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Dean Martin (June 7, 1917 – December 25, 1995) was an Italian-American
singer and film actor.
Dean Martin, born Dino Paul Crocetti in the West Virginia-Ohio border-town
of Steubenville, Ohio, found phenomenal success in almost every
entertainment venue and, although suffering a few down times during his
career, always managed to come out on top. His parents were Italian Gaetano
and Angela Crocetti. He spoke only Italian until age five. During the 1950s,
he and partner Jerry Lewis formed one of the most popular comic duos in
filmdom. After splitting with Lewis, he was associated with Hollywood's
ultra-cool Rat Pack and came to be known as the chief deputy to the "Chairman
of the Board," Frank Sinatra.
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Young Dean Martin, early 1940s.Although initially a comic actor, Martin also
proved himself in such dramas as The Young Lions (1958), more than holding
his own opposite Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift. He was also never above
poking sly fun at his image as a smooth womanizer in such outings as the
Matt Helm spy spoofs of the 1960s. As a singer, Martin was, by his own
admission, not the greatest baritone on earth, and made no bones about
having copied the styles of Bing Crosby and Perry Como. He couldn't even
read music, and yet recorded more than 100 albums and 500 songs, racking up
major hits such as "That's Amore", "Volare", "You're Nobody Till Somebody
Loves You" and his signature tune "Everybody Loves Somebody". Elvis Presley
was said to have been influenced by Martin, and patterned "Love Me Tender"
after his style.
For three decades, Martin was among the most popular nightclub acts in Las
Vegas. Although a smooth comic, he never wrote his own material. On
television, Martin had a highly rated, near-decade-long series; it was there
that he perfected his famous laid-back persona of the half-soused crooner
suavely hitting on beautiful women with sexist remarks that would get anyone
else slapped, and making snappy, if not somewhat slurred, remarks about
fellow celebrities during his famous roasts. Martin attributed his long-term
TV popularity to the fact that he never put on airs or pretended to be
anyone else onstage, but that's not necessarily true. Those closest to him
categorized him as a great enigma; for, despite all his exterior fame and
easygoing charm, Martin was a complex, introverted soul and a loner. Even
his closest friend, Sinatra, only saw Martin once or twice per year. His
private passions were golf, going to restaurants, and watching television.
He loathed parties—even when hosting them—and would sometimes sneak off to
bed without telling a soul. He once said in a 1978 interview for Esquire
Magazine that, although he loved performing, particularly in nightclubs, if
he had to do it over again he would be a professional golfer or baseball
player.
Dean never made any claims to being an intellectual or put on pretentious
airs, and perhaps was telling the truth when he told an interviewer that he
had only read one book in his life, the children's story Black Beauty.
The son of a Steubenville barber, Martin dropped out of school in the tenth
grade and took a string of odd jobs ranging from steelworker to bootlegger;
at the age of 15, he was a 135-pound boxer who billed himself as "Kid
Crocetti." It was from his prizefighting years that he got a broken nose (it
was later fixed), a permanently split lip, and his beat-up hands. For a
time, he was involved with gambling as a roulette stickman and blackjack
croupier. At the same time, he practiced his singing with local bands.
Billing himself as "Dino Martini" (after the then-famous Metropolitan Opera
tenor, Nino Martini), he got his first break working for the Ernie McKay
Orchestra. But in the early 1940s, he started singing for bandleader Sammy
Watkins. It was here that he changed his name to Dean Martin. A hernia got
Martin out of the Army during World War II, and with wife and children in
tow, he worked for several bands throughout the early 1940s, scoring more on
looks and personality than vocal ability until he developed his own smooth
singing style. Failing to achieve a screen test at MGM, Martin appeared
permanently destined for the nightclub circuit until he met fledgling comic
Jerry Lewis at the Glass Hat Club in New York, where both men were
performing. Martin and Lewis formed a fast friendship which led to their
participation in each other's acts, and ultimately forming a music-comedy
team.
Martin and Lewis' official debut together occurred at Atlantic City's 500
Club on July 25, 1946, and club patrons throughout the East Coast were soon
convulsed by the act, which consisted primarily of Lewis interrupting and
heckling Martin while he was trying to sing, and, ultimately, the two of
them chasing each other around the stage and having as much fun as possible.
