SUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
It’s a simple idea with a long history: Woman is told her husband has perished at sea, so she remarries, then the original husband turns up alive and hijinks ensue! An old-timey excuse to show a throuple and a natural premise for comedy, this concept stayed resonant for many years and was remade a number of times – including as a classic screwball 1940 film, that was later itself in 1947 adapted into a hilarious and chaotic radio production starring Lucille Ball as the wife with Bob Hope and Frank Sinatra as the husbands. This week, we hear that radio production in full, and go on a deep...
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
We're off for Ramadan and will be back soon. In the meantime, here's a classic episode of Rocky Fortune with a quick intro about some upcoming episodes. website: suddenlypod.gay contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
Not just the 1992 "Is Elvis Alive?" conspiracy theory special The Elvis Conspiracy (a sequel to 1991's The Elvis Files). Not just the specific airing of that special from Channel 7 in Adelaide, South Australia on 26 May 1992. The commercials from that airing. It's as granular as we've ever been, and we're joined by Adelaide's own David M. Green, host of VHS Revue, a show which specialises in commercials from Australian TV found on old VHS tapes. This was originally intended to be a bonus episode for the TCBCast After Dark Patreon-exclusive deep dive into "Is Elvis Alive?"...
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
In 1947, a musical premiered in which a conservative US senator is transformed into a woman by a farming commune of "rainbow people" in order to teach him a lesson. Brimming with queer and trans subtext, Finian's Rainbow is a difficult and exhausting watch today but it remains fascinating as an artefact of proto-feminism and postwar LGBTIQA+ history. Sinatra was originally slated to appear in an animated version in the 1950s and even worked on a soundtrack with Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald, but the project never eventuated - though he did go on to record "Old Devil Moon" on Songs for...
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
I love my wife. The "I Love My Wife" timeline: "" (unrelated song from I Do, I Do, 1966) Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice (1969) I Love My Wife (film, unrelated to the musical, 1970) Viens chez moi, j'habite chez une copine (French play, 1975) "I Love My Wife" (Sinatra single release of title song from musical, January 1977) (book of original musical, 1977) I Love My Wife (musical, premieres March 1977) I Love My Wife (original cast recording, 1977) "I Love My Wife" (Bill Evans recording, 1978) (South African cast recording, 1978) Viens chez moi, j'habite chez une...
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
As Los Angeles burns, Henry checks in with the show from a Motel 6 in Palm Springs. websites: henrygiardina.com suddenlypod.gay contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
We're back, ahead of schedule, with an emotional first episode of 2025 after a long and personally very traumatic few months. This week we turn to Sinatra's classic 1956 album Songs for Swingin' Lovers! and explore how the album title inadvertently became a double entendre in the 1960s. Placing this album in the inadvertent context of the "swinging" sexual revolution throws new light on it and snaps the album's "concept" into focus. Mostly, this is just spectacular music and we're back to our roots of appreciating it. In particular, we spotlight the trumpet work of Harry "Sweets" Edison, a...
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
Merry Christmas. I'm back. See you soon. - Rabia suddenlypod.gay suddenlypod at gmail dot com
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
Hi, Rabia here. I have Long COVID and am struggling. I need time to process things and figure out how to best use my energy. Podcasting is good for me but very energy consuming, and I need to work out how I'm going to manage this condition. So Season 3 will end here for now and we will pick back up at some stage in 2025. In the meantime, enjoy this episode of Rocky Fortune. Wear an N95, run an air purifier, avoid crowds, do whatever you can to avoid both contracting and spreading this virus. I dig you the most xx contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
info_outlineSUDDENLY: a Frank Sinatra podcast
Melbourne's Medically Supervised Injecting Room (MSIR) in North Richmond opened in 2018. This was the result of a years-long grassroots campaign led by the local community, fed up with constant overdoses in the streets. The MSIR operates on principles of harm reduction which simply work and urgently need to be applied throughout the world. The stigma around drug use, and the criminalising of drug users, must end - and that begins with us. In 1955, Frank Sinatra made a historically significant contribution to the destigmatisation of drug use on film in Otto Preminger's The Man with the...
info_outlineIt’s a simple idea with a long history: Woman is told her husband has perished at sea, so she remarries, then the original husband turns up alive and hijinks ensue! An old-timey excuse to show a throuple and a natural premise for comedy, this concept stayed resonant for many years and was remade a number of times – including as a classic screwball 1940 film, that was later itself in 1947 adapted into a hilarious and chaotic radio production starring Lucille Ball as the wife with Bob Hope and Frank Sinatra as the husbands. This week, we hear that radio production in full, and go on a deep dive beginning with a simple title which does not officially have an exclamation mark in it but absolutely should – Too Many Husbands!
Referenced media:
- Black Mirror latest season (2025)
- Dale Beran - It Came from Something Awful (2019)
- Search Engine podcast episode, "What’s actually on teenagers’ phones?" (2025)
- Social Studies (TV documentary series, 2025)
- Erin in the Morning (Substack newsletter)
- A Minecraft Movie (2025)
- Prince - N.E.W.S. (2003)
- Origin of "Knock it into a cocked hat" from Wordhistories.net
- D.H. Lawrence - Samson and Delilah
- Caught in the Draft (1941)
- Paris Review on "Brownette" - "A Visit to the Max Factor Museum" by Sadie Stein (2014)
"TOO MANY HUSBANDS" TIMELINE (incomplete... could be someone's PhD to work all this out, likely many strands missing)
- 1565 – Martin Guerre story published
- 1800s – Someone, somewhere, writes a story probably called “The Fisherman” about a fisherman who goes missing, is presumed dead, comes back and finds his wife has married.
- 1854 – Thomas Woolner is an English sculptor and poet visiting Australia, and while there he buys a lot of books. He then returns to England on board a ship called the Queen of the South and spends a lot of time reading. In one of those books he reads “The Fisherman”. We don’t know what book it is or who wrote it. He later passes it on to his friend Lord Alfred Tennyson.
- 1864 – "Enoch Arden", poem by Lord Tennyson, based on “The Fisherman”
- 1911 – Too Many Husbands, play by Anthony E. Wills
- 1914 – Too Many Husbands, film based on Wills’ play
- 1918 – Too Many Husbands, English film
- 1919 – Home and Beauty aka Too Many Husbands, play by Maugham
- 1938 – Too Many Husbands, British film
- 1940 – Too Many Husbands, American film based on 1919 play
- 1940 – My Favorite Wife, remake of 1940 film with genderflip
- 1947 – “Too Many Husbands” radio adaptation with Lucille Ball, Frank Sinatra and Bob Hope
- 1954 – “Too Many Husbands” episode of Rocky Fortune
- 1955 – Three for the Show, remake of 1940 film
- 1962 – Something’s Got to Give, aborted Marilyn project, remake of My Favorite Wife
- 1963 – Move Over, Darling, made instead of above
- 2020 – “Too Many Husbands”, song by Coriky
contact: suddenlypod at gmail dot com
website: suddenlypod.gay
donate: ko-fi.com/suddenlypod