48 episodes

SUDDENLY... exploring the 20th century from a trans, queer & radical Australian perspective through the legacy of Frank Sinatra. Catgirl noir, ring a ding ding, etc. Join us as we deep dive into Sinatra's work and the nuances of history in abstract & creative ways, with episodes structured around Sinatra's albums, songs, films and radio appearances. Hosted by Rabia & Felix in Melbourne, and Henry Giardina in Los Angeles. Check out our website: suddenlypod.gay. Contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com. I dig you the most xx

SUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast Rabia, Felix & Henry

    • Music
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

SUDDENLY... exploring the 20th century from a trans, queer & radical Australian perspective through the legacy of Frank Sinatra. Catgirl noir, ring a ding ding, etc. Join us as we deep dive into Sinatra's work and the nuances of history in abstract & creative ways, with episodes structured around Sinatra's albums, songs, films and radio appearances. Hosted by Rabia & Felix in Melbourne, and Henry Giardina in Los Angeles. Check out our website: suddenlypod.gay. Contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com. I dig you the most xx

    Authorized x SUDDENLY - Robin and the 7 Hoods

    Authorized x SUDDENLY - Robin and the 7 Hoods

    We went on Authorized Novelizations Podcast to talk about Jack Pearl's 1964 novelisation of Sinatra's Robin and the Seven Hoods. This episode was recorded around six months ago and just released by Authorized this week. They've graciously given us permission to repost it on our feed.

    If you like what we do on SUDDENLY, you'll definitely have a good time with this epic two-and-a-half-hour deep dive into not just a lesser-known Sinatra film project, but the 60-year-out-of-print trashy novelisation of same. We delve into the bizarre circumstances surrounding the making of the film, and examine the psyche of pulp author Jack Pearl who added original strange details and incredibly violent, misogynistic content to the book. One surprise twist follows another. We're in good hands with the Authorized gang being experts in the maligned genre of film-to-book adaptations, having read Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, Cowboys and Aliens and the Cheetah Girls trilogy amongst many others.

    Authorized is one of our favourite shows and we really recommend you check them out. Despite the cultural divide that comes with different regional spellings of "novelisation/novelization" and "authorised/authorized", everyone had a great time! 

    Regular SUDDENLY programming will resume in April.  

    AUTHORIZED:
    instagram, twitter - @authorizedpod 
    patreon - patreon.com/authorizedpod 

    SUDDENLY:
    website - suddenlypod.gay
    contact - suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    donate - ko-fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 2 hr 40 min
    Why "Our Town" Matters

    Why "Our Town" Matters

    In Episode 43 ("Love and Marriage"), Rabia and Felix watched the infamous televised 1955 musical version of Thornton Wilder's Our Town, starring Frank Sinatra as the Stage Manager. The songs were so terrible, and the acting so bad, that Wilder personally called the station and ensured that it would never air ever again. Neither Rabia nor Felix had ever seen the play before, nor even heard of it. While a beloved cultural mainstay in the US, Our Town somehow never made it to Australia. Now, in his first solo episode, Henry explains to Australians what we're missing out on and why Our Town matters. 

    website: suddenlypod.gay
    contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 31 min
    Suspense

    Suspense

    We think of Sinatra as emerging as a serious dramatic actor from the early 1950s onwards, shedding his clean-cut MGM image for the first time when he takes intense roles as mentally disturbed soldiers in From Here to Eternity and Suddenly. But there's a part of the story we've all forgotten. In January 1945, at the height of the bobby-soxer era and months before tapdancing in a sailor suit for Anchors Aweigh, Sinatra made his actual dramatic acting debut on the radio horror anthology series Suspense. This week, we listen to "To Find Help", shockingly ahead of its time, where Sinatra briefly shed his squeaky-clean status to play a violent and mentally ill man terrorising an old woman in her home.

    website: suddenlypod.gay
    contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 1 hr 55 min
    In the Wee Small Hours

    In the Wee Small Hours

    In the Wee Small Hours is often considered Sinatra's best work and arguably the first concept album. The "concept" is something along the lines of “I am awake at 3am and I am feeling deeply sad about a lost love.” And that's really it. Just when you think there couldn't possibly be any more songs about the nuances of that kind of misery, there are seven more. It's relentless, it's brutal, it borders on self-harm and it changed the way we all listen to albums forever. So many emotions, such beautiful music, so much history, such an enormous legacy. And yet, what is there to say? Sometimes it's best just to listen - not just to Sinatra, but to the people out there in the world, all with their own problems, who heard this and felt something.

