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Children’s
author, composer and screenwriter who attended Syracuse University and Yale
Law School. He started out
writing sketches for Carl Ballantine, The Charles
Playhouse, and Larry Hankin. In 1960, he worked on the television
program, Candid Camera.
He and his
wife Carole would frequently collaborate, as they did on the
children’s TV show, Sesame
Street. Not only did the
Harts write sketches for the show:
Bruce wrote the lyrics to the famous theme song. In 1970, he took home an Emmy award
for the pilot episode.
The Harts
wrote for the show for a year and then moved on to work on other film and
television projects, many of them geared toward the young. One of these was the 1974 television
special, Free to Be… You &
Me, which starred Marlo Thomas and featured a
wide array of talent, including Alan Alda, Harry
Belafonte, Mel Brooks, Rosie Grier and Michael Jackson. Bruce co-penned some of the songs in
the show, and Carole wrote and produced.
He also
composed a song called “One Way Ticket” that Mama Cass turned
into a hit. In 1979, Bruce and
Carole produced a children’s variety show for TV entitled Hot Hero Sandwich, which enjoyed a
short but successful run on NBC.
They also churned out a string of films on the topic of psychology,
and wrote adolescent fiction such as the book Sooner or Later, which hit the shelves in 1978. In 1979, they directed, produced and
wrote a made-for-TV movie version, which starred Barbara Feldon, Denise Miller and Rex Smith. Rex had a hit with “You Take
My Breath Away”, for which Bruce had written the lyrics.
In 1981, they
returned to the world of literature, publishing the book Waiting Games. Bruce then executive produced the
“Oh, Boy! Babies”
episode of NBC Special Treat,
which aired in 1983. He also
wrote the script for the made-for-TV movie Leap of Faith, which featured Anne Archer and Sam Neill. The Writers Guild nominated the
script for Best Long-Form Drama.
In the late
‘80s and early ‘90s, Bruce and Carole continued to write books
aimed at teens, such as Breaking up
is Hard to Do, Cross Your Heart,
Now or Never and Strut. In 2002, his song “Badder Badder Schwing” was used in the Michael Myers comedy, Austin Powers in Goldmember.
Bruce passed
away from lung cancer on 21st February 2006. His lyrics to “Sesame
Street” have captured the imagination of children worldwide for four
decades.
The Oscar Peterson Trio and The Singers
Unlimited recordings
Sesame Street (Bruce Hart/Joe Raposo/Jon
Stone)
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Hart_(songwriter)
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0366176/bio
- http://articles.latimes.com/2006/feb/24/local/me-passings24.2
- http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Rec/rec.arts.books.childrens/2006-02/msg00107.html
- http://www.answers.com/topic/free-to-be-you-and-me-2006-album-by-marlo-thomas-1
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0366176/
- http://video.barnesandnoble.com/DVD/Sooner-or-Later/Bruce-Hart/e/759731407625
- http://www.lovefilm.com/browse/contributor/92727/Bruce_Hart.html
- http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/518240.Bruce_Hart
- http://www.allbookstores.com/author/Carole_Hart.html
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