Saturday, February 28, 2026

Lorraine Bayly obit

Beloved Aussie TV icon Lorraine Bayly dies age 89

A beloved figure on Australian TV screens has died aged 89. 

She was not on the list.


Beloved Australian actress Lorraine Bayly AM has died aged 89.

The Sullivans star’s death was confirmed to 2GB on Saturday by her close friend and journalist Craig Bennett on behalf of her family.

Bayly died in a Sydney care home on Saturday morning.

She was best known for her role as Grace Sullivan in The Sullivans, which ran from 1976 to 1983, as well as her time as a presenter on popular children’s show Playschool and a guest role on Neighbours.

After leaving The Sullivans, Bayly took a starring role in Carson’s Law that was written specifically for her, playing solicitor Jennifer Carson.

She won Silver Logies for most popular actress for both The Sullivans and Carson’s Law.

In an emotional post to social media, Mr Bennett said Bayly was a “showbiz legend, a bona fide star of stage and screen, a triple Logie winning TV treasure and beautiful friend to many”, noting she had only retired 10 years ago.

He said her love of the arts had been strong from a young age. As a child in Narrandera, she would cloak herself in the curtains and sing and dance around, before training more formally at Sydney’s Ensemble Theatre in the 1950s.

Despite an illustrious television career, Mr Bennett said Bayly’s “big love” was the stage, where she starred in more than 50 plays and musicals.

Bayly turned 89 last month, and had been enjoying her retirement by spending time with her nephew Brad, his wife Janelle and their children on the family’s macadamia farm at Maclean Ridge.

She never slowed down though, Mr Bennett said, using all of her years to their full potential.

“Every decade Lorraine would learn something new, from playing tennis to the saxophone, to ballroom dancing,” he said.

“Vale to a most kind, remarkable and beautiful person.

“After years of gruelling health issues, she’s now free and off onto her next wild adventure. Big block of chocolate in hand! LB was a self confessed chocoholic!”

Actress

To My One and Only

Short

Doris

2015

 

Locks of Love (2014)

Locks of Love

6.9

Doris

2014

 

Miranda Otto, Craig McLachlan, and Peter O'Brien in Through My Eyes (2004)

Through My Eyes

7.6

TV Mini Series

Avis

2004

2 episodes

 

Pizza (2000)

Pizza

7.4

TV Series

The Fairy

2001

1 episode

 

Michael Craig and Denise Roberts in G.P. (1989)

G.P.

7.5

TV Series

Pat Stoppard

1995

1 episode

 

Neighbours (1985)

Neighbours

5.7

TV Series

Faye Hudson

1991–1992

58 episodes

 

John Wood in Rafferty's Rules (1987)

Rafferty's Rules

7.3

TV Series

Gwen Forster

1988–1990

2 episodes

 

Penny Cook, Lorrae Desmond, Grant Dodwell, Shane Porteous, Syd Heylen, Anne Tenney, Brian Wenzel, and Shane Withington in A Country Practice (1981)

A Country Practice

6.8

TV Series

Jean Richmond

1989

2 episodes

 

Home Brew

TV Movie

Edna Eustace

1989

 

Grim Pickings (1989)

Grim Pickings

7.6

TV Mini Series

Betsy Tender

1989

2 episodes

 

The Challenge (1986)

The Challenge

7.8

TV Mini Series

Eileen Bond

1986

6 episodes

 

Lorraine Bayly in Carson's Law (1983)

Carson's Law

8.2

TV Series

Jennifer Carson

1983–1984

184 episodes

 

1915 (1982)

1915

7.2

TV Mini Series

Helen Gilchrist

1982

4 episodes

 

The Man from Snowy River (1982)

The Man from Snowy River

7.2

Rosemary Hume

1982

 

Lorraine Bayly, Paul Cronin, Susan Hannaford, Andrew McFarlane, Richard Morgan, and Steven Tandy in The Sullivans (1976)

The Sullivans

6.9

TV Series

Grace Sullivan

1976–1980

594 episodes

 

Fatty Finn (1980)

Fatty Finn

6.6

Maggie McGrath

1980

 

Case for the Defence (1978)

Case for the Defence

6.4

TV Series

Sister Barrett

1978

1 episode

 

Play School (1966)

Play School

7.5

TV Series

1976

1 episode

 

Ride a Wild Pony (1975)

Ride a Wild Pony

6.1

Mrs. Ellison

1975

 

Grigor Taylor in Silent Number (1974)

Silent Number

5.8

TV Series

Jackson

1974

1 episode

 

Spyforce (1971)

Spyforce

6.7

TV Series

Julia Carpenter

1971

1 episode

 

Homicide (1964)

Homicide

7.7

TV Series

Audrey ShepherdMargaret StevensJennifer Tracy ...

1967–1971

4 episodes

 

The Link Men (1970)

The Link Men

TV Series

1970

1 episode

 

The Rovers (1969)

The Rovers

8.1

TV Series

Virginia Shaw

1970

1 episode

 

Division 4 (1969)

Division 4

8.3

TV Series

Linda SzaboJenny Noble

1969

2 episodes

 

Hunter (1967)

Hunter

8.5

TV Series

Karen SavageSharon ReidDiana Mannering

1967–1968

4 episodes

 

The Interpretaris (1966)

The Interpretaris

TV Mini Series

Vera Balovna

1966

6 episodes

 

Jack Allan, Gordon Glenwright, Sean Scully, and Jacki Weaver in Be Our Guest (1966)

Be Our Guest

TV Series

Lorraine

1966

 

Self

Sunday Night (2009)

Sunday Night

4.7

TV Series

Self - Interviewee

2018

1 episode

 

The Jewel of the Mountains (2015)

The Jewel of the Mountains

TV Movie

Self - Narrator

2015

 

When the Queen Came to Town (2014)

When the Queen Came to Town

Self - Story teller

2014

 

Talkin' 'Bout Your Generation (2009)

Talkin' 'Bout Your Generation

7.5

TV Series

Self

2011

1 episode

 

