- Source: The Frank Sinatra Show (1957 TV series)
- Andy Williams
- Ray Charles
- Love Me Tender (film)
- Warner Bros.
- Academy Awards
- Harum Scarum (film)
- Kissin' Cousins
- The Frank Sinatra Show (1957 TV series)
- Nancy Sinatra
- The Frank Sinatra Show
- The Frank Sinatra Timex Show: Welcome Home Elvis
- Frank Sinatra
- Duets (Frank Sinatra album)
- List of songs recorded by Frank Sinatra
- The Edsel Show
- Tommy Sands
- The Untouchables (1959 TV series)
Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin (2024)
Hard to Die
Gridman Universe (2023)
Saving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie (2024)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
The Frank Sinatra Show is an ABC variety and drama series, starring Frank Sinatra, premiering on October 18, 1957, and last airing on June 27, 1958.
Summary
This was Sinatra's second attempt at a television series, his first was The Frank Sinatra Show on CBS Television (1950ā1952).
The series was originally slated to consist of one-third variety episodes, one-third dramas starring Sinatra, and one-third dramas hosted by Sinatra. Sinatra was paid $3 million for the series, and "given carte blanche to do it exactly as he wanted to."
Nelson Riddle directed the orchestra for the variety episodes. Beginning on March 29, 1958, Jesse White became a regular on the variety episodes.
The drama segments of the show fared less well against the variety episodes in ratings and the final total was fourteen live variety shows, eight filmed variety shows, four dramas starring Sinatra, and six dramas hosted by Sinatra. Rather than 36 episodes for the season, ABC cut its losses and reduced the total number to 32.
Sinatra hated rehearsing, and tried to make eleven shows in fifteen days; the series subsequently received a critical mauling and was Sinatra's last attempt at a television series.
Black and white copies of kinescopes of several shows have been released on VHS and DVD.
Guest appearances
Johnny Crawford
Bing Crosby
Susan Cummings
Sammy Davis Jr.
Ella Fitzgerald
Bob Hope
Peter Lawford
Peggy Lee
Dean Martin
The McGuire Sisters
Cheerio Meredith
Ethel Merman
Robert Mitchum
Elvis Presley
Eleanor Roosevelt
Nancy Sinatra
Pat Suzuki
Natalie Wood
Episodes
Production
Paul Dudley produced and wrote for The Frank Sinatra Show; William Self was the director. Liggett & Myers bought the show before it debuted, as a vehicle for advertising Chesterfield cigarettes. The trade publication Billboard reported that the program "will be TV's most expensive half-hour" at $66,000 per week. The Bulova Watch Company was a co-sponsor.
Initially episodes were filmed at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood. It was broadcast on Fridays from 9 to 9:30 p.m. EasternTime, when its competition included The Phil Silvers Show, M Squad on CBS and Mr. Adams and Eve on NBC. Low ratings led to changes, including having an audience during filming and presenting more musical episodes. The New York Times reported in December 1957 that the show "recently inserted a live presentation in an effort to improve its rating." Although the premiere's rating was a "whopping 29.1 Trendex, outranking combined network competition", about a month later the trade publication Television Digest reported, "Major salvage job being attempted by ABC-TV on its expensive, but low-rated Frank Sinatra Show".
Critical response
The trade publication Broadcasting began a review of the show's premiere episode with "For sheer disappointment, it is hard to beat the long-awaited premiere of the Frank Sinatra Show on ABC-TV. The hour was marked by banality, stilted comedy, and free plugs ..." The review praised Sinatra's singing and said, "He should have sung for the entire hour." The episode's guest stars received negative comments also. Bob Hope "proved just mildly amusing"; Kim Novak "added nothing" and "was painful to watch" in a skit"; and Peggy Lee "was just plain unexciting".
As the show's run was ending, the trade publication Ross Reports commented, "The end of the Frank Sinatra Show, seemingly not lamented by any one concerned in its sponsorship or production, affirms for variety specialists that a strong production hand with a good planning sense is as important as a star attraction."
References
External links
The Frank Sinatra Show at IMDb
Episode guide and summary from classictv.com