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Search resuls for: "Tony Bennett’s"


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CNN —Tony Bennett’s wife and son are sharing some of their final memories of him. Danny Bennett and Susan Benedetto spoke with “Today” about the legendary singer, who died recently at the age of 96. In addition to Danny, they also shared another son, Dae. The singer was married to Sandra Grant, with whom he shared daughters Joanna and Antonia Bennett, from 1971 to 1984. She also revealed his final words to her.
Persons: Tony Bennett’s, Danny Bennett, Susan Benedetto, Patricia Beech, , , Bennett, , Beech, Danny, Dae, Sandra Grant, Joanna, Antonia Bennett, Benedetto, Alzheimer’s Organizations: CNN,
In the 1970s, Tony Bennett’s career and life were in disarray. He was performing mostly in Las Vegas, a declining city that glued him to a bygone era. His music was out of vogue — his last Top 40 single had been in 1965. The rebirth of Mr. Bennett, who died on Friday, ensured that he would remain one of the most revered singers of American popular music for generations to come. Mr. Bennett managed a career resurgence in the late 1980s and ’90s without changing much about his music.
Persons: Tony Bennett’s, Bennett Organizations: Internal Revenue Service, American, MTV Locations: Las Vegas
Tony Bennett’s Heart Was in Jazz
  + stars: | 2023-07-21 | by ( Marc Myers | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
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Persons: Dow Jones
Tony Bennett’s 10 Essential Songs
  + stars: | 2023-07-21 | by ( Rob Tannenbaum | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
When Anthony Dominick Benedetto was growing up in Astoria, Queens, during the Depression, his parents couldn’t afford to pay for the singing lessons he wanted. Anthony Benedetto later took the advice of the comedian Bob Hope and adopted the more Americanized stage name Tony Bennett. Voice lessons, however long delayed, were important to his development. After he served in World War II, Bennett studied, thanks to the G.I. In 1965, Frank Sinatra told Life magazine, “For my money, Tony Bennett is the best singer in the business.” He held on to that distinction for decades to follow.
Persons: Anthony Dominick Benedetto, John Benedetto, Anthony Benedetto, Bob Hope, Tony Bennett, Bennett, Bill, Cole Porter, Stevie Wonder, Frank Sinatra Organizations: Kennedy Center, Library of Congress, American Theater Wing Locations: Astoria , Queens, Italy, Manhattan, Italian
Tony Bennett, Always a Class Act
  + stars: | 2023-07-21 | by ( Jim Windolf | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Like his singing voice, Tony Bennett’s personal style was supple, straightforward and sure of itself. He resisted the temptation to change his approach to music when rock overtook the pop charts, and he largely stayed away from many sartorial trends that came and went during his seven decades in show business, wisely sticking with tuxedos and smartly tailored suits, many of them from the Italian fashion brand Brioni. For more casual moments, he went with slacks and a blazer, sometimes with a handsome dark turtleneck in place of a button-down shirt and tie. Paradoxically enough, by sticking with the style that allowed him to feel most himself when it came to both music and fashion, Mr. Bennett managed to avoid the trap of becoming associated too strongly with any one era. In recent decades, when men’s fashion magazines celebrated the ring-a-ding-ding style of the 1950s and early 1960s in backward-looking fashion spreads, they tended to focus on Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and other dyed-in-the-wool members of the Rat Pack.
Persons: Tony Bennett’s, Bennett, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin Organizations: slacks
There were the famous New York places where he was celebrated, like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where his 75th birthday party wasn’t referred to as a birthday party. There were the canvases he painted in every Manhattanite’s backyard. And there were the New York stages he appeared on, from the Paramount Theater when he was in his 20s to Carnegie Hall in his 30s to Radio City Music Hall in his 90s. Tony Bennett may have become famous for “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” but his own heart was unquestionably a New Yorker’s. He had that New York cool, decade after decade — the kid from Astoria, Queens, who made a go of it in Manhattan.
Persons: Tony Bennett, Organizations: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Paramount Theater, Carnegie Hall, Radio City Music Hall Locations: New York, Central Park, New, San Francisco, York, Astoria , Queens, Manhattan
An irresistible force and an immovable object: that would be Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett on Friday evening at Radio City Music Hall where they sang more than 30 standards, separately and together, before a respectful multigenerational audience that tilted older. The immovable object was Mr. Bennett, a living monument at 88, who, when he moved across the stage, proceeded slowly, cautiously and with dignity. With his customary grace and humility, Mr. Bennett embodied the patriarch of American popular song he has been for the last two decades. Around him fluttered that irresistible force, Lady Gaga, 29, an eccentric living bauble, in a succession of extravagant showgirl outfits and wigs. The chemistry between the performers in this Cheek to Cheek tour is noticeably different from the cuddly granddad and granddaughter intimacy of their videos.
Persons: Gaga, Tony Bennett, Bennett, Lady Gaga, Mae West, Marilyn Monroe, Mike Renzi, Cheek Organizations: Radio City Music, Broadway
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