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Nancy Sinatra Wiki, Biography, Age, Spouse, Height, Net Worth, Fast Facts

Nancy Sandra Sinatra[4] (born June 8, 1940)[5] is an American former singer and actress. She is the elder daughter of Frank Sinatra and Nancy Sinatra (née Barbato), and is best known for her 1966 signature hit “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’.

Nancy Sinatra began her career as a singer and actress in November 1957 with an appearance on her father’s ABC-TV variety series, but initially achieved success only in Europe and Japan. In early 1966 she had a transatlantic number-one hit with “These Boots Are Made for Walkin“. A TV promo clip from the era features Sinatra in high boots, accompanied by colorfully dressed go-go dancers, in what is now considered an iconic Swinging Sixties look.[6][7] The song was written by Lee Hazlewood, who wrote and produced most of her hits and sang with her on several duets. As with all of Sinatra’s 1960s hits, “Boots” featured Billy Strange as arranger and conductor.

Between early 1966 and early 1968, Sinatra charted on Billboard’s Hot 100 with 14 titles, ten of which reached the Top 40. In addition to “These Boots Are Made for Walkin“, defining recordings during this period include “Sugar Town”, “Love Eyes”, the transatlantic 1967 number one “Somethin’ Stupid” (a duet with her father), two versions of the title song from the James Bond film You Only Live Twice (1967), several collaborations with Lee Hazlewood – including “Summer Wine”, “Jackson”, “Lady Bird” and “Some Velvet Morning” – and a non-single 1966 cover of the Cher hit “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)”, which features in the opening credits of Quentin Tarantino’s 2003 film Kill Bill Volume 1. In 1971 Sinatra and Hazlewood achieved their first collaborative success in the UK singles chart with the no. 2 hit “Did You Ever?”, and the 2005 UK no. 3 hit by Audio Bullys, “Shot You Down”, sampled Sinatra’s version of “Bang Bang”.

Between 1964 and 1968 Sinatra appeared in several feature films, co-starring with Peter Fonda in Roger Corman’s biker-gang movie The Wild Angels (1966) and alongside Elvis Presley in the musical drama Speedway (1968). Frank and Nancy Sinatra played a fictional father and daughter in the 1965 comedy Marriage on the Rocks.

Nancy Sinatra Wiki, Biography,

Sinatra was born on June 8, 1940, in Jersey City, New Jersey. She is the eldest of the three children born to Frank Sinatra and his first wife, Nancy Barbato. Both of her parents were of Italian ancestry.[8] When she was a toddler, the family moved to Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey. They later moved again to Toluca Lake, California, for her father’s Hollywood career. There she spent many years in piano, dance and dramatic performance lessons, and undertook months of voice lessons.[9]

Recording career

Sinatra began to study music, dancing and voice at UCLA in the late 1950s, but she dropped out after one year.[10] She made her professional debut on her father’s 1960 television special The Frank Sinatra Timex Show: Welcome Home Elvis, which celebrated the return of Elvis Presley from Europe following his discharge from military service.[11] Nancy was sent to the airport on behalf of her father to welcome Presley when his plane landed. On the special, Sinatra and her father danced and sang a duet, “You Make Me Feel So Young/Old”. That same year, she began a five-year marriage to Tommy Sands.[12]

Sinatra was signed to her father’s label, Reprise Records, in 1961. Her first single, “Cuff Links and a Tie Clip,” went largely unnoticed. However, subsequent singles charted in Europe and Japan. By 1965, without a hit in the United States, she was on the verge of being dropped by the label. Her singing career received a boost with the help of songwriter/producer/arranger Lee Hazlewood, who had been making records for ten years, notably with Duane Eddy.[11] Hazlewood’s collaboration with Sinatra began when Frank Sinatra asked Lee to help boost his daughter’s career. When recording “These Boots are Made for Walkin'”, Hazlewood is said to have suggested to Nancy, “You can’t sing like Nancy Nice Lady anymore. You have to sing for the truckers.” She later described him as “part Henry Higgins and part Sigmund Freud”.

