Alan Bergman, the Oscar-winning lyricist who teamed with his wife, Marilyn, for an enduring and loving partnership that produced such old-fashioned hits as âHow Do You Keep the Music Playing?,â âIt Might Be Youâ and the classic âThe Way We Were,â has died at 99.
Bergman died late Thursday at his home in Los Angeles, family spokesperson Ken Sunshine said in a statement Friday. The statement said Bergman had, in recent months, suffered from respiratory issues âbut continued to write songs till the very end.â
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The Bergmans married in 1958 and remained together until her death, in 2022. With collaborators ranging from Marvin Hamlisch and Quincy Jones to Michel Legrand and Cy Coleman, they were among the most successful and prolific partnerships of their time, providing words and occasional music for hundreds of songs, including movie themes that became as famous as the films themselves. Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson, Tony Bennett and many other artists performed their material, and Barbra Streisand became a frequent collaborator and close friend.
Sunshine said that there will still be a centennial celebration of Alan Bergman as planned at Santa Monica's Broad Stage, with guests including Michael Feinstein, Jackson Browne and Patti Austin. Feinstein, among the many artists who posted tributes Friday, wrote that the Bergmans were âkind, talented and principled artistsâ who âlived from a place called Love.â
Blending Tin Pan Alley sentiment and contemporary pop, the Bergmans crafted lyrics known by millions, many of whom would not have recognized the writers had they walked right past them. Among their most famous works: the Streisand-Neil Diamond duet âYou Donât Bring Me Flowers,â the well-named Sinatra favorite âNice ânâ Easyâ and the topical themes to the 1970s sitcoms âMaudeâ and âGood Times.â Their film compositions included Ray Charlesâ âIn the Heat of the Nightâ from the movie of the same name; Noel Harrisonâs âThe Windmills of Your Mind,â from âThe Thomas Crown Affairâ; and Stephen Bishopâs âIt Might Be You,â from âTootsie.â
The whole world seemed to sing and cry along to âThe Way We Were,â an instant favorite recorded by Streisand for the 1973 romantic drama of the same name that co-starred Streisand and Robert Redford. Set to Hamlischâs tender, bittersweet melody, it was essentially a song about itself â a nostalgic ballad about nostalgia, an indelible ode to the uncertainty of the past, starting with one of historyâs most famous opening stanzas: âMemories / light the corners of my mind / misty watercolor memories / of the way we were.â
âThe Way We Wereâ was the top-selling song of 1974 and brought the Bergmans one of their three Oscars, the others coming for âWindmills of Your Mindâ and the soundtrack to âYentl,â the Streisand-directed movie from 1983. At times, the Academy Awards could be mistaken for a Bergman showcase. In 1983, three of the nominees for best song featured lyrics by the Bergmans, who received 16 nominations in all.
The Bergmans also won two Grammys, four Emmys, were presented numerous lifetime achievement honors and received tributes from individual artists, including Streisandâs 2011 album of Bergman songs, âWhat Matters Most.â On âLyrically, Alan Bergman,â Bergman handled the vocals himself. Although best known for their movie work, the Bergmans wrote the Broadway musical âBallroomâ and provided lyrics for the symphony âVisions of America.â
Their very lives seemed to rhyme. They didnât meet until they were adults, but were born in the same Brooklyn hospital, four years apart; raised in the same Brooklyn neighborhood, attended the same childrenâs concerts at Carnegie Hall and moved to California in the same year, 1950. They were introduced in Los Angeles while working for the same composer, but at different times of the day. Their actual courtship was in part a story of music. Fred Astaire was Marilynâs favorite singer at the time and Alan Bergman co-wrote a song, âThat Face,â which Astaire agreed to record. Acetate in hand, Bergman rushed home to tell Marilyn the news, then proposed.
Bergman is survived by a daughter, Julie Bergman, and granddaughter.
Bergman had wanted to be a songwriter since he was a boy. He majored in music and theater at the University of North Carolina, and received a masterâs from the University of California, Los Angeles, where he befriended Johnny Mercer and became a protege. He and Marilyn at first wrote childrenâs songs together, and broke through commercially in the late 1950s with the calypso hit âYellowbird.â Their friendship with Streisand began soon after, when they visited her backstage during one of her early New York club appearances. âDo you know how wonderful you are?â was how Marilyn Bergman greeted the young singer.
The Bergmans worked so closely together that they often found themselves coming up with the same word at the same time. Alan likened their partnership to housework: one washes, one dries, the title of a song they eventually devised for a Hamlisch melody. Bergman was reluctant to name a favorite song, but cited âA Love Like Oursâ as among their most personal:
âWhen love like ours arrives / We guard it with our lives / Whatever goes astray / When a rainy day comes around / A love like ours will keep us safe and sound.â