    Selected resources:
    * Woody Guthrie - Dustbowl Ballads (1940) (featured: "Dust Cain't Kill Me")
    * Gordon Jenkins - Seven Dreams (1953) (featured: "The Cocktail Party (The Fourth Dream)")
    * The Beach Boys - Pet Sounds (1967) (featured: "Wouldn't It Be Nice", "That's Not Me", "Caroline, No")
    * Paul Kelly - How to Make Gravy (autobiography, 2010)
    * Jane Russell & Hoagy Carmichael - "I Get Along Without You Very Well" (from Las Vegas Story, 1952)
    * Bob Crosby and His Orchestra (with Marion Mann, vocal) - "Deep in a Dream" (1938)
    * Laurie Anderson - "Smoke Rings" (from Home of the Brave, 1986)
    * The Berlin Patient (podcast hosted by Joel White, 2016-17) (Complete series available on YouTube and Internet Archive)
    * Sophie Calle - Take Care of Yourself (book and art project, 2007)
    * Nick Hornby - High Fidelity (novel, 1995)
    * Marian McPartland Trio - "This Love of Mine" (from self-titled album, 1956)

    Special thanks to W.M. Akers.

    contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    website: suddenlypod.gay
    donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 1 hr 37 min
    Love and Marriage

    Love and Marriage

    "Love and Marriage" was one of the worst songs Sinatra ever recorded, and the toxic ideas about marriage that it perpetuated left a negative impact on the world. This week, we look into the song's unlikely origins in a televised musical version of Thornton Wilder's Our Town and its shameful legacy as the theme song for the vile 1980s-90s sitcom Married... with Children. Watching this show for the first time in 2024 is a jaw-dropping experience, not least because of the jeering, catcalling studio audience. And of course, we've sought out the transphobic episode. Join us, won't you, as we travel down the "Tender Trap" to Al Bundy pipeline. This one made us feel bad.
    contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    website: suddenlypod.gay
    donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 1 hr 32 min
    The Tender Trap

    The Tender Trap

    The phrase "tender trap" essentially didn't exist before the mid-1950s, entering common usage from the film and song which were both popularised by Frank Sinatra. The image of being lured into your downfall by a thing pretending to be soft speaks to a basic element of what it is to be human, and people all over the world have projected their emotions, hangups and life experiences onto this simple concept. This week, we examine Sinatra's classic film and song, plus the original play, then take a look at the many manifestations of the "tender trap" ever since, exploring 70 years of human sexuality and emotion. 

    Selected references:
    Pamela Robinson Wojcik - The Apartment Plot: Urban Living in American Film (2010) The article about the musical they do in High School Musical Marjorie Holmes - I've Got to Talk to Somebody, God (1969) and Second Wife, Second Life (1993) Michael Walsh - How to Undo a Maiden (1971) Transvestia magazine, issue #110. "The Gift" by J. Reviere. (1971) Howard Cosell - Like It Is (1974) Seductress magazine, issue #6 (pornography) (1970s?) The Tender Trap (1978) (pornography) Gay Barchives - Interview with Doug Rehrer about The Tender Trap, Pittsburgh (2020) Ron Nyswaner - Blue Days, Black Nights (2004) Jay Matthews - “Youthful Lovers in China Find They Are Caught in a Tender Trap” 17 December 1978, Washington Post Alexander Abdennur - The Conflict Resolution Syndrome: Volunteerism, Violence, and Beyond The Sapphire Room (1997) Dave Damiani - "The Tinder App" (2016) Madeleine Davies - “Don’t Fall for the Tender Trap” 13 July 2017, Jezebel The Tender Trap (2021, New Zealand) Interview with Sharon Armstrong, Woman Magazine NZ, 1 March 2021 Death Trap aka The Tender Trap (1974) starring Vincent Price contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
    website: suddenlypod.gay
    donate: ko.fi.com/suddenlypod

    • 3 hr 12 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
3 Ratings

3 Ratings

hgiardina ,

Incredible show, a must listen

If you’re trans and are interested in Frank Sinatra, American history, Australian history, queer history, and trans head canon, you are in for a serious treat. Rabia and Felix do fantastic deep dives on each and every film where Sinatra appears, and the research is illuminating. Literally one of the best podcasts I’ve ever encountered.

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