The Rat Pack Never Had A Sixth Member—But If They Did, It Would’ve Been Her

The Rat Pack Never Had A Sixth Member—But If They Did, It Would’ve Been Her


April 23, 2026 | Jesse Singer

The Rat Pack Never Had A Sixth Member—But If They Did, It Would’ve Been Her


You Could Get Close—But Not That Close

The Rat Pack had a reputation for being loose, unpredictable, and open to anything. On stage, it looked like anyone could step in and be part of it. But off stage, it was something very different. The group didn’t change. It didn’t expand. And no matter how close someone got, there was a line that never moved.

Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine pose for a studio portraitSilver Screen Collection, Getty Images

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Not Just Another Face In The Crowd

The Rat Pack had its core five—Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop. That was it. There was never an official sixth member of the pack. But there should’ve been. And her name was Shirley MacLaine.

The ''Rat Pack'' FILE PHOTO: An undated promotional photo of the ''Rat Pack'', (from left)Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop.Getty Images, Getty Images

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She Worked Directly With Sinatra

MacLaine starred opposite Sinatra in Some Came Running (1958), one of his major dramatic roles. Her performance earned an Academy Award nomination. That working relationship mattered, because Sinatra didn’t collaborate closely with people he didn’t respect.

Shirley MacLaine svájci látogatásakorHans Gerber, Wikimedia Commons

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She Was Already A Major Star

By 1960, MacLaine wasn’t an up-and-comer. She had starred in The Apartment, which earned her another Oscar nomination and became one of the most acclaimed films of the era. She had clear momentum without needing the Rat Pack.

Publicity photo of Shirley MacLaine in The Apartment.movie studio, Wikimedia Commons

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She Was Part Of The Same Vegas Circuit

MacLaine performed in Las Vegas during the same period the Rat Pack dominated the Sands. While she wasn’t part of their regular shows, she was working the same venues and playing to similar audiences.

Shirley MacLaine svájci látogatásakorHans Gerber, Wikimedia Commons

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She Knew Sinatra Socially

Beyond films, MacLaine and Sinatra moved in overlapping social circles. That included the late-night Vegas scene, where performers, executives, and celebrities mixed after shows.

Shirley MacLaine with Frank Sinatra (Original Caption) Actress Shirley MacLaine and singer Frank Sinatra on set during filming of Sergeants 3.Bettmann, Getty Images

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She Was Around During Their Peak Years

MacLaine’s rise lined up closely with the Rat Pack’s peak from roughly 1959 to 1963. She wasn’t connected later through nostalgia. She was there while it was happening.

Shirley MacLaine Shirley MacLaineHerbert Dorfman, Getty Images

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She Wasn’t Part Of The Sands Shows

The Rat Pack’s identity was built around their performances at the Sands Hotel. MacLaine was not part of those core group shows, which helped define who was in and who wasn’t.

Gettyimages - 74296093, "Rat Pack" At The Sands LAS VEGAS - 1962: Entertainers and members of the Rat Pack, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop, pose for a portrait outside The Sands Hotel and casino in circa 1962 in Las Vegas, Nevada.Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images

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She Wasn’t Included In Their Films

When the Rat Pack moved into film with Ocean’s 11, they kept the same core group. The movie featured friends and cameos, but the central lineup stayed intact. MacLaine wasn’t part of it.

Ocean's Eleven Rat Pack The stars of the film, 'Ocean's Eleven, Hollywood, California, 1960. L-R Peter Lawford, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Frank Sinatra. Underwood Archives, Getty Images

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Sinatra Controlled The Group

Sinatra had the most influence over the group’s direction. He shaped who appeared, how shows were structured, and how the group operated publicly. There’s no record of him expanding the group beyond the original five.

Portrait of Frank Sinatra at Liederkranz Hall, New York.William P. Gottlieb, Wikimedia Commons

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Membership Didn’t Expand

Even as their fame grew and their network expanded, the Rat Pack never added members. That includes periods when they worked with other major stars who were just as well known.

6-4John Springer Collection, Getty Images

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Even Core Members Weren’t Fully Equal

Sammy Davis Jr., despite being central to the group, still faced racial barriers. In early Vegas appearances, he wasn’t always allowed to stay where he performed. The group itself had internal limits.

Photo of Sammy Davis, Jr. in 1972.Jay Bernstein Public Relations, Wikimedia Commons

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Peter Lawford Shows How Fixed It Was

Lawford was deeply connected through both the group and his ties to the Kennedy family. But after falling out with Sinatra, he was effectively cut off. If a core member could be removed that quickly, adding someone new wasn’t realistic.

