* En anglais uniquement
Alan Bergman teamed with wife
Marilyn to forge one of the premier lyric-writing teams in contemporary film music, authoring a series of hit themes for movies including In the Heat of the Night, The Thomas Crown Affair, and The Way We Were.
Bergman was born September 11, 1925, in Brooklyn, NY, and began his career during the early '50s as a director of children's television programming.
In 1958, he married
Marilyn and three years later the couple earned their first big-screen credit for their work on The Right Approach. 1967's In the Heat of Night was the Bergmans' breakthrough; composed with
Quincy Jones, the picture's familiar title theme was sung by the inimitable
Ray Charles. The following year, the couple teamed with composer
Michel Legrand for The Thomas Crown Affair, notching an international smash with
Noel Harrison's rendition of the film's "The Windmills of Your Mind," and the Bergmans subsequently enjoyed a lengthy collaboration with
Legrand that yielded such familiar favorites as "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" and "How Do You Keep the Music Playing." Arguably their best-known effort was the title theme to the 1973 melodrama The Way We Were, written with
Marvin Hamlisch. The song, a number one pop hit for the movie's star,
Barbra Streisand, also earned an Academy Award. After notching Emmys for their work on the television projects Queen of the Stardust Ballroom and Sybil, the Bergmans reunited with
Hamlisch for 1978's Oscar-nominated "The Last Time I Felt Like This," from Same Time, Next Year. With
Dave Grusin, the couple also penned the Tootsie theme "It Might Be You," a Top Ten hit for
Stephen Bishop in 1982. A year later they earned an Oscar for Best Original Score for their work on
Streisand's Yentl, and the Bergmans also earned two Academy Award nominations, for their contributions to 1989's Shirley Valentine and 1995's Sabrina.
Bergman took a tentative vocal on his own "It Might Be You" for
Diane Schuur's 2000 album
Friends for Schuur, and released his own vocal full-length, Lyrically, Alan Bergman, in 2007. ~ Jason Ankeny