Marilyn Bergman, Oscar-Winning Lyricist for ‘The Way We Were,’ Dead at 93

Marilyn Bergman, the songwriting giant and music industry fixture who, with her husband Alan, wrote the lyrics to Oscar-winning songs like Barbra Streisand’s “The Way We Were” and Michel Legrand’s “The Windmills of Your Mind,”At the age of 93, he died.

Bergman’s representative Ken Sunshine confirmed Marilyn’s death from non-Covid-related respiratory failure to The Hollywood Reporter Saturday. Alan, her husband and collaborator, is her survivor.

“It is with deep sadness that I personally, and all of ASCAP, mourn the passing of Marilyn Bergman, one of the greatest lyricists who ever lived and truly ASCAP royalty,”Paul Williams, a fellow Oscar-winning songwriter, and the current ASCAP president/chairman, stated in a statement on Saturday. “She was a brilliant songwriter who together with her husband gave us some of the most beautiful and enduring lyrics of all time. She was a tireless and fierce advocate for music creators not only during her term as president and chairman of ASCAP but throughout her life. Our community will miss her intelligence, her wit and her wisdom. Alan — we mourn with you.”

The duo — inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame and recipients of the National Academy of Songwriters’ lifetime achievement award — won three Oscars and two Grammys over their six-decade-long career, most notably for “The Way We Were,”It was named Song of the Year at the 1973 Grammys and Academy Awards.In 2011, Streisand released an album of the Bergmans’ songs, What is most important?.

The Bergmans teamed up with Michael Legrand, a French composer, to write lyrics. “The Windmills of Your Mind”(First recorded by Noel Harrison, for his 1969 film The Thomas Crown Affair. Dusty Springfield made the film a hit later that same year). “Pieces of Dreams,” “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?” (also on Streisand’s The Way We Were( “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?,”Tony Bennett, a crooner himself, covered this song and called his own “favorite song” following news of Bergman’s death Saturday:

Quincy Jones collaborated also with the duo to create the music. The Heat of the Night; Marilyn’s death came just one day after the death of that film’s star Sidney Poitier. “My dear, dear, beautiful Marilyn Bergman, to lose you this morning, so close to our brother Sidney is just crushing me. You, along with your beloved Alan, were the epitome of Nadia Boulanger’s belief that ‘an artist can never be more or less than they are as a human being,’” Jones Tweet Saturday.

“The secret weapon to your songwriting…the unconditional love in your heart for your family, friends, and community. Your lyrics an extension of your being. We shared so much of life together…songs, laughter, love and hugs, and every minute was pure joy. And when they ask ‘How Do You Keep The Music Playing,’ I will always say ask Marilyn and Alan Bergman to write you the song. RIP my sweet ‘Owl.’ Your songs will sing in our hearts forever.”

The Bergmans were nominated for the Song of the Year Grammy four times — most recently in 1979 for Neil Diamond’s “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers” — and received the Trustees Award from the Recording Academy in 2013.

Marilyn Bergman, in addition her lyrics, was a major music industry figure who was the chairman and presidant of the American Society of Composers, Songwriters, and Performers, (ASCAP), from 1994 through 2009.

Norman Lear Tweet Saturday, “There was only one Marilyn Bergman. No one knew that more than her husband and partner in music, Alan. To those of us who loved the Bergman’s lyrics, Marilyn takes a bit of our hearts and souls with her today.”

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