Tag: The Way We Were

  • Hamlisch’s Historic Oscar Triumph

    Hamlisch’s Historic Oscar Triumph

    50 years ago today, Marvin Hamlisch made history at the 46th Academy Awards, when he became the first person ever to win in three music categories at the same Oscars ceremony. Hamlisch was honored with the awards for Best Original Score and Best Original Song (with Alan and Marilyn Bergman) for “The Way We Were,” and also in the rather cumbersomely-named category “Best Scoring: Original Song Score and Adaptation or Scoring: Adaptation,” for “The Sting.”

    Hamlisch’s use of ragtime as the basis for his music for “The Sting” contributed enormously to the Scott Joplin revival of the 1970s. Suddenly everyone was pecking out “The Entertainer” on their pianos. Nevermind the fact that the prevalence of Joplin’s music in the film was anachronistic for a caper set during the 1930s; the music perfectly complemented the bright and breezy hijinks of Paul Newman and Robert Redford.

    Hamlisch was only the second artist, after Richard Rodgers, to win all five of the major awards: Emmy (4), Grammy (4), Oscar (3), Tony (1), and, most unusually for a musical, the Pulitzer Prize for “A Chorus Line.”

    Hamlisch thanked Joplin in his “Sting” acceptance speech. Later, when the nominees for Best Original Score were read, Cher made a repeated hash of Hamlisch’s name, until corrected by Henry Mancini. But Hamlisch had the last laugh, when he in turn acknowledged her as “Sheer.”

    The presenters for the song-and-adaptation Oscar were Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds. John Huston introduced Mancini and Cher. As a nice bonus, John Williams was also honored with two more nominations, pre-“Jaws.” Williams won his first Oscar, for adapting the music for “Fiddler on the Roof,” in 1972.

    The ‘70s were a very good decade for Joplin, who died in 1917 at the age of 48. In 1970, Joshua Rifkin’s first LP of Joplin piano rags became a classical bestseller for Nonesuch Records. The same year, the composer was inducted into the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame. In 1973, Gunther Schuller revived period orchestrations of Joplin’s works for another recording, “The Red Back Book,” which won a Grammy.

    Joplin’s opera, “Treemonisha,” was finally given its first complete staging in 1972. And in 1976, Joplin received a citation from the Pulitzer Prize committee “for his contributions to American music.” Of course, by then, he had already been dead for 59 years.

    More than anything, it was the use of his rags on the soundtrack for “The Sting,” and the resulting Top-40 status of “The Entertainer” (which reached number 3 on the Billboard charts), that brought Joplin roaring back into the popular consciousness.

    Intriguingly, after Hamlisch’s death in 2012, it was revealed that he had been poised to succeed Peter Nero as music director of the Philly Pops, leaving us in the Philadelphia area to muse on what might have been.

    More than just a singular sensation, Marvin Hamlisch was the one.

  • Marilyn Bergman Legendary Lyricist Dies at 93

    Marilyn Bergman Legendary Lyricist Dies at 93

    16-time Academy Award nominated lyricist Marilyn Bergman has died. Bergman worked with her husband, Alan, for over half a century, to expand the American Songbook with insistently memorable fare, including “In the Heat of the Night” – the title song of the film starring Sidney Poitier, who died on Thursday at 94 – with music by Quincy Jones (it’s sung by Ray Charles on soundtrack), “Nice ‘n’ Easy” for Frank Sinatra, “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life” for the film “The Happy Ending,” and “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” with Neil Diamond. Their songs were performed and recorded by Fred Astaire, Tony Bennett, Rosemary Clooney, Aretha Franklin, and Michael Jackson.

    The Bergmans were recognized with three Oscars, for “The Windmills of Your Mind,” from “The Thomas Crown Affair,” the title song from “The Way We Were,” and their body of songs for “Yentl.” Along the way, they also collected three Emmys and a Grammy Award for Song of the Year (again, for “The Way We Were”).

    Composer-collaborators included Marvin Hamlisch, Henry Mancini, Dave Grusin, John Williams, and especially Michel Legrand.

    Marilyn Bergman began formulating her first lyrics following an accident in college, after a fall down the stairs broke both her shoulders. Unable to play the piano or even write, she began preserving her inspirations on tape.

    While both Bergmans hailed from Brooklyn (Marilyn’s maiden name was Keith), they didn’t meet until they were in California. The couple wed in 1958.

    The team was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1980. At the time of her death Marilyn was 93 years old. She is survived by her husband, now 96.


    “The Windmills of Your Mind”

    “In the Heat of the Night”

    “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers”

    “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life”

    “The Way We Were”

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