Sinatra album Where Are You?
Come Dance with Me! is the sixteenth studio album by American vocalist Frank Sinatra, released on January 5, 1959. [4] Come Dance with Me! was Sinatra's most successful album, spending two and a half years on the Billboard charts. Stereo Review wrote in 1959 that "Sinatra swaggers his way with effortless verve through an appealing collection of ...
Where Are You? is the thirteenth studio album by Frank Sinatra. This is the first album Sinatra recorded at Capitol without Nelson Riddle, as well as the first he recorded in stereo. In 1970 it was re-issued as a ten track album under the name The Night We Called It a Day.
A majority of these special "Man and His Music" LP's were given away as door prizes by Sinatra at a party in Palm Springs. The party celebrated the singer's 50th birthday, as well as the airing of Sinatra's 1965 NBC television special of the same name (Frank Sinatra: A Man and His Music).
Beverly Hills locals Frank Sinatra, left, and Dean Martin enjoy their distinctive brand of boozy hijinks â but a barroom brawl and an errant telephone upended the good times in 1966.
Jilly's Saloon was a popular celebrity hangout in the 1960s. Rizzo's long-time friend Frank Sinatra frequented the lounge. [1] Rizzo later became one of Sinatra's chief aides, and was even referenced in Sinatra's adapted lyrics for "Mrs. Robinson" to avoid using the name "Jesus".