Biography
The post-war songwriter Jay Livingston earned three Academy Awards for Best Song during the 1940s and '50s in tandem with Ray Evans. Born in Pennsylvania, Livingston studied classical piano as a child and while at the University of Pennsylvania, studied composition and orchestration. He led a dance band on the side, where he met lyricist Ray Evans. After graduation in 1937, the pair moved to New York and found their first hit with G'bye Now, written in 1941 for Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson's #Hellzapoppin'. After spending several years in the U.S. Army, Livingston moved with Evans to Hollywood in 1944 and signed a contract with Paramount. In all, they wrote songs for 100 films in the ten years from 1946 to 1956, including the award-winning Buttons and Bows (from 1948's #The Paleface), Mona Lisa (from 1951's #Captain Carey of the U.S.A.), and Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be) (from 1957's #The Man Who Knew Too Much).

Livingston and Evans began freelancing for different studios during the '50s and concentrated more on complete scores -- #The Lemon Drop Kid (which introduced the holiday classic Silver Bells) and #My Friend Irma, among others -- than isolated songs. In 1961, the duo composed the score for the Broadway musical +Let It Ride! Both were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. ~ John Bush, Rovi




 
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Jay Livingston & Ray Evans - Theme from Bonanza (Original TV Version)
Composers Ray Evans & Jay Livingston on writing the "Mister Ed" theme song- EMMYTVLEGENDS
RAY EVANS & JAY LIVINGSTON - BONANZA THEME - 1959
Jay Livingston and Ray Evans on their hit song "Tammy" sung by Debbie Reynolds - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG
DEBBIE REYNOLDS "TAMMY" (Jay Livingston, Ray Evans) BEST HD QUALITY
Bonanza Theme (Jay Livingston und Ray Evans): Rheingauer Film-Symphoniker
Que Sera Sera by Jay LIvingston and Ray Evans
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