20 to 1 (2005)

20 to 1

5.7

TV Series

Self - Actress

2006–2010

7 episodes

 

Gary Day, Charles 'Bud' Tingwell, and Norman Yemm in Homicide... 30 Years On (1994)

Homicide... 30 Years On

8.4

TV Movie

Self

1994

 

New Faces

TV Series

Self - Judge

1992–1993

 

Michael Parkinson in Parkinson in Australia (1979)

Parkinson in Australia

6.4

TV Series

Self

1983

2 episodes

 

Mike Willesee and Pro Hart in This Is Your Life (1975)

This Is Your Life

6.5

TV Series

Self

1979

1 episode

 

Sammy Awards 1979

TV Special

Self - Compere

1979

 

Play School (1966)

Play School

7.5

TV Series

Self

1966–1979

157 episodes

 

Muhammad Ali and Bert Newton in The 21st Annual TV Week Logie Awards (1979)

The 21st Annual TV Week Logie Awards

TV Special

Self - Silver Logie Winner

1979

 

Capriccio!

TV Series

Self

1978–1980

 

The 11th Annual TV Week Logie Awards (1969)

The 20th Annual TV Week Logie Awards

TV Special

Self - Silver Logie Winner

1978

 

Mike Walsh and Marcia Hines in Sammy Awards 1977 (1977)

Sammy Awards 1977

TV Special

Self

1977

 

Play School (1964)

Play School

7.0

TV Series

Self - Presenter (as Lorraine Bailey)

1972

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Walt Disney in The Magical World of Disney (1954)

The Magical World of Disney

8.3

TV Series

James' Wife (archive footage)

1979

2 episodes

Stage

 

Year     Production       Role     Venue / company        Ref.

1954    The Desert Song                     Rockdale Town Hall with Australian Light Opera Company

1958    Variations on Similar Themes             Cammeray Children's Library, Theatre Institute, Sydney with Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1958–1960      The Man          Ruth    Theatre Institute, Sydney, Ensemble Theatre, Sydney          

1959    The Drunkard  The Child        Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1960    Miss Lonelyhearts       Lead role        

1961    The Buffalo Skinner   The Mother    

1962    Fairytales of New York           All female roles          

1963    The Season at Sarsaparilla      Judy Pogson    Theatre Royal, Sydney with J. C. Williamson's / Elizabethan Theatre Trust      

The Tiger / The Typists           Stage manager Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1963–1964      Mary, Mary     Tiffany Richards         Comedy Theatre, Melbourne, Theatre Royal Sydney, Her Majesty's Theatre, Adelaide & New Zealand tour with J. C. Williamson's   

1964    The Rehearsal Lead role         Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

Cages: Snow Angel / Epiphany          Stage manager

1965    Invitation to a March             

Chase Me Comrade     Nancy Rimmington     Her Majesty’s Theatre, Adelaide, Comedy Theatre, Melbourne, Theatre Royal Sydney with J. C. Williamson's          

1966    The Shadow of a Gunman                  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1968    The Rimers of Eldritch                      

1968–1969      An Enemy of the People                    

1969    The Daughter-in-Law Lead role        

Come Laughing Home           Lead role        

1970    We Bombed in New Haven    Lead role         Monash University, Playhouse, Canberra with Ensemble Theatre, Sydney         

Three Months Gone    Anna   Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1971    Who Killed Santa Claus?                    Phillip Theatre, Sydney with J. C. Williamson's        

1973    Suddenly at Home      Sheila Wallis   Comedy Theatre Melbourne with J. C. Williamson's 

Queen of the Rebels    Lead role         Marian St Theatre, Sydney    

1974    Who's Who     Lead role         Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, Theatre 62, Adelaide     

1975    The Male of the Species                     Comedy Theatre, Melbourne, Elizabethan Theatre, Sydney, Her Majesty's Theatre, Adelaide with J. C. Williamson's 

1976    Status Quo Vadis         Mrs Elgin        Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1980–1981      The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas Mona Stangley            Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne with Cooke Hayden Price      

1984–1985      Play Memory               Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1985    Same Time, Next Year            Doris   Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1987    The Gingerbread Lady            Evy Meara       Universal Theatre Theatre Royal, Hobart, Ensemble Theatre           

1989–1990      Lipstick Dreams                      Belvoir St Theatre, Sydney, Monash University, Melbourne, Twelfth Night Theatre, Brisbane       

1991    Another Time  Belle    Marian St Theatre, Sydney    

1991    Gaslight           Mrs Manningham        Australian tour with Theatre of Comedy       

1992    Dear Liar         Mrs Patrick Campbell Monash University, Geelong Arts Centre with Malcolm C Cooke & Associates  

1994    Mixed Emotions                      Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

1995    The Last Yankee                    

1996    Rough Justice  Prosecutor Margaret Casely   

1997    Death of a Salesman   Linda Loman   Sydney Opera House with Ensemble Theatre, Sydney         

1998    Blinded by the Sun                

1999    The Shoe-Horn Sonata            Sheila 

2000    Travelling North                     University of Sydney with Ensemble Theatre, Sydney         

2001    The Oldest Profession Vera     Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

The Chalk Garden                   Glen St Theatre, Sydney with The Actors' Forum     

2002    Brighton Beach Memoirs                    Sydney with The Actors' Forum        

2003    Birthrights       Margaret          Melbourne Theatre Company, Sydney Opera House, Ensemble Theatre, Sydney           

2007    Rabbit Hole     Nat      Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, Playhouse, Canberra     

2010    Calendar Girls Jessie   Lyric Theatre, Brisbane Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, Comedy Theatre, Melbourne      

2012    When Dad Married Fury        Judy     Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, Theatre Royal, Sydney  

2015    The Shoe-Horn Sonata            Sheila  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney    

2015–2016      The Sound of Music    Frau Schmidt   Australian national tour


Ayatollah Khamenei obit

Ayatollah Khamenei, who battled the US and Israel for decades as Iran’s supreme leader, has been killed

 

He was not on the list.