Peter Lawford Peter Lawford MGM Studio publicity portrait of the English born star circa 1946.Screen Archives, Getty Images

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Women Were Around—But Not Included

Women like Angie Dickinson and Judy Garland spent time around the group and performed in similar spaces. But none were considered part of the Rat Pack itself, regardless of their fame or proximity.

A publicity photo of Judy Garland used in conjunction with The Harvey Girls (1946).Eric Carpenter for en:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Wikimedia Commons

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The Group Was Built That Way

Women were part of the Rat Pack’s world—on stage, off stage, and in their personal lives. But the group itself was something else entirely. It was built as a five-man identity—and that was never something that expanded.

Rat Pack Members At Friar's Club Dinner BEVERLY HILLS - FEBRUARY 14: Singers and Rat Pack members Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin attend a Friar's Club dinner on February 14, 1957 in Los Angeles, California.Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images

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Talent Wasn’t The Barrier

MacLaine had major film success, awards recognition, and industry respect. She wasn’t lacking anything professionally that would have excluded her on merit alone.

L'actrice américaine Shirley MacLaine au Festival du cinéma américain de Deauville (Normandie, France) en septembre 1987.Roland Godefroy, Wikimedia Commons

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Neither Were Connections

She worked with Sinatra. She moved in the same Hollywood circles. She had real relationships, not surface-level access. She was already inside that system in a meaningful way.

Title: Shirley MacLaine, actress, anti-war demonstration, NYC [Vietnam moratorium]
Creator(s): Gotfryd, Bernard, photographer
Date Created/Published: [1969]
Medium: 1 photograph : color transparency ; 35mm (slide format)
Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-gtfy-02693 (digital file from original)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication. For information seeGotfryd, Bernard, photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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She Got There A Different Way

A lot of women who got close to that world did so through relationships, usually with Sinatra or someone in the group. MacLaine didn’t. She didn’t date Sinatra or rely on that kind of access. She got there on her own through her work, her presence, and her reputation.

Shirley MacLaine American actress Shirley MacLaine in a yellow cardigan, circa 1960.Silver Screen Collection, Getty Images

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So What Was Missing?

Nothing on her side. That’s what makes it stand out. She had the talent, the timing, and the access. The only thing in the way wasn’t her—it was the structure of the Rat Pack itself, and the fact that it was never designed to include anyone new.

Shirley MacLaine Shirley MacLaine, the Hollywood film star, dancer and actress, in the Savoy Gardens, London. William Lovelace, Getty Images

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The Line Never Moved

Even when it would have made sense. Even when the fit was obvious to anyone watching at the time. The group stayed exactly what it was, and there’s no evidence it was ever seriously considered to expand beyond those original five members.

Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin (Original Caption) 12/7/1961-Kanab, Utah: Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin (LtoR) kill some time between takes of Bettmann, Getty Images

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Others Came And Went

Plenty of celebrities orbited the group over the years—actors, comedians, musicians. Some shared the stage. Some were part of the same late-night scene. But none crossed into membership, no matter how close they got or how often they appeared alongside them.

south-african actress and dancer Juliet Prowse - publicity still (cropped)unknown (20th Century Fox), Wikimedia Commons

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The Clearest Proof Was On Screen

When the Rat Pack turned themselves into a movie with Ocean’s 11 (1960), that was the group—on screen and off. Even with access to major Hollywood talent, the core lineup didn’t change. MacLaine wasn’t part of it, and neither was anyone else outside the five.

Ocean's Eleven Ocean's Eleven, lobbycard, (aka OCEAN'S 11), from left, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford, Joey Bishop, 1960. LMPC, Getty Images

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The Sixth Member That Never Was

Shirley MacLaine was never officially part of the Rat Pack. But based on timing, relationships, and proximity, she remains one of the few names that can reasonably be placed just outside that core group.

Shirley MacLaine American actress Shirley MacLaine, circa 1963. Silver Screen Collection, Getty Images

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The Rat Pack Never Had A Sixth Member—But If They Did, It Would’ve Been Her

The Rat Pack had a reputation for being loose, unpredictable, and open to anything. On stage, it looked like anyone could step in and be part of it. But off stage, it was something very different. The group didn’t change. It didn’t expand. And no matter how close someone got, there was a line that never moved.


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