What a life! Not without tragedy (the death of his father when Tony was 10), not without trauma (frontline experience during World War II), not without heartache (two divorces before he met Susan with whom he found deep happiness), and not without the rollercoaster movement of an entertainer's career that included a near fatal drug overdose, and a good decade of being 'out of fashion.' But always with music, and an open heart and a willingness to keep learning, and keep experimenting with the form. Tony Bennett was just shy of his 97th birthday when he passed last week (July 21, 2023), but in many ways, he was eternally young.
Just Getting Started is Tony Bennett's tribute to the people who were important to him, and touched his life. That includes family, other entertainers, and artists (Bennett was also a talented artist). The book is a constant high - there is no negativity in his remembrances, only good thoughts and love for people who shared his journey. The story starts with memories of his mother, whose work standards as a dressmaker taught him never to work with cheap material, and ends with his father. In between, we get sketches of singers and songwriters, and friends and artists. Bob Hope renamed him (Anthony Dominick Benedetto became Tony Bennett), and Tony took the stage with Hope in the first big break of his career which took him all over the world. He speaks generously of other singers - Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Judy Garland, Ella Fitzgerald, Pearl Bailey and songwriters, Johnny Mercer, Charlie Chaplin (who wrote the melody to 'Smile'). In fact, he is generous and loving to everyone in this book, which is, I think, a clue to his longevity and to his icon status: he was a gentleman who only wanted to share music, art and beauty with the world. May the lessons of his life and career live forever.