[December 12th
will mark the
100th anniversary of Frank Sinatra’s birth, and since Sinatra
was as well-known for his famous
group of friends as for his individual achievements, I wanted to spend the
week AmericanStudying such circles of friends. Leading up to this special
weekend post on the Rat Pack!]
On how the
famous group of friends started, how it changed, and why the shift matters.
I’m not going to
pretend that I knew the slightest bit about the original, 1950s
version of the Rat Pack, one centered on Humphrey Bogart and his wife
Lauren Bacall and featuring such Hollywood luminaries as controversial
couple Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn, Judy Garland, David Niven, Cary
Grant, Rex Harrison, and many others, until I started doing research for this
post. Indeed, I very much doubt that many people, outside of Rat Pack
completists, hard-core Bogie/Bacall or Tracy/Hepburn fans, and historians of
mid-20th century Hollywood, know about this originating iteration of
the group, with a nickname allegedly drawn from Bacall’s
assessment of the men at the end of a long night of carousing (“You look
like a pack of rats”) and a full name (the “Holmby Hills Rat Pack”) honoring
the neighborhood of the Bogart/Bacall
residence where the group most often gathered.
With Bogart’s
death in 1957, the group’s de
facto leadership shifted to singer and actor Frank Sinatra, who had been an
occasional member in those early years and who even briefly dated Bacall after (or,
possibly, just before, although the Daily
Mail is always to be taken with a pound of salt) Bogart’s death. Leaving
such gossip aside, this 1960s version of the Rat Pack is the one that came to
be thoroughly associated with the name:
Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop,
performing in concerts
together, making films
together, becoming legendary partiers and womanizers together, and coming
to define collectively a certain version of cool for a generation. Perhaps to
differentiate themselves from that prior version, and perhaps because rats aren’t
exactly the coolest creatures in the animal kingdom, the members of this group
apparently preferred the names “the Summit” and “the Clan”
(although Davis
of course was less fond of that latter option); but “Rat Pack” was too
catchy and irresistible, and has not only stuck but even spawned imitations
such as the Brat Pack on which I focused in Thursday’s post.
So the leadership
and membership significantly shifted from Bogart’s Pack to Sinatra’s—but is the
shift worth analyzing in more cultural or historical terms? I would say that it
is, for at least two reasons. For one thing, Sinatra’s Rat Pack was far more of
a professional partnership, one where the members would not only make art
together but would also consistently contribute to each other’s artistic
efforts; this was distinctly different from the more purely social nature of
Bogart’s group, and would link Sinatra’s more fully to the professional
collaborations of the Algonquin Round Table (for example). And for another
thing, Sinatra’s Pack was notably more diverse, with not only the African
American Davis but Sinatra (son of two Italian immigrants), Martin (son of an Italian immigrant
father and Italian American mother), and Bishop
(born Joseph Gottlieb to two Polish Jewish immigrants) as core members. There’s
certainly value in better remembering Bogart’s Rat Pack, but the significance
of Sinatra’s, well beyond just notions of cool, remains and endures
nonetheless.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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