Ayatollah Ali Hosseini Khamenei, who ruled Iran with an iron fist as its supreme leader for nearly four decades, facing off against the US and Israel while crushing dissent and advancing a controversial nuclear program at home, has been killed, a seismic development that plunges his nation and the region into uncharted territory.

Multiple Iranian state media outlets confirmed Khamenei’s death on Sunday morning, hours after US and Israeli officials declared he had been killed in their joint strikes targeting his regime.

One of the Middle East’s most powerful men, Khamenei dominated Iran during a reign defined by resistance and resilience — standing firm against decades of Western and Israeli pressure aimed at forcing the Islamic Republic to bend to their will. Under his leadership, Iran expanded its influence far beyond its borders, earning a reputation as a formidable and dangerous regional power to be reckoned with.

But his death comes at a time when Iran is arguably at its weakest since he took power in 1989. Decades of Western sanctions had already left the country isolated and economically battered before American and Israeli strikes in June 2025 dealt his rule a severe blow.

New attacks launched on February 28 specifically targeted Khamenei and other top leaders, devastating his residence and offices in Tehran.

“The Supreme Leader of Iran Has Reached Martyrdom,” state broadcaster IRIB reported Sunday morning.

Khamenei was killed “in his office in the household of the leader” while “carrying out his duties” at the time of the attack early on Saturday, state media Fars News Agency reported.

Satellite images from Airbus showed black smoke rising from the leader’s Tehran compound after the attack. The images appear to show that several buildings in the compound were severely damaged by strikes.

The latest US-Israeli strikes followed the crushing of Iranian anti-government protests that began in late December over economic grievances but quickly turned political, spreading across all 31 of the country’s provinces within weeks. The regime responded with a brutal crackdown, killing thousands of protesters and prompting a global outcry and a threat of intervention from US President Donald Trump.

That intervention came on Saturday, when Trump said the US military was undertaking a “massive and ongoing operation to prevent this very wicked, radical dictatorship from threatening America and our core national security interests.”

He also called on the Iranian people to “take over your government,” adding that they now “have a president who is giving you what you want, so let’s see how you respond.”

In the final years of Khamenei’s stubborn rule, the country grew increasingly isolated, plagued by corruption and sinking deeper into economic turmoil, with dwindling prospects for a swelling youth population and shrinking middle class.

Khamenei’s supporters argue that he was pushed against the wall for pursuing a foreign policy that defied the United States and Israel, and that his death was the ultimate price he paid for that stance.

Under Khamenei’s leadership, Iran advanced a controversial nuclear program that became the defining fault line between the Islamic Republic and the West, and which he used as a bargaining chip to gain leverage over adversaries.

He ruled a nation of 90 million people with a 2,500-year-old civilization, maintaining an iron grip as he consolidated power.

Though surrounded by enemies, Khamenei long kept them at bay. After he became his country’s top political and religious authority following the death of the previous supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in the aftermath of the Iran-Iraq war, Iran avoided major direct attacks from its adversaries for more than three decades — even as other regional foes of the United States and Israel fell one by one. The regime entrenched itself with the formation of the “Axis of Resistance,” a loose network of allied groups spread throughout the region that allowed Tehran to project power at its enemies’ doorstep.

But all that — along with the aura of fear and intimidation that Khamenei carefully cultivated — began to unravel in his final years. The chain of events triggered by the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel by Hamas shattered the image of Iran as an impenetrable and defiant regional power.

The axis started to crumble soon after the attacks. Israel launched a devastating war on Hamas, then turned its sights on Hezbollah in Lebanon, one of Iran’s most prized proxies. Israeli forces later moved into Syria following the fall of President Bashar al-Assad.

Emboldened by a string of battlefield successes, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to “finish the job,” culminating in a bold and unprecedented strike on Iran itself in June 2025, ostensibly to dismantle its nuclear program and its ability to defend itself. The Israeli strikes ultimately drew in the US, which struck three Iranian nuclear sites in the final days of the war. Trump declared that the facilities had been “obliterated.”

Six months after that 12-day war, Iran had lost most of its bargaining chips with Israel and the West, including much of its nuclear leverage and its regional proxies. The regime found itself embroiled in an even deeper economic crisis, fueling mass public protests.

With few options remaining, the government reluctantly returned to talks with the US but refused to budge on its demand to continue enriching uranium, a fuel for nuclear power plants that can also be used to build a bomb.

Iranian officials and an Omani mediator sounded optimistic about a deal after the last round of talks on Thursday, with Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi saying a deal was “within reach.” By Saturday morning, the US and Israel had launched a surprise attack on Iran.

To his supporters, Khamenei was the steadfast, fearless leader who transcended mere politics and inspired devotion. To his critics, Iranian and foreign, he was a feared tyrant bent on crushing those opposed to him while keeping his country isolated from the West.

He was only the second leader of the Islamic Republic and by far the longest-serving. His rule shaped the regime’s national psyche, and his death is likely to transform it profoundly.

Khamenei, who was born in 1939 in Mashhad, Iran’s holiest city, became a Shiite Muslim cleric at a young age. He was an activist before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, helping to organize protests against the shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and serving time in prison for it.

He was also a target for the new Islamic regime’s opponents and escaped an assassination attempt in 1981 that left his right arm useless.

Not long afterward, he was elected president on a platform deeply hostile to the West and its liberal ideology, and especially to the United States — threatening a hard fight in the event of war.

“We in no way are willing to start an all-out war with the US, but if it so happens, we will inevitably put up a very strong defense,” he said.

He was a protégé of Khomeini, who led the struggle to overthrow the shah and founded the Islamic Republic. When Khomeini died in 1989, Khamenei became his successor within a matter of weeks.

While lacking Khomeini’s theological standing, Khamenei proved to be politically shrewd. Over time, he consolidated control over Iran’s armed forces, intelligence services, judiciary and state media to ensure that no major decision could be made without his approval.

The nuclear deterrence that backfired

It was Khamenei’s advancement of Iran’s nuclear program that ultimately led to the attacks on Iran by Israel and the US.

