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The song is featured prominently in the 1963 feature film Come Fly with Me sung by Frankie Avalon.The song was also used as the theme tune to the 1998 television series Airline, sung by Tina May, and it also appears in numerous films, including Raging Bull (1980), Dear Mr. Wonderful (1982), Betsy's Wedding (1990), Air America (1990), Vegas Vacation (1997), Little Voice (1998), Heartbreakers ...
Sinatra sang the song in Australia during a concert tour in 1959 and relayed the story of the Kipling family objection to the song and explained how the Australian release of Come Fly with Me came to contain "Chicago". [12] "Mandalay" was eventually restored on the 1984 UK re-pressing, and has been included on all subsequent releases.
Come Fly Away is a dance revue conceived, directed and choreographed by Twyla Tharp, around the songs of Frank Sinatra. The musical, set in a New York City nightclub, follows four couples as they look for love. It premiered on Broadway in March 2010 after tryouts in Atlanta and has received mostly warm reviews. [1]
The following is a sortable table of songs recorded by Frank Sinatra: The column Song lists the song title. The column Year lists the year in which the song was recorded. 1,134 songs are listed in the table. This may not include every song for which a recording by Sinatra exists.
The Concert Sinatra is an album by American singer Frank Sinatra that was released in 1963. It consists of showtunes performed in a 'semi-classical' concert style. [1] Marking a reunion between Sinatra and his frequent collaborator, arranger Nelson Riddle, it was the first full album Riddle arranged on Sinatra's Reprise Records label. [6]
Portrait of Sinatra – Forty Songs from the Life of a Man ... (Kent Music Report) [2] 70 ... Sinatra: New York (2009): features Frank Sinatra performing at Madison ...
A Man and His Music is a 1965 double album by Frank Sinatra. It provides a brief retrospective of Sinatra's musical career. It provides a brief retrospective of Sinatra's musical career. The album won the 1967 Grammy Award for Album of the Year .
Wade Tatangelo, reviewing the set for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, described the set as "every bit as rewarding" as Sinatra: Vegas and Sinatra: New York and wrote of the Monaco concert that "...Sinatra never sounded better in the studio or on stage than he did in the late 1950s and this concert is a perfectly-paced treasure".