The RatPack
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr,
Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop
Our esteemed Chairman has finally abdicated the board. Now that my
man Francis has bought the Big Casino, who are we gonna look to as
our guide for masculinity with style? Is there anyone out there
who possesses the genuine cool and swagger that can act as
a beacon for us to follow, or are all the rest of 'em just a bunch
of hapless clydes? Believe me baby, people today are lookin' to 'em,
'cause interest in the Rat Pack is higher now than any time since
their late 50's-mid 60's Vegas heyday, as the flood of Pack
related books and the recent TV Land special can attest to. It's
'cause they set the standard for classy, adult entertainment while
still cutting up like frat boys. That's a feat that requires style
to pull off successfully. So what makes the Rat Pack the pinnical
of style? Grab a drink, light up a square, and enjoy the
discourse, baby.
"We're not setting out to make
Hamlet or Gone with the Wind. The idea is to hang out together,
find fun with the broads, and have a great time. We gotta make
pictures that people enjoy. Entertainment, period." - Frank
Okay, suppose you're an American male, circa early to mid 1960's,
you're in your late twenties to mid-thirties, who are you looking
to as a cultural role model? A politican perhaps? Back in those
days, when our Presidents earned a bit more esteem than they do
now, it wouldn't have been unreasonable to expect them to set an
example for us to follow. But who did you look to? Eisenhower?
Squaresville, baby. The popular entertainers of the era? Remember,
this was when Perry Como and Danny Williams were extremely
popular. Dullsville, clyde. You thought you were maybe a little to
old for Rock'n'Roll, or perhaps it's style just didn't appeal to
you...who ya gonna turn to baby?
Luckily, a group of show-biz buddies decide to turn their
proclivity for cutting up into a stage act. When the Rat Pack made
the scene, adult males at last had role models to show them you
could project an aura of style and sophistication and still have
fun. They showed that you could dress to the nines and still not
come off as a stuffed shirt. They taught us that acting a little
chauvanitstic wasn't necessarily bad if you did it with style.
And as Francis told us in song baby, You gotta have style.
The era in which the Rat Pack came to prominence was one where
people, were expected to conform to a certain type of expectation.
The workin' nine to five, come home to your wife and 2.5 kids day
in and day out grind was not most men's idea of livin' life to
it's fullest. They couldn't buy into the younger generations
notions of what constituted non-conformity, their way of life
being totally foreign to them. But when they saw men their own age
or close to it livin' life like the world was one big adult
playground, they could live vicariously through them.
And who wouldn't want live like that--dressin' in tux's,
drinkin' like fish, swingin' from one good lookin' broad to
another, singin' to adorin' audience's and getting paid to
do it!
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The Pack represented a time when you didn't have to worry about
people giving you grief if you fired up a square, had one drink
too many or cracked an ethnic joke. They represented something we
don't have enough of today-- complete unadulterated raw freedom.
Was the Pack chauvenistic? Damn straight. Did they sometimes cross
the line with the racial comedy bits? Hell yeah. Women? Love 'em
and leave 'em. But they had the freedom to make asses of
themselves, something the homoginized "please everybody and
offend nobody" entertainers of today wouldn't consider
attempting. And let's be honest--a lot of the
"insensitive" routines they preformed were pretty damn
funny, baby. |
They epitomized raffish cool. They possessed panache in spades.
They told off-color jokes, boozed and smoked and still
looked like class personified. While the Pack had attitude enough
to spare, they came from an era where entertainers didn't soley
rely on attitude to carry their act. Today, far to many
entertainers lean on an "image" to get their message
across. It's as if they hope that all their bullshit posturing
masks their innate lack of any real talent. With most of them,
when you look past the slick, prefabricated veneer, you find a
suprisingly shallow act underneath the surface. And shallow isn't
the word that comes to mind when you hear Frank
sing.
Frank,
Dino and Sammy always had genuine talent to carry them through the
act, the on stage hijinks simply being the package it was wrapped
in. Frank
Sinatra, the undisputed entertainer of the century, and upon
who's shoulders the entire popular music industry was built,
practicaly invented swagger and attitude, two traits entertainers
strive for today, but without having the goods neccessary to make
it authentic. His career spanned decades when most
entertainers are lucky to enjoy a few years of succsess. He was
the first solo superstar singer in popular music, inventing the
phenomenon of enthusiastic, screaming fans. He went from a singer
that men resented and couldn't relate to, to a legend every other
man emulated. He did something that was rare then and is
practicaly unheard of this age of disposable celebrities--he grew
into his image.
And there was Dean Martin--otherwise known as Dag to the rest
of the Pack, a man so smooth he must have been born packed in
grease. It was performing with the rest of the Pack that Dino
showed he was a hell of a lot more than just Jerry Lewis' straight
man. Dino was without a doubt, one of the most naturally funny men
to ever walk on to a stage. He wasn't afraid to poke fun at his
own image, and was one of the few men ever allowed to poke fun at Sinatra's
image. Dino never cared much about being percieved as a serious
artist. He was simply trying to have a good time, while to letting
his audience in on the fun. He had what Frank
called "gorgeous indifference", an attribute that made
everything seem to come so easy to him, which may explain why he's
never gotten his due for being the great entertainer he was.
Sammy Davis Jr., was one of the most versatile performers in
the history of show business. He could act, dance and sing. Man oh
man, could that cat sing. Anyone who remembers him for just
being the guy who sang the "Baretta" t.v. theme song
would do themselves a great service by discovering his musical
catalog.
Is that all? Well of course there were Peter Lawford and Joey
Bishop. The Brit and the comedian and most aren't even aware of
the fringe members of the Ratpack: Shirley MacLaine, Juliet
Prowse, Angie Dickinson, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh.
Women were never official members of the Ratpack.
Then there is the "original" Holmby Hills Rat Pack.
Comprised of Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Frank
Sinatra, Judy Garland, Sid Luft, Swifty Lazar, Jimmy Van
Heusen, David Niven and Kay Thompson.
Whoa baby! We ain't finished yet. Their mystique was so powerful
that the media draws from the Ratpack whenever possible. The
BratPack comprised of: Emilio Estevez, Rob Lowe, Andrew McCarthy,
Demi Moore, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Mare
Winningham, kept the Pack's magic alive through the eighties.
By themselves, they were formidable showman, but when they
joined forces, they showed what comradarie and chemistry were all
about.
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