Though he repeatedly claimed the program was for peaceful purposes — and even issued a religious decree, or fatwa, proclaiming that nuclear weapons were forbidden by Islam — he steadfastly supported the development of nuclear energy as a matter of national sovereignty and strategic leverage.

By the time Hassan Rouhani, a centrist politician, succeeded hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president in 2013, the nuclear showdown with the West had turned into Iran’s biggest foreign policy challenge. With Khamenei’s approval, Rouhani’s administration negotiated the 2015 nuclear deal (known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA) with world powers, including the US. The deal was meant to free the Iranian economy from years of crippling sanctions in return for limits on Iran’s nuclear program, notably its enrichment of uranium.

But Khamenei remained skeptical. His reluctance to fully embrace the deal contributed to its fragility. When Trump unilaterally exited the agreement in 2018, Iran continued to abide by it. But a year later, Tehran said it would no longer be bound by its commitments if the other parties to the JCPOA were in breach of theirs.

Khamenei seized the moment to accelerate uranium enrichment and leaned ever further into a “resistance economy” doctrine — emphasizing self-sufficiency and confrontation over compromise.

In late June 2019, new US sanctions were imposed on Khamenei himself, as well as his office, to block Iran’s access to the international finance system. Trump’s punitive “maximum pressure” policy crippled Iran’s economy and effectively denied its people the nuclear pact’s promised benefits.

The election of reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian in 2024 on a platform of reengaging with the world and resolving Iran’s nuclear standoff brought hope of reinvigorating Iran’s economy and reintegrating the Islamic Republic into the international community. Talks resumed with the US a year later, but hopes of reaching a detente with the West were crushed by Israel’s attack on Iran in the middle of those talks, as it sought to capitalize on its military gains after the October 7 attacks.

Eight months later, Iran and the US began another round of indirect talks, mediated by Oman. Despite engaging with Tehran, the Trump administration started the biggest American military buildup in the Middle East in over two decades. Trump sent mixed signals, saying talks had been going well, while advocating regime change in Iran.

While Iran always denied any involvement in or prior knowledge of the October 7 attacks by Hamas and allied militias, the assault and the seismic regional events it triggered had major implications for a key pillar of Khamenei’s legacy: a reliance on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and proxy groups it supported to project power beyond Iran’s borders.

Under Khamenei, Iran’s influence extended into Iraq after Saddam Hussein’s ouster in 2003. In the following years, Tehran also became a major player in regional conflicts, including Syria’s civil war, where IRGC forces were at the forefront of operations.

The IRGC, which reported directly to Khamenei, became the most powerful military institution in Iran, holding deep influence over domestic politics and the economy. It also wielded huge influence over key armed groups elsewhere in the region, such as Lebanon’s once formidable Hezbollah, Hamas in Gaza, the Houthis in Yemen and several armed Shiite groups in Iraq and Syria. In 2019, the US added the IRGC to its list of designated terrorist groups in an unprecedented move against another country’s armed forces.

In the 2010s, as the threat from the Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist group grew, so did Iran’s involvement in neighboring Arab countries. Many Shiite Muslims saw ISIS as an existential threat, and while Iranian-backed militias had some success in pushing back the group, their campaigns also deepened regional sectarian tensions.

Sunni Muslims often viewed the fight not just as a battle against terrorism, but as an Iranian-led war on their sect. Powerful Arab states in the Persian Gulf saw Iran’s moves as part of a broader effort to expand a “Shiite Crescent” across the region, heightening fears of unrest at home. By the mid-2010s, several Arab states in the gulf had severed diplomatic ties with Tehran.

Khamenei didn’t back away, instead doubling down on support for Iran’s proxies. ISIS was eventually crushed by a multinational coalition in 2019, and Iran’s regional influence solidified. A battered Syria turned into a key staging ground for the IRGC, placing Iranian forces and allies right at Israel’s doorstep. In time, Saudi Arabia restored ties with Iran through secret, Chinese-brokered talks, and other gulf states soon followed. By then, Iran had managed to improve relations with several neighbors. Despite crippling sanctions, it appeared strategically ascendant — its regional reach more secure than ever.

That strategic depth was dismantled bit by bit by Israel after the October 7 attacks. With its proxies crippled, Iran became vulnerable and finally itself became a target of both Israel and the US. After that 12-day war in June, Tehran was left with little negotiating leverage, its nuclear facilities heavily damaged, its proxies nearly neutralized and its economy in tatters.

Opposition to reform

Iran saw repeated pushes for reform during Khamenei’s rule, and repeated crackdowns on those efforts. He worked to contain the reformist movement of President Mohammad Khatami in the late 1990s and backed the brutal suppression of protests that erupted amid claims that the 2009 elections had been rigged in favor of the hard-line Ahmadinejad.

Khamenei’s public backing of Ahmadinejad and the subsequent crackdown cemented his image as a leader intolerant of dissent and reluctant to change.

The 2021 election of Ebrahim Raisi as president marked the culmination of Khamenei’s ideological ambitions: a political landscape dominated by conservative and loyal forces with little room for dissent. Raisi was even considered by some as the natural successor to Khamenei and his worldview.

Under Raisi, Iranian security forces cracked down on demonstrations sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who died in the custody of Iran’s morality police after being arrested for allegedly violating the country’s mandatory hijab laws. The protests quickly evolved into a nationwide uprising led largely by women and young people.

Once again, Khamenei used the full force of the state to stifle calls for change, with hundreds killed and thousands arrested in the crackdown. Raisi’s untimely death in a helicopter crash in 2024 provided Khamenei with another opportunity to address public frustration, and many saw the election of the reform-leaning Masoud Pezeshkian as a step in that direction.

But Pezeshkian’s reformist agenda — and his hopes of delivering a nuclear deal that could bring economic and social relief to his people — were abruptly derailed by Israel’s attacks.

