Janice Brooks
From: Pleasant Gap Pa
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Posted 16 Feb 2007 3:21 pm
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http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ex-evansobit16feb17,0,65...
Ray Evans, whose long collaboration with songwriting partner Jay
Livingston produced a string of hits that included the Oscar-winning
"Buttons and Bows," "Mona Lisa" and "Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que
Sera, Sera)," has died. He was 92.
Evans, who teamed up with Livingston in the late 1930s, died of an
apparent heart attack at UCLA Medical Center on Thursday evening,
Frederick Nicholas, Evans' lawyer and the trustee of his estate, said
today.
Considered among Hollywood's greatest songwriters, Livingston and
Evans wrote songs for dozens of movies, most of them at Paramount,
where they were under contract from 1945 to 1955.
With Livingston providing the melodies and Evans writing the lyrics,
the team wrote 26 songs that reportedly sold more than 1 million
copies each.
"Ray Evans, along with his late partner Jay Livingston, gave us some
of the most enduring songs in the great American songbook," lyricist
Alan Bergman told The Times today. "We will miss him but know that his
songs will live on."
In addition to their three Oscar-winning songs, Livingston and Evans
earned four other Oscar nominations - for "The Cat and the Canary"
from "Why Girls Leave Home" (1945); "Tammy," sung by Debbie Reynolds
in "Tammy and the Bachelor" (1957); "Almost in Your Arms" from
"Houseboat" (1958), and "Dear Heart" from the movie of the same name
(1964).
"Dear Heart," with lyrics credited to Livingston and Evans and music
by Henry Mancini, became a big hit for Andy Williams.
"I just loved the record I made of 'Dear Heart,'." Williams told The
Times today. "Livingston and Evans were really part of the generation
of songwriters that I loved, and I sang a lot of their songs over the
years. I wasn't as close to them like I was to Johnny Mercer and Henry
Mancini, but I certainly recognized their talent and how good they
were at their craft of putting out great songs."
Among Livingston and Evans' songs, which reportedly have sold a total
of nearly 500 million copies, is the Christmas standard "Silver
Bells." Introduced in the 1951 Bob Hope-Marilyn Maxwell comedy "The
Lemon Drop Kid," "Silver Bells" is said to have been recorded by
nearly 150 artists and has sold more than 160 million copies.
The songwriting duo also wrote the memorable themes for the TV series
"Bonanza" and "Mr. Ed."
"Ray had a great ear for language, for the vernacular, which is
something he had in common with many of the great lyricists," singer-
pianist Michael Feinstein, who in 2002 released an album devoted to
the Evans and Livingston songbook, told The Times a few years ago.
"He was able to distill a mood or a feeling into a song without it
sounding clichéd," Feinstein said. "He did not consider himself a
sophisticated writer, but he knew how to express the thoughts,
feelings and emotions of the common man in an eloquent way."
The son of a secondhand paper, string and burlap dealer, Evans was
born in Salamanca, N.Y., on Feb. 4, 1915.
After graduating from high school, where he played clarinet in the
school band and served as valedictorian, Evans earned a degree in
economics from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
While at the university, he met Livingston, a journalism major from
Pennsylvania who had studied piano as a child. Evans joined
Livingston's band, which played college dances and parties, and during
school vacations they played together on cruise ship bands.
After graduating in 1937, Evans and Livingston continued to work on
cruise ships before moving to New York City, where they began their
songwriting collaboration.
They had their first success in 1941 when their song "G'Bye Now" was
incorporated into Olsen and Johnson's zany Broadway revue
"Hellzapoppin'." and landed on "Your Hit Parade."
In 1944, the two songwriters came out to Hollywood, where they had a
hit with Betty Hutton's recording of "Stuff Like That There."
They earned their first Oscar nomination with "The Cat and the
Canary." Under contract to Paramount, the duo wrote one of the biggest
hits of 1946: the title song for the Olivia de Havilland movie "To
Each His Own," the basic framework of which began with Evans' phrase
"two lips must insist on two more to be kissed."
For one week in 1946, five versions of "To Each His Own" were listed
on Billboard's Top 10 list, with recordings by Eddy Howard (No. 1),
Tony Martin, Freddy Martin, the Modernaires and the Ink Spots.
Livingston and Evans picked up their first Oscar for the bouncy
"Buttons and Bows," which was introduced by Bob Hope in the 1948
comedy western "The Paleface" and was recorded by Dinah Shore, among
others.
While at Paramount, the songwriting duo even made a cameo appearance
playing themselves in Billy Wilder's 1950 classic "Sunset Boulevard."
Although they were born only six weeks apart, Livingston and Evans
were "not the least bit alike," Evans told The Times in 1985.
"I'm nuts about sports, play baseball and tennis every weekend. Jay
couldn't care less. He's restrained and quiet. I'm more outward going.
Jay is a marvelous musician. I have a tin ear."
But, he said, "Our tastes are similar, and we both like good music and
song."
The Oscar-winning "Mona Lisa," which they wrote for "Captain Carey,
U.S.A.," a 1950 drama starring Alan Ladd, remained Evans' favorite
song.
The song originally was called "Prima Donna," but they changed the
title at the suggestion of Evans' wife, Wyn, who thought "Mona Lisa"
sounded much nicer.
In the movie, the song is sung by a blind Italian street singer to
send a signal to Italian partisans during World War II and is heard
only in fragments.
But Evans and Livingston felt that if they could play the song for Nat
King Cole, they might be able to convince him to record it.
"So Paramount Studio, who owned the song, pulled some strings and
[Cole] allowed us to come to his home and play it for him, in 1950,"
Evans recalled in a 1993 interview with the Buffalo News. "He recorded
it, and in 1951 Capitol Records decided not to release it. They said
it wouldn't ever be a hit."
Capitol eventually used the song, but only as the flip side of a Cole
single the record company felt would become a hit, "The Greatest
Inventor of Them All."
"Eventually, we had the last laugh," said Evans. "Mona Lisa" became an
enormous hit. "It was so different and so unusual," Evans said. "It's
hardly ever dropped in popularity and it's given me a lot of credit
and ego."
Livingston and Evans also made television history when they wrote the
songs for the first 90-minute color television "spectacular," "Satins
and Spurs," starring Betty Hutton, on NBC in 1954.
After leaving Paramount to work as freelancers in 1955, Livingston and
Evans won their third Oscar for "Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera,
Sera)," which was sung by Doris Day in Alfred Hitchcock's 1956
thriller "The Man Who Knew Too Much."
The duo also wrote the music and lyrics for two Broadway musicals, "Oh
Captain!" in 1958 (a Tony nominee for best musical) and "Let It Ride"
in 1961. And in 1979, two of their songs were included in the hit
Broadway revue "Sugar Babies."
In later years, the songwriting team provided special material for Bob
Hope and charity shows.
In 1993, Evans returned to Salamanca, N.Y., which renamed a Main
Street theater in his honor. Then 78, Evans told the Buffalo News that
he no longer wrote songs. Popular tastes had changed drastically since
his and Livingston's heyday, he acknowledged. "There's no way we are
going to be heard," he said.
But there was no denying the staying power of Livingston and Evans
songs. The year before he and Livingston and their publisher each made
$400,000 off the royalties from past hits.
But while they no longer had the "economic pressure" to continue
writing, he said, "you don't live on bread alone. There's the
excitement and fun that you miss."
After Livingston died in 2001 at age 86, Evans wrote a few songs with
other collaborators. But, according to Feinstein, "He said it was a
strange experience after being teamed with Jay for over 60 years."
Evans, whose wife died in 2003, is survived by his sister, Doris
Feinberg. |
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