Who’s Who In The Rat Pack (December 1998 | Volume: 49, Issue: 8)

Who’s Who In The Rat Pack

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December 1998 | Volume 49, Issue 8

SAMMY—Hip, Sensitive, Careful

On the night JFK partied with the Rat Pack at the Summit: “I was also told there were four wild girls scheduled to entertain him and I didn’t want to hear about that either and I got out of there.Some things you don’t want to know.”

Booed at the Democratic National Convention: “I focused on a flag in the back of the hall and clung to it, standing there, torn to shreds inside, hurt and naked in front of thousands of people, in front of the world.”

The Kennedy Inauguration: “I wondered what the people would be thinking looking at me onstage in Camden, knowing that the rest of the Rat Pack was in Washington. It hurt like a motherf——.”

In the fall of 1960 Davis called his best man, Sinatra, to announce the postponement of his wedding to May Britt, citing problems with the banquet room and the rabbi’s schedule:

Sinatra: “You’re lying, Charlie.”

Davis: “Look, what the hell, it’s best that we postpone it ‘til after the election.”

Sinatra: [ Long silence. ] “You don’t have to do that.”

Davis: “I want to. All the talk . . .”

Sinatra: “Screw the talk.”

Davis: “I know, but it’s better this way.”

Sinatra: [ In a whisper. ] “I’ll be there whenever it is. You know that, don’t you?”

Davis: “I know that, Frank.”

Sinatra: “You know that I’d never ask you to do a thing like this. Not your wedding. I’d never ask that!”

Davis: “That’s why it’s up to me to be saying it.”

Sinatra: “You’re a better man than I am, Charlie. I don’t know if I could do this for you, or for anyone . . .”

—As reported by Davis in Yes, I Can.

SINATRA—Generous, Volatile, Charismatic
“God, he looked like a star. He had the aura of a king as he sat signing autographs with a solid-gold pen."—

Davis, on glimpsing Sinatra in Hollywood in 1944

In 1958 Sinatra tapped Davis for a role in the World War II picture Never So Few . When producers complained that there were no Negroes in the Burma Theater, Sinatra replied, “There are now.” Then Davis told an interviewer that Sinatra would occasionally step on people. Furious, Sinatra called him a “dirty nigger bastard,” wrote him out of the movie, and banished him. Davis begged for forgiveness. After months of Davis’s groveling, Frank signaled that all was forgiven by publicly embracing him at a benefit concert, just in time for Davis to get a role in Ocean’s 11 —as the driver of a