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Sunday, July 15, 2018

WAS SHE A BELIEVING AND PRACTICING CATHOLIC AND UNDERSTOOD THE SANCTITY OF THE SACRAMENT OF HOLY MATRIMONY AND SINCE WHEN HAVE WOMEN BEEN CALLED "SENIOR" AND "JUNIOR"?

Despite the fact that Frank Sinatra, Sr. had three other "wives" after his Catholic Sacramental marriage to his "first" wife, there appears to be no Catholic annulment for his presumed sacramental marriage to Nancy Sinatra, Sr. not to be confused with Nancy Sinatra, Jr.

Nancy, Sr. died at 101 the other day. She and her husband Frank married in the Catholic Church as the story below states. Nancy, Sr. never married again living to 101. Of course her sacramental marriage to Frank, Sr., can to an end with his death as a true sacramental marriage can only be dissolved by death and no other human decision.

So what do you think? The story below doesn't describe if Nancy, Sr. was a believing Catholic and for this reason never remarried since she was married in the eyes of God to Frank, Sr.

And what about women being called "senior" and "junior" why not "I", "II" and yes the "III"?

Nancy Sinatra Sr. dies at 101


LOS ANGELES — Nancy Sinatra Sr., the childhood sweetheart of Frank Sinatra who became the first of his four wives and the mother of his three children, has died. She was 101.
Her daughter, Nancy Sinatra Jr., tweeted that her mother died Friday and a posting on her web page said she died at 6:02 p.m. but didn’t indicate where she died. “She was a blessing and the light of my life,” her daughter said.

Attempts to reach representatives for Sinatra Jr. late Friday were unsuccessful.

Nancy and Frank Sinatra had been dating as teenagers and married at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic church in Jersey City, New Jersey, on Feb. 4, 1939, just as Frank’s singing career was about to take off. Three years before marrying the former Nancy Barbato, he had landed a 15-minute radio show on local station WAAT.

During the marriage’s early years, the Sinatras lived in a modest apartment in Jersey City, where their two eldest children were born. For a time she was employed as a secretary while her husband worked as a singing waiter.
After Sinatra became a pop-music sensation in the 1940s, the couple moved to Los Angeles, where the singer would also become a movie star, raconteur, man about town and notorious womanizer.

Nancy Sinatra left Frank after his affair with actress Ava Gardner became public knowledge. Weeks after the pair’s divorce became final in 1951, Sinatra’s ex-husband married Gardner, while Sinatra went on to raise the couple’s three children: Nancy, Frank Jr. and Tina.

After the gossip over the divorce and Gardner marriage died down, Nancy Sinatra devoted herself to family and numerous celebrity friends, largely withdrawing from the spotlight. She not only outlived her husband, who died in 1998, but her son, who died in 2016.

She is credited, under the name Nancy Barbato, on the Internet Movie Database with just two TV and film appearances, in her daughter Nancy’s 1975 concert film, “Nancy and Lee in Las Vegas,” and in 1974 on her friend Dinah Shore’s talk show.

In later years she would become known as Nancy Sr., especially after daughter Nancy became a 1960s singing star in her own right with “These Boots Are Made For Walking” and other hit songs.

She also remained friendly with her ex-husband, the latter being said to have put in requests over the years for pasta and other Italian food dishes she was known to be an expert at preparing. She never remarried.

1 comment:

Mark Thomas said...

Speaking of Sinatra...Frank Sinatra, that is...click here should you desire a laugh or two:

Dean Martin Roasts...

Jonathan Winters roasts Frank Sinatra.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmFegSP8Zuo

Pax.

Mark Thomas