A radio series commenced in 1949, the same year that Martin and Lewis were
signed by Paramount producer Hal Wallis as comedy relief for the film My
Friend Irma. Martin and Lewis was the hottest act in nightclubs, films, and
television during the early '50s, but the pace and the pressure took its
toll, and the act broke up in 1956, ten years to the day after the first
official teaming. Lewis had no trouble maintaining his film popularity alone,
but Martin, unfairly regarded by much of the public and the motion picture
industry as something of a spare tire to his former partner, found the going
rough, and his first solo-starring film, Ten Thousand Bedrooms, bombed.
Never totally comfortable in films, Martin still wanted to be known as a
real actor. So, though offered a fraction of his former salary to co-star in
the war drama The Young Lions (1957), he eagerly agreed in order that he
could be with and learn from Brando and Clift. The film turned out to be the
cornerstone of Martin's spectacular comeback; by the mid-'60s, he was a top
movie, recording, and nightclub attraction, even as Lewis' star began to
fade.
In 1965, Martin launched his weekly NBC comedy-variety series, The Dean
Martin Show, which exploited his public image as a lazy, carefree boozer,
even though few entertainers worked as hard to make what they were doing
look so easy. It's also no secret that Martin was sipping apple juice, not
booze, most of the time onstage. He stole the lovable-drunk shtick from Phil
Harris; and his convincing portrayals of heavy boozers in Some Came Running
(1958) and Howard Hawk's Rio Bravo (1959) led to unsubstantiated claims of
alcoholism. In the late 1970s, Martin concentrated on club dates,
recordings, and an occasional film, and even made an appearance, thanks to
Frank Sinatra, on the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon in
1976. (Talk of a complete reconciliation and possible re-teaming of their
old act, however, was dissipated when it was clear that, to paraphrase
Lewis, the men may have loved each other but didn't like each other).
Rat Pack Album cover, early 1980s.On December 1, 1983 while playing
Blackjack at the Golden Nugget Casino in Atlantic City, Martin and Frank
Sinatra intimidated the blackjack dealer and several casino employees into
breaking New Jersey casino laws by making the dealer deal the cards by hand
instead of by a shoe which is required by law. Although Sinatra and Martin
were implicated as the direct cause of the violation, neither were fined by
the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. The Golden Nugget on the other
hand received a $25,000 fine and four employees including the dealer, a
supervisor and pit boss were suspended from their jobs without pay.
Dean Martin, late in life.Martin's even-keel world began to crumble in 1987,
when his son Dean Paul Martin was killed in a plane crash. A much-touted
tour with old pals Sammy Davis Jr. and Frank Sinatra in 1989 was abruptly
canceled, and the public was led to believe it was due to a falling out with
Sinatra; only intimates knew that Martin was a very sick man who had never
completely recovered from the loss of his son and, as a lifelong smoker, was
suffering from emphysema. But Martin courageously kept his private life to
himself, emerging briefly and rather jauntily for a public celebration of
his 77th birthday with friends and family. Whatever his true state of
health, he proved in this rare public appearance that he was still the
inveterate showman. Martin died of respiratory failure at the age of 78 on
Christmas morning, 1995. Martin had been told he needed major surgery on his
kidneys and liver in order to prolong his life, and he had refused.
At his side for much of his last illness was ex-wife #2 Jeannie (Bieggers)
Martin, whom he had divorced to marry a younger woman, Catherine Hawn. He
quickly divorced Hawn, a former hair salon receptionist, after deciding that
she was a big-spending opportunist. Dean and Jeannie became closer during
his last years and there were rumors of reconciliaton, but it was too late.
In a bit of irony, like fellow "boozer" W.C. Fields, Martin died on
Christmas Day.
There was talk of a feature film biography about Martin called "Dino", with
Tom Hanks in the starring role and Martin Scorcese directing. But as of
2006, the project has yet to come to fruition. On a side note, Hanks
previously portrayed the singer in an episode of Saturday Night Live. |
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DEAN MARTIN PICTURES |
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