When protests erupted six months later, he acknowledged the limits of his government’s ability to address the economic grievances that fueled the demonstrations. For many Iranians, the president had failed to pull the country out of isolation, failed to revive a nuclear deal and failed to deliver the long-promised prosperity.

In late January, the US began a massive military buildup around Iran while engaging in talks with Tehran via Omani mediation. Those talks never formally collapsed, and all sides were signaling varying degrees of progress just hours ahead of the attacks that ultimately led to Khamenei’s death.

For Khamenei, it was a final reckoning. He had spent decades warning that engagement with the West was pointless and that Iran’s enemies would eventually strike. Even if the foundations he spent years building were wiped away, for Iran’s hard-liners, he had finally been vindicated.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Neil Sedaka obit

Neil Sedaka Dies: “Breaking Up Is Hard To Do” & “Laughter In The Rain” Hitmaker Who Also Wrote “Love Will Keep Us Together” Was 86

 He was not on the list.


Neil Sedaka, a multiple Grammy nominee and Songwriters Hall of Famer who wrote and sang on nine Top 10 hits including chart-toppers “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do,” “Laughter in the Rain” and “Bad Blood” and penned the 1975 smash “Love Will Keep Us Together,” died Friday in Los Angeles. He was 86.

A rep for his family confirmed the news to Deadline but did not provide a cause of death. TMZ reported that Sedaka was rushed to a hospital Friday morning.

“Our family is devastated by the sudden passing of our beloved husband, father and grandfather, Neil Sedaka,” his family said in a statement. “A true rock and roll legend, an inspiration to millions, but most importantly, at least to those of us who were lucky enough to know him, an incredible human being who will be deeply missed.”

During a career that would span more than 60 years, Sedaka is among the handful of artists whose songs made the U.S. Top 20 in five different decades, from the 1950s-’80s and in 2004, when American Idol runner-up hit the Top 5 with “Solitaire,” which Sedaka co-wrote with collaborator Phil Cody.

Born on March 13, 1939, in Brooklyn, Sedaka was a child piano prodigy and attended the Juilliard School of Music. He was among the originators of the “Brill Building” songwriting group that would include such legends as Gerry Goffin & Carole King, Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil, Burt Bacharach & Hal David, Mort Shuman & Doc Pomus and others. Sedaka and his childhood friend and songwriting partner Howard Greenfield were the first to sign with Aldon Music, which was run by Don Kirshner and Al Nevins. Their first hit was Connie Francis’ Top 15 tune “Stupid Cupid” in 1958, and they later penned Francis’ signature song, “Where the Boys Are.”

The duo also wrote hits for R&B hitmakers LaVern Baker and Drifters alum Clyde McPhatter. Those successes helped land Sedaka a recording deal with RCA Victor, and he had his first national hit as a singer with “The Diary” in late 1958.

Sedaka first hit the Billboard Top 10 in early 1960 with “Oh! Carol,” written about his teenage girlfriend and future music legend King. During the next two years, he followed up with such hits as “Stairway to Heaven,” “Calendar Girl” and “Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen” before topping the Billboard Hot 100 for the first time with “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do.”

From 1959-63, Sedaka was the second-biggest selling artist behind Elvis Presley, according to the Songwriters Hall of Fame, into which he was inducted in 1983.

Sedaka had one more big hit with “Right Next Door to an Angel” before the British Invasion knocked many of rock ‘n’ roll’s early stars out of the spotlight. He would move to England in the early 1970s to perform on the burgeoning oldies circuit there, releasing a few albums along the way.

But he would come roaring back later that decade amid the ’50s/early ’60s nostalgia wave that gripped the United States.

After a number of early rockers scored early-’70 hits, including Chuck Berry’s “My Ding-a-Ling” and Rick Nelson’s “Garden Party,” America’s nostalgia craze for All Things 1950s/Early ’60 took hold. With the success of George Lucas’ American Graffiti and the ABC sitcom Happy Days, the pop hitmakers who’d been shoved off the charts by the likes of The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Beach Boys and others suddenly found themselves in high demand.

By 1974, Sedaka hadn’t had a hit in a dozen years, but that changed when he signed with Elton John’s Rocket Records. Before long, he soared to No. 1 with the lovely ballad “Laughter in the Rain” in early 1975. Sedaka was back atop the Hot 100 just five months later when The Captain and Tennille covered his 1974 album track “Love Will Keep Us Together.” The bouncy singalong spent four weeks at No. 1, became the biggest single of 1975 and won the Grammy for Record of the Year. Sedaka and Greenfield shared a Song of the Year Grammy nom for the track — one of five during Sedaka’s career. He was up for Best Male Vocal Performance for “Bad Blood” that same year and was a presenter during the ceremony.

Sedaka was back — as we heard late in “Love Will Keep Us Together.” As the oldies-inspired “da-da-da-daaaaas” play just before the fade, listeners could hear, “Sedaka is baaaaack.” During the ensuing Bicentennial year, The Captain and Tennille had another smash with a Sedaka-penned tune as “Lonely Nights (Angel Face)” hit No. 1. The duo also had a Top 10 with Sedaka’s “You Never Done It Like That.”

And Sedaka wasn’t through. After two follow-up singles stalled below the Top 20, Sedaka was back at No. 1 with “Bad Blood.” Backed by vocals from his label chief Sir Elton — who by then was among the world’s top acts — the song spent three weeks atop the Hot 100 just four months after “Love Will Keep Us Together.”

John is quoted on Sedaka’s website as saying about signing the pop legend to his Rocket label: “It had been like Elvis coming up and giving us the chance to release his records. We couldn’t believe our luck.”

Next came what would be Sedaka’s final Top 10 hit, a slowed-down piano-ballad version of his 1962 smash “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do” that reached No. 8. His follow-up “Love in the Shadows” hit No. 16, and he’d have one last Top 20 hit with 1980’s “Should’ve Never Let You Go,” which also featured vocals by his daughter Dara Sedaka. That one was written by Cody, who had co-penned “Bad Blood,” “Laughter in the Rain” and a few other Sedaka hits.

