Frank Sinatra in 1957, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Frank Sinatra (1915-1998) was an American singer and actor. Born in Hoboken, New Jersey to Italian immigrant parents, Sinatra would go on to become one of the most popular performers of the twentieth century, with a career in music and film spanning over fifty years. He was awarded the Kennedy Center Honors, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal, and multiple Grammy awards, among other honors.
In 1999, Sinatra’s close friend and fellow singer Tony Bennett conceived the idea of a public high school dedicated to the arts where young artists would be able to dedicate themselves to their craft in a rigorous academic environment. The Frank Sinatra School of the Arts opened in 2001 in a temporary home in Long Island City and moved to a new building in Bennett's native Astoria in 2009. Bennett named the school in honor of his beloved Sinatra; in a 2009 spotlight on Sinatra for Vanity Fair, Bennett described Sinatra as his “best friend” and extolled his emotional honesty in performance. Sinatra had spoken of Bennett in similar terms, stating in a 1965 profile in Life magazine that “Tony Bennett is the best singer in the business, the best exponent of a song. He excites me when I watch him – he moves me. He’s the singer who gets across what the composer has in mind and probably a little more.”
“About FSSA,” Frank Sinatra School of the Arts, accessed November 19, 2025
Alexander Larman, “‘The best singer in the business’: inside Tony Bennett’s friendship with Frank Sinatra” The Telegraph, July 23, 2023
Ben Cosgrove, “Sinatra at His Home Bar, and More: Intimate Photos Of a Legend,” Life, accessed November 19, 2025
Corey Kilgannon, “He’s Never Left Astoria Behind,” The New York Times, June 26, 2009
Tony Bennett, “That Old Sinatra Magic,” Vanity Fair, July 8, 2009