AlexBrowne said:
Nancy Sinatra was Frank's first child, born in 1940 while her father was a band singer with Tommy Dorsey's orchestra, and she proved to be the most successful performer of his children: Nancy's duet with Frank, "Somethin' Stupid," was a #1 song in 1967, as was "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" in 1966; her other hits included "How Does That Grab You, Darlin'?" and "Sugar Town" in 1966, and a group of duets with Lee Hazlewood, "Jackson" and "Lady Bird" in 1967, and "Some Velvet Morning" in 1968.
Connie Francis
was born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero in Newark, New Jersey. Connie’s
first ten singles were failures and she considered giving up singing for a career in medicine. "Who's Sorry Now?" debuted on Dick Clark's American Bandstand television show in Jan 1958, followed by many other
hits over the next decade. Francis specialized in downbeat ballads delivered in
her trademark "sobbing" style, such as "My Happiness", "Among My Souvenirs", "Together", "Breakin' In a Brand New Broken Heart", and the Italian song "Mama". However, she also had success with a handful of more upbeat, rock-and-roll-oriented compositions, such as "
Stupid Cupid", "Lipstick On Your Collar", and "Vacation". "Everybody's Somebody's Fool" and "My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own" went to
#1 on Billboard in 1960. In 1962, Francis had another
#1 hit with "Don't Break the Heart That Loves You". Francis remade many of her
hits in foreign languages, including her signature
song, "Where the Boys
Are". Francis recorded in thirteen languages throughout her career: English, German, Swedish, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian (and its dialect Neapolitan), Hebrew, Yiddish, Japanese, Latin and Hawaiian.