King Of Cool: A Brand New Original Documentary

King of Cool: The Dean Martin Story is a brand-new hour-long retrospective on the life of Dean Martin from Newsmax. Including never-before-seen clips and interviews from celebrities, family, friends and co-stars, including DMA president Elliot Thorpe, and with lots of surprises about Dean’s life, the program chronicles his journey from hard-scrabble upbringing to superstardom, from Italy to Las Vegas to Hollywood.

See it exclusively on Newsmax, Sunday 16 June 2024, 9pm ET

One of Hollywood’s most beloved legends, Dean Martin was an undeniable singing, acting and stage sensation. Renowned for his captivating looks, velvety voice, and incomparable charm, few names shine as brightly as this legendary and enduring performer.

Whether teamed with comedic partner Jerry Lewis, or alongside Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr., as a key member of ‘The Rat Pack,’ Martin was a dynamic figure in entertainment for nearly half a century.

The Dean Martin Show was immensely popular, running on NBC for nearly a decade. His charisma, humor, and easy-going style endeared him to TV viewers across the country. With a drink in one hand and a beautiful woman on each arm, Dean Martin delighted audiences with his impeccable singing talent, comedic timing and on-screen magnetism.

He was the man every man wanted to be, and every woman wanted to be with. Join us as we celebrate the man behind the martini glass, and the indelible mark he left on the illustrious world of entertainment.

KING OF COOL: THE DEAN MARTIN STORY airs exclusively on Newsmax, 16 June 2024, 9pm ET. UK viewers can see it Tuesday 17 June 2024, 2am BST.

Happy Birthday, Dino!

On Dino’s 107th birthday, BERNARD H THORPE in this article* from our latest edition of Just Dino (#424, 7 June 2024) considers the impact Dean has on all of us.

Where to begin?

Sometimes when I sit amid the hundreds and hundreds of letters that come in to the London DMA office addressed to Dino, I recall in 1960 that I had no idea to the extent of how far reaching his admirers were around the world. The majority of course are in the US, and that makes perfect sense, but we have a huge percentage in the UK and across Europe. Australia features large, as does South Africa, and so many from Asia.

I occasionally wonder too how Dean’s voice ‘translates’, for our members for whom English isn’t their first language. We know how he works a lyric, how he phrases a word and holds a note. But at the end of the day, I know he transcends such silly barriers as language and culture! Dean truly is an international superstar, and appeals to all corners of our fragile planet. He brings everyone together, and those who are brought together indeed find a common ground.

When we started out, we were Dino’s Fan Club, then The International Dean Martin Club. But Dean told us he wanted us to be called The Dean Martin Association; so what our Chairman proposed, we gladly and without hesitation complied.

You see, Dean knew what he was doing. He always knew what he was doing. He just liked to make us think he didn’t. That was his stage act.

We were an association of Dean Martin admirers – that’s how I saw us and that’s what Dean was happy to see in us, too. So we literally became an association, in name and in actuality. We became Dean’s association.

All of what we do at the DMA is for our wonderful Dino and for our wonderful members. We have built working relationships and made friendships all over the world because of this one man.
He smiles and nods when I tell him whenever our membership numbers increase (which at the time of writing, following his London concerts, is quite often and by quite a lot!). ‘Is that so?’ he gently says, as if he is diplomatically incredulous that anyone would be interested in anything he does!

But interested we are, and interested his admirers are (I don’t like to use the word fan because Dean isn’t fond of the label, another reason why he changed our name). We would like to play his records twenty-four seven; we’d watch his TV show back to back if we could; his movies would be on endless repeat…

So what does he mean to me, this enigmatic, hugely talented American entertainer? What does he mean to all of us? Perhaps that’s assumptive of me to know what he means to others, but by all the mountains of correspondence we get, let alone what Dean gets himself directly, I can be certain that he means very much the same thing to all of us: we admire his effortless charm, his suavity, his ability to make everyone feel welcome and wanted. We enjoy his outlook, the manner in which he sings a song, how he walks across a cabaret stage in Las Vegas or a soundstage in Hollywood. We appreciate his elegance in dress, his way that he can spin a gag and make us laugh. He makes us feel like he’s there for us, and only us.

He looks like a million dollars, and we feel like a million dollars when we watch him.

I’ve been fortunate enough to meet him, to spend time alone with him talking about business and pleasure. I feel privileged to be in his company, but that doesn’t mean I am ever a sycophant to him: I respect him greatly and very deeply, and I offer my opinions to him. He likewise understands I’m not here to bask in his glory, to pass it off as my own. No. And I would never ever misuse my position as the president of his association. I do a job for him. But what a job! To have to listen to his latest LP or his newest single, to have to attend premiers to his films, to go around the world talking about him and his career! Oh boy! Some jobs are a bind. But this one? I wouldn’t change it for the world!

How much longer can the DMA go on for? That’s not up to me, that’s not even up to Dino.

That’s up to you. And I hope it will go on forever.

*originally written in 1983