Friday, June 01, 2018

Dino welcomed everyone into his world.



  
Hey pallies, likes how time flies when your supremely smitten by our most beloved Dino and eager to share your Dino-happiness with others.  Today is June 1 and the start of our awesome annual coolest of cool celebration of the month in which our most most beloved Dino was birthed.  We tag our delightful Dino's birthday, The Day That Coolness Came To Earth, and 'cause it is so so special to all Dino-holics we can't help by take the whole month of June each year to proudly praisin' our King of Cool.

Likes we always invite Dino-philes likes youse to consider contributin' your own Dino-prose to this Dino-fest of deepest of deep devotion to our Dino and likes if any of youse pallies woulda likes to partake of this Dino-action simply send us an email to kentsmokerguy@yahoo.com to eagerly express your Dino-intention, and know we will respond to youse ASAP and get you on the Dino-schedule.

Well on to our Dino 1 Dino-gram!  Likes we wanted somethin' extra Dino-special to get the Dino-celebration goin' and we uncovered this sweetest of sweet salutation to our one and only Dino that we knows is simply primo perfecto for this Dino-occasion!   From the awesome annals of "northjersey.com" comes the tremendously touchin' 'n tender thoughts of  Mr. Rosario A. Iaconis, the "adjunct professor in the Social Sciences Department of Suffolk County Community College in New York."  Mr. Iaconis' premier prose is lovin'ly titled, "Everybody loved Dean Martin all of the time."

Mr. Iaconis' wonderfully wise words were written in huge homage of our Dino's centennial last year, and not discovered by ilovedinomartin until most recently.  We are supremely sorry not to have shared 'em before this, but we are totally totally thrilled to share 'em as we begin our 2018 celebration of The Day That Coolness Came To Earth.  Likes each and every syllable of each and every word that Rosario has stunnin'ly selected to lift up the life, the times, and the teachin's of our Dino is beautifully brimmin' with the most awesome of awesome adulation of our one, our only Dino and brings the deepest of deepest Dino-happiness to our hearts as we soak all this Dino-amore into our bein's!

We were stupendously struck by Mr. Iaconis' depth of devotion to our Dino and we chose our fav of fav remarkable reflections form this learned scholar for the title of this post, " Dino welcomed everyone into his world."  What a perfectly profound Dino-truth for all us Dino-holics to ponder pallies!  Indeed our Dino welcomes all of us pallies into his world and all we have to do is accept his incredible invitation!

Likes, of course, we coulda goes on and on 'bout how beautifully blown 'way we are by Mr. Roasrio Iaconis' deep devotion to our Dino, but we, of course, whats all youse Dino-devotees to drink in all his Dino-praise for yourselves.  We express our appreciation to Professour Iaconis for publicly professin' his amazin' apprecation to our Dino, certain to have won many readers of this fine publication to walkin' the Dino-way.  To checks this out in it's original format, simply clicks on the tag of this Dino-report.

We Remain,

Yours in Dino,

Dino Martin Peters


Everybody loved Dean Martin all of the time

Rosario A. Iaconis Published 7:18 p.m. ET June 12, 2017

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As centenary celebrations go, June 7, 2017, was the proverbial kick in the head.

Elvis Presley has left the building. Ol’ Blue Eyes is gone. Bing Crosby bid us farewell long ago. Only Tony Bennett remains. But the cultural legacy of Dino Paul Crocetti, a. k. a. Dean Martin, endures on the 100th anniversary of his birth.

Of all the troubadours who once ruled the airwaves in the 20th century, only Steubenville, Ohio’s favorite son conquered stage, screen, radio and television with the sprezzatura (or effortless mastery) of a true Renaissance talent.

In addition to being “The King of Cool,” as Elvis Presley so unerringly dubbed him, Dean Martin was the quintessential triple-threat entertainer: a consummate thespian, a gifted comedian of great wit and drollery, and a sophisticated crooner whose mellifluous Italianate baritone charmed audiences around the globe.

More ingratiating than the icily aloof Bing Crosby and warmer than the perennially surly Frank Sinatra, Dino welcomed everyone into his world. And Hollywood was no different.

Lauded by the likes of Howard Hawks, Vincente Minelli and Billy Wilder, Dino was a director’s dream – a conscientious actor whose cinematic appeal was equaled only by an indefatigable dedication to his craft. Though not an adherent of the Stanislavski “Method,” Dean Martin brought an uncommon emotional intensity to his roles. This was especially evident in such films as “Rio Bravo,” “The Young Lions” and “Some Came Running” – movies in which Dino stole the show from such film icons as John Wayne, Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and Frank Sinatra.


In “Rio Bravo,” Dean Martin’s bravura performance as the disgraced alcoholic deputy brought a gritty sensibility to what might otherwise have been a formulaic western. Martin eschewed the drunken pagliaccio. Instead, he depicted Dude as a fallen hero in search of redemption – a lawman who reclaims his honor and the kinship of his peers.

In “Career,” Dean played a conflicted opportunist-cum-communist-sympathizer. And in “Ada,” he depicted a cynical (Bill) Clintonesque southern governor. Dino also turned in a masterful performance in the film adaptation of Lillian Hellman’s “Toys in the Attic.”

Martin jammed with the Mills Brothers, Nat King Cole, Lena Horne and Louis Armstrong. A staunch civil-rights advocate who refused to entertain in venues that discriminated against African Americans and Jews, Martin was fiercely proud of his Italian heritage. Indeed, he abhorred “The Godfather”: “I hated that movie, what it did to the Italian people. There was no call for that.”

In “Mr. Ricco,” his final starring role, Martin portrayed a progressive Italian-American defense attorney who stands on principle in championing civil liberties and upholding the rule of law.
During the turbulent 1960s, America turned to Dean Martin’s variety show every Thursday night for solace, merriment and dulcet melodies. Truth be told, everybody loved Dino – the legendary scion of Italy whom Jerry Lewis recalled as “the boy with the tall, dark, and handsome voice” – sometime.

Now that’s amore.

Rosario A. Iaconis is an adjunct professor in the Social Sciences Department of Suffolk County Community College in New York.

4 comments:

  1. Wow! Man...Rosario nailed it, pals! Awesome homagin’ to our one & ONLY Dino!

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  2. An outstanding find, DMP!

    Dean Martin was the quintessential triple-threat entertainer: a consummate thespian, a gifted comedian of great wit and drollery, and a sophisticated crooner whose mellifluous Italianate baritone charmed audiences around the globe.

    So true.

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  3. Hey pallie, likes Danny-o, youse are right on the ol' Dino-mark...and how cool that Rosario is Italiano himself....and youse are our Dino-lovin' pallie! Keeps lovin' 'n sharin' our mighty magnificant DINO!

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  4. Hey pallie, likes Miss AOW, this primo prose encourages all of us Dino-holics to likes be supremely searchin' the web for undiscover Dino-adulation! Keeps lovin' our most lovin' DINO!

    ReplyDelete