Frank Sinatra gets stamp of approval

? Coming to a mailbox near you: Ol’ Blue Eyes himself.

As Frank Sinatra’s three children looked on, Postal Service officials unveiled an oversized replica of a stamp commemorating the iconic crooner in Beverly Hills on Wednesday.

The Rat Pack ringleader is depicted smiling, sporting his trademark fedora with his signature scrawled across the bottom of the 1950s-era image by artist Kazuhiko Sano. And popping from the center of the portrait are – what else? – Sinatra’s electric-blue eyes.

“I am certain that anyone receiving a letter with Frank Sinatra’s smile on it will smile back,” said his daughter Nancy, 67, her voice breaking.

Wednesday would have marked Sinatra’s 92nd birthday; he died in 1998 of a heart attack.

The postal service plans to issue 120 million of the first-class stamps next spring.

Sinatra joins other cultural luminaries – including magician Harry Houdini, artist Andy Warhol, vocalist Ella Fitzgerald and Yoda of “Star Wars” – enshrined on the fronts of envelopes. To be honored with a stamp, subjects must be deceased for at least five years, with the exception of former presidents.

Master of the American songbook, Sinatra entertained for six decades, earning Grammys, a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for “From Here to Eternity” and a Presidential Medal of Freedom. The “Chairman of the Board” was a Las Vegas fixture in the 1960s.