By Richard Hutton
While he has carved out quite a nice career for himself as an actor in film and television, Robert Davi is happiest when he is one stage singing from the Great American Songbook. It's something, though, that he never felt quite right doing as long as Frank Sinatra was able to take to the stage.
That's because The Chairman of the Board was long considered a hero in the Italian community. "For the Italians, it's the Pope and Sinatra, and not always in that order. He was a towering figure because he was the son of immigrants," Davi says, adding that a quote from the New York Times at the time regarding Italian immigrants as "the dirtiest" and "lower than the Negro."
Source: http://www.niagarathisweek.com/
Award-winning author and Brooklynite Paul Moses is back with a historic yet dazzling sto...
For the first time ever, The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, in collaboration with the O...
Si intitola Pietra Pesante, ed è il miglior giovane documentario italiano, a detta della N...
Hoboken’s favorite son, Frank Sinatra, continues to evoke images of the good life nearly 1...
On Sunday, November 17 at 2 p.m., Nick Dowen will present an hour-long program on the life...
The Mattatuck Museum (144 West Main St. Waterbury, CT 06702) is pleased to celebrate...
For the final performance of his spring solo tour, Italian classical guitarist Roberto Fab...
The Morgan Library & Museum's collection of Italian old master drawings is one of the...