Hazlewood had Sinatra sing in a lower key[14] and crafted songs for her. Bolstered by an image overhaul – including bleached-blond hair, frosted lips, heavy eye makeup and Carnaby Street fashions – Sinatra made her mark on the American (and British) music scene in early 1966 with “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,[15] its title inspired by a line from Robert Aldrich’s 1963 western comedy 4 for Texas, starring her father and Dean Martin. One of her many hits written by Hazlewood, it received three Grammy Award nominations, including two for Sinatra and one for arranger Billy Strange. It sold more than one million copies and was awarded a gold disc.[16] A TV promotional clip features Sinatra in high boots, accompanied by colourfully dressed go-go dancers, to iconic Swinging Sixties effect.[6][7]

A run of chart singles followed, including two 1966 US Top Ten hits: “How Does That Grab You, Darlin’?” (no. 7) and “Sugar Town” (no. 5). “Sugar Town” became Sinatra’s second million-seller.[16] The ballad “Somethin’ Stupid” – a duet with her father – reached number one in the US and the UK in April 1967 and spent nine weeks at the top of Billboard’s easy listening chart.[17] Frank and Nancy became the only father-daughter duo to top the Hot 100, but DJs dubbed the track “the incest song” because it was sung as if by two lovers.[17] The record earned a Grammy Award nomination for Record of the Year and remains the only father-daughter duet to hit number one in the US; it became Nancy’s third million-selling disc.[16]

Other singles showcasing Sinatra’s forthright delivery include “Friday’s Child” (US no. 36, 1966) and the 1967 hits “Love Eyes” (US no. 15) and “Lightning’s Girl” (US no. 24). She rounded out 1967 with the low-charting “Tony Rome” (US no. 83), the title track from the detective film Tony Rome starring her father. Her first solo single in 1968 was the more wistful “100 Years” (US no. 69). That same year she recorded “Highway Song”, written by Kenny Young and produced by Mickie Most, for the European markets. The song reached the Top 20 in the UK and other European countries.

Sinatra enjoyed a parallel recording career cutting duets with the husky-voiced, country-and-western-inspired Hazlewood, starting with “Summer Wine” (originally the B-side of “Sugar Town”). Their biggest hit was a cover of the 1963 country song “Jackson”. The single peaked at no. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1967, just a few months after Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash hit big on the country chart with their cover of the song.

In December 1967 Sinatra and Hazlewood released the single “Some Velvet Morning” (US no. 26), accompanied by a promo clip. The recording is regarded as one of pop’s more unusual singles; critic Cathi Unsworth wrote, “The puzzle of its lyrics and otherworldly beauty of its sound [offer] seemingly endless interpretations.”[18] The British broadsheet The Daily Telegraph placed “Some Velvet Morning” atop its 2003 list of the Top 50 Best Duets Ever (“Somethin’ Stupid” ranked no. 27.)[19] The song appeared on the duo’s 1968 album Nancy & Lee, about which National Public Radio commented in 2017, “… its sly, sultry movements both are a gem of traditional ’60s pop and an inversion of traditional conceptions of romance.”[20]

Sinatra recorded the theme song for the James Bond film You Only Live Twice in 1967. In the liner notes of the CD reissue of her 1966 album Nancy In London, Sinatra states that she was “scared to death” of recording the song, and asked the songwriters: “Are you sure you don’t want Shirley Bassey?” There are two versions of the Bond theme. The first is the lushly orchestrated track featured during the opening and closing credits of the film. The second – and more guitar-heavy – version appeared on the double A-sided single with “Jackson”, though the Bond theme stalled at no. 44 on Billboard‘s Hot 100.[21] “Jackson”/”You Only Live Twice” was even more successful in the UK, reaching no. 11 on the singles chart during a 19-week chart run (in the Top 50); it ranked 70 in the year-end chart.[22]

Sinatra traveled to Vietnam to perform for US troops in 1966 and 1967.[11] Many soldiers adopted her song “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ as their anthem, as shown in Pierre Schoendoerffer’s documentary The Anderson Platoon (1967) and reprised in a scene in Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket (1987). Sinatra recorded several antiwar songs, including “My Buddy”, which was featured on her album Sugar, “Home”, co-written by Mac Davis and “It’s Such a Lonely Time of Year”, which appeared on the 1968 LP The Sinatra Family Wish You a Merry Christmas. Sinatra recreated her Vietnam concert appearances on a 1988 episode of the television show China Beach. Sinatra still performs for charitable causes supporting Vietnam veterans, including Rolling Thunder.[23]

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Net Worth

 

The Estimated Net worth is $80K – USD $85k.

Monthly Income/Salary (approx.)$80K – $85k USD
Net Worth (approx.)$4 million- $6 million USD

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