He also found plenty of chart success across the pond, with seven Top 10 singles in the UK from 1959-62 including his first, “I Go Ape” — which had been his second U.S. chart single after “Oh! Carol” but stalled outside the Top 40 stateside.

During Sedaka’s decade-plus chart hiatus as a recording act, other big-name artists would cover songs he wrote or co-wrote. The Monkees covered “When Love Comes Knocking at Your Door” for their smash sophomore LP More of the Monkees, which spent more than four months atop the Billboard 200 in 1967. The 5th Dimension made the Top 20 with “Workin’ on a Groovy Thing” — penned by Sedaka and Roger Atkins — a track from the group’s seminal album The Age of Aquarius, and Tom Jones later hit the Top 30 in 1971 with his Sedaka-Greenfield cover “Puppet Man.”

Several top-name acts would cover songs written and/or recorded by Sedaka. Frank Sinatra recorded the Greenfield-penned song “The Hungry Years,” the title track of Sedaka’s 1975 comeback album that reached No. 16 on the Billboard 200 and went gold. Presley covered the Sedaka-Cody track “Solitaire” for his 1976 LP From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee.. The Carpenters reached the Top 20 with their version of “Solitaire” in 1976, and Sheryl Crow later recorded the song for a Carpenters tribute album. Cher recorded Sedaka’s “Don’t Hide Your Love” on her 1973 album Foxy Lady. Sedaka was a semi-regular on her variety TV shows during the 1970s.

Sedaka had a “jukebox musical” based on his catalog, titled Breaking Up Is Hard to Do, that was produced regionally. “Oh! Carol” later was included in Tom Stoppard’s 2014 play The Real Thing and made it to Broadway as part of the hit show Beautiful: The Carole King Musical.

In 1995, Sedaka pivoted to classical music with Classically Sedaka, harking back to his days at Juilliard. During the Covid lockdown in 2020, Sedaka gave daily mini-concerts online, drawing in many new homebound fans.

Sedaka also was a regular face on television, making dozens of appearances The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and The Mike Douglas Show and episodes of many others and performing three times on The Ed Sullivan Show. During his mid-’70s comeback, he was the musical guest on a Season 1 episode of NBC’s Saturday Night Live hosted by the British comedy duo of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, performing the redo of “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do” along with “Lonely Night (Angel Face).” He also was a guest host on Season 2 of Fox’s American Idol in 2003, starred in a pair of primetime specials and appeared on American Bandstand a half-dozen times.

Despite all the credentials, Sedaka never has been nominated for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Information on survivors was incomplete.

 

Actor

Jerry Stiller, Kevin James, and Leah Remini in The King of Queens (1998)

The King of Queens

7.4

TV Series

Neil Sedaka

2005

1 episode

 

New Jersey Turnpikes (1999)

New Jersey Turnpikes

5.7

1999

 

Food Rocks (1994)

Food Rocks

9.0

Short

Neil Moussaka (uncredited)

1994

 

Neil Sedaka in Neil Sedaka: New Orleans (1984)

Neil Sedaka: New Orleans

Music Video

Ticket AgentMississippi Queen

1984

 

Rolf Harris in The Rolf Harris Show (1967)

The Rolf Harris Show

4.8

TV Series

1973

1 episode

 

Playgirl Killer (1967)

Playgirl Killer

4.5

Bob

1967

 

Pro of Contra

8.2

TV Series

1963

1 episode

 

Composer

A Journey of Faith

Composer

CompletedTV Special

 

Cover that One Cupid

Music Video

composer

2023

 

J.A. Molina, Francisco Javier Sánchez, Daniel Ensoleaga, and Jennyfer Navarro in Lucas Chronicle (2017)

Lucas Chronicle

music by

2017

 

Uncharted 2: Among Thieves IGN Podcast Beyond

Short

Composer

2011

 

Hermes House Band ft. Tony Christie: (Is This the Way To) Amarillo

Music Video

Composer

2005

 

Comic Relief 2005: Is This the Way to Amarillo (2005)

Comic Relief 2005: Is This the Way to Amarillo

7.0

Music Video

Composer

2005

 

Music Department

New World (1995)

New World

5.9

soundtrack

1995

 

Food Rocks (1994)

Food Rocks

9.0

Short

writer: Breaking Up Is Hard To Do (uncredited)

1994

 

Billy Crystal in Breaking Up Is Hard to Do (1979)

Breaking Up Is Hard to Do

5.7

TV Movie

title song vocalist

1979

 

Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith, Peter Tork, and The Monkees in The Monkees (1965)

The Monkees

7.5

TV Series

song producer: "When Love Comes Knocking [At Your Door]"song writer: "When Love Comes Knocking [At Your Door]"

1967

1 episode

 

Soundtrack

Vincent D'Onofrio, Liev Schreiber, Regina King, Yuri Kolokolnikov, Tonic, JC Argüelles, Matt Smith, Zoë Kravitz, Austin Butler, Nikita Kukushkin, and Bad Bunny in Caught Stealing (2025)

Caught Stealing

6.9

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl"

2025

 

Final Destination: Bloodlines (2025)

Final Destination: Bloodlines

6.7

writer: "Fallin'"

2025

 

Bailee Madison, Chandler Kinney, Malia Pyles, Maia Reficco, and Zaria in Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin (2022)

Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin

7.0

TV Series

performer: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"writer: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"

2024

1 episode

 

Diane Morgan in Mandy (2019)

Mandy

7.4

TV Series

performer: "Little Devil"writer: "Little Devil" (uncredited, uncredited)

2024

1 episode

 

ABBA: Against the Odds (2024)

ABBA: Against the Odds

7.3

writer: "Ring Ring"

2024

 

Anna Paquin, Colin Hanks, Jake Lacy, and Mckenna Grace in A Friend of the Family (2022)

A Friend of the Family

7.3

TV Mini Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2022

1 episode

 

Rachel Brosnahan in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017)

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

8.6

TV Series

writer: "Stupid Cupid"performer: "The Diary"writer: "The Diary" (uncredited)

2018–2022

3 episodes

 

Zendaya in Euphoria (2019)

Euphoria

8.2

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2022

1 episode

 

Sadie Sink in Fear Street: Part Two - 1978 (2021)

Fear Street: Part Two - 1978

6.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Up Together"

2021

 

Kim Friele in Kim Friele - homokampens førstedame (2021)

Kim Friele - homokampens førstedame

TV Special

writer: "Where the Boys Are"

2021

 

Elizabeth Debicki in The Crown (2016)

The Crown

8.6

TV Series

writer: "Fallin'" (uncredited)

2020

1 episode

 

Esme Young, Joe Lycett, and Patrick Grant in The Great British Sewing Bee (2013)

The Great British Sewing Bee

7.8

TV Series

music: "Turn On the Sunshine" (uncredited)

2020

1 episode

 

Jay Hernandez and Perdita Weeks in Magnum P.I. (2018)

Magnum P.I.

6.4

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2020

1 episode

 

Darren Aronofsky, Lance Oppenheim, and Melissa Oppenheim in Some Kind of Heaven (2020)

Some Kind of Heaven

7.2

writer: "Laughter in the Rain"

2020

 

Zeit.geschichte (2011)

Zeit.geschichte

5.7

TV Series

writer: "Ring, Ring"

2019

1 episode

 

Time of Our Lives

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo"

2019

 

Michael Ealy, Cobie Smulders, and Jake Johnson in Stumptown (2019)

Stumptown

7.5

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2019

1 episode

 

Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, and ABBA in ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes It All (2019)

ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes It All

7.3

TV Movie

writer: "Ring Ring"

2019

 

Kristen Bell in Veronica Mars (2004)

Veronica Mars

8.3

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"writer: "Where The Boys Are" (uncredited, uncredited)

2005–2019

2 episodes

 

Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin - Advent of the Red Comet (2019)

Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin - Advent of the Red Comet

7.9

TV Series

music: "Mizu no Hoshi e Ai wo Komete" (From the Aqueous Star with Love)

2019

4 episodes

 

Britain's Got More Talent (2007)

Britain's Got More Talent

5.1

TV Series

writer: "(Is This The Way To) Amarillo" (uncredited)

2019

1 episode

 

Pete Davidson and Griffin Gluck in Big Time Adolescence (2019)

Big Time Adolescence

6.9

writer: "Where the Boys Are"

2019

 

For Facts Sake (2018)

For Facts Sake

3.4

TV Series

performer: "Oh Carol"writer: "Oh Carol" (uncredited, uncredited)

2018

5 episodes

 

ITV Evening News (1999)

ITV Evening News

4.5

TV Series

writer: "(Is This the Way To) Amarillo" (uncredited)

2018

1 episode

 

Letters to Cupid (2017)

Letters to Cupid

Short

writer: "Stupid Cupid" ("Stupid Cupid")

2017

 

Mayim Bialik, Kaley Cuoco, Johnny Galecki, Simon Helberg, Jim Parsons, Melissa Rauch, and Kunal Nayyar in The Big Bang Theory (2007)

The Big Bang Theory

8.1

TV Series

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited)

2017

1 episode

 

Cannonball (2017)

Cannonball

5.9

TV Series

writer: "(Is This The Way To) Amarillo" (uncredited)

2017

1 episode

 

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (2014)

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon

7.0

TV Series

music: "Calendar Girl"music: "Laughter in the Rain"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited)

2015–2017

3 episodes

 

Beat Shazam (2017)

Beat Shazam

6.1

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2017

1 episode

 

Justin Theroux in The Leftovers (2014)

The Leftovers

8.3

TV Series

performer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2014–2017

2 episodes

 

Máme rádi Cesko (2013)

Máme rádi Cesko

4.9

TV Series

writer: "Kvítek mandragory (Is This the Way to Amarillo)"

2017

1 episode

 

Diedrich Bader, Katy Mixon Greer, Daniel DiMaggio, Meg Donnelly, and Giselle Eisenberg in American Housewife (2016)

American Housewife

7.4

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2017

1 episode

 

H. Jon Benjamin, Kristen Schaal, Eugene Mirman, Dan Mintz, and John Roberts in Bob's Burgers (2011)

Bob's Burgers

8.2

TV Series

writer: "Stupid Cupid" (uncredited)

2017

1 episode

 

Rufus Sewell in The Man in the High Castle (2015)

The Man in the High Castle

7.9

TV Series

performer: "Calendar Girl"performer: "Little Devil"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited, uncredited, uncredited) ...

2016

2 episodes

 

Lorraine Kelly in Lorraine (2001)

Lorraine

2.9

TV Series

writer: "Ring Ring" (uncredited)

2016

1 episode

 

Strictly Come Dancing (2004)

Strictly Come Dancing

6.1

TV Series

writer: "(Is This the Way to) Amarillo" (uncredited)

2016

1 episode

 

Breakfast (2000)

Breakfast

5.2

TV Series

performer: "Another Sleepless Night"writer: "Another Sleepless Night" (uncredited, uncredited)

2016

1 episode

 

Brian McFadden in Who's Doing the Dishes? (2014)

Who's Doing the Dishes?

3.8

TV Series

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited)

2016

1 episode

 

Olivia Swann, Shayan Sobhian, Nick Zano, Amy Louise Pemberton, Matt Ryan, Adam Tsekhman, Caity Lotz, Tala Ashe, Jes Macallan, and Lisseth Chavez in DC's Legends of Tomorrow (2016)

DC's Legends of Tomorrow

6.7

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2016

2 episodes

 

Rose McIver in iZombie (2015)

iZombie

7.8

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2016

1 episode

 

Melissa McCarthy in The Boss (2016)

The Boss

5.4

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2016

 

Bobby Cannavale in Vinyl (2016)

Vinyl

7.7

TV Series

writer: "Ring Ring"

2016

1 episode

 

Ryan Reynolds in Deadpool (2016)

Deadpool

8.0

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl"

2016

 

Haven (2010)

Haven

7.5

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2010–2015

2 episodes

 

Overspel (2011)

Overspel

7.9

TV Series

performer: "Solitaire"writer: "Solitaire"

2015

1 episode

 

Sandra Bullock and Billy Bob Thornton in Our Brand Is Crisis (2015)

Our Brand Is Crisis

6.1

writer: "Puppet Man"

2015

 

Cierra Ramirez, Maia Mitchell, Noah Centineo, David Lambert, and Hayden Byerly in The Fosters (2013)

The Fosters

7.9

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2015

1 episode

 

Dead Slow Ahead (2015)

Dead Slow Ahead

6.8

performer: "You Mean Everything To Me"writer: "You Mean Everything To Me"

2015

 

The Official Top 50 Best-Selling Singles of the 90s and 00s

TV Special

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo?"

2015

 

14+ (2015)

14+

6.9

performer: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"writer: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"

2015

 

Nirbashito (2014)

Nirbashito

6.5

writer: "Ring Ring"

2014

 

The Hotel (2011)

The Hotel

8.1

TV Series

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo"

2014

1 episode

 

Clown (2014)

Clown

5.7

performer: "King Of Clowns"writer: "King Of Clowns"

2014

 

Eric Roberts, Tori Spelling, Reginald VelJohnson, Alfonso Ribeiro, Anna Delvey Sorokin, Joey Graziadei, Ilona Maher, Jenn Tran, Stephen Nedoroscik, Dwight Howard, Julianne Hough, Phaedra Parks, Chandler Kinney, Danny Amendola, and Brooks Nader in Dancing with the Stars (2005)

Dancing with the Stars

4.9

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2014

1 episode

 

Boomers (2014)

Boomers

7.1

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"

2014

2 episodes

 

Liv Tyler, Matt Bomer, and Patrick Wilson in Space Station 76 (2014)

Space Station 76

4.9

performer: "Laughter in the Rain"writer: "Laughter in the Rain"

2014

 

Noble (2014)

Noble

6.8

performer: "Little Devil"writer: "Little Devil"

2014

 

Adrian Edmondson in The Dales (2011)

The Dales

7.4

TV Series

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited)

2013

1 episode

 

Brian Gross, Terence Knox, Rich Komenich, and Madeline Fabian in Gila! (2012)

Gila!

4.7

TV Movie

music: "As Long As I Live"performer: "As Long As I Live"

2012

 

Eric Roberts and Eddie Izzard in Bullet in the Face (2012)

Bullet in the Face

6.9

TV Mini Series

lyrics: "Love Will Keep Us Together"music: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2012

1 episode

 

Sarah G Live

6.8

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2012

1 episode

 

Lionel Richie, Ryan Seacrest, Carrie Underwood, and Luke Bryan in American Idol (2002)

American Idol

4.3

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"writer: "Solitaire"writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" ...

2002–2012

7 episodes

 

Uncharted 2: Among Thieves IGN Podcast Beyond

Short

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2011

 

Rock & Chips (2010)

Rock & Chips

7.1

TV Series

writer: "Another Sleepless Night"

2011

1 episode

 

Getaway (1992)

Getaway

5.7

TV Series

writer: "Ring Ring" (uncredited)

2010

1 episode

 

You Are Beautiful (2009)

You Are Beautiful

7.6

TV Series

performer: "You Mean Everything To Me"writer: "You Mean Everything To Me"

2009

1 episode

 

Raül Díaz in Memòries de la tele (2007)

Memòries de la tele

5.9

TV Series

writer: "Oh Carol"

2009

1 episode

 

Naveen Andrews, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Daniel Dae Kim, Emilie de Ravin, Matthew Fox, Jorge Garcia, Josh Holloway, Yunjin Kim, Dominic Monaghan, Terry O'Quinn, Harold Perrineau, Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Watros, Maggie Grace, and Evangeline Lilly in Lost (2004)

Lost

8.3

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2009

1 episode

 

Jessica Chastain in Jolene (2008)

Jolene

6.4

writer: "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen"

2008

 

Molly Parker, Lana Parrilla, and Miriam Shor in Swingtown (2008)

Swingtown

7.6

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2008

1 episode

 

Kim Cattrall, Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis, and Cynthia Nixon in Sex and the City (2008)

Sex and the City

5.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2008

 

Maman est chez le coiffeur (2008)

Maman est chez le coiffeur

7.1

writer: "C'est le Temps des Vacances" (Let's Go Steady Again)

2008

 

The Wrecking Crew! (2008)

The Wrecking Crew!

7.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2008

 

Får jag lov - Till den sista dansen?

8.0

writer: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen", "Calendar Girl', "Stupid Cupid"

2008

 

Woody Harrelson and Emily Mortimer in Transsiberian (2008)

Transsiberian

6.6

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2008

 

Danny - Tähti ja tähtien tekijä (2007)

Danny - Tähti ja tähtien tekijä

Video

writer: "Amarillo"

2007

 

Bill Paxton, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Chloë Sevigny, and Ginnifer Goodwin in Big Love (2006)

Big Love

7.7

TV Series

writer: "Stupid Cupid" (uncredited)

2007

1 episode

 

Adam Sandler and Kevin James in I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry (2007)

I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry

5.9

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl"

2007

 

Grant Denyer in It Takes Two (2006)

It Takes Two

6.5

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2007

1 episode

 

Banished (2007)

Banished

6.7

writer: "Where the Boys Are"

2007

 

Keelia Flinn in Karaoke Revolution Presents: American Idol (2007)

Karaoke Revolution Presents: American Idol

6.7

Video Game

Soundtrack ("Love Will Keep Us Together")

2007

 

Torvill & Dean's Dancing on Ice (2006)

Torvill & Dean's Dancing on Ice

6.4

TV Series

writer: "Is This The Way To Amarillo"

2006

1 episode

 

Adam Sandler in Click (2006)

Click

6.4

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2006

 

Jerry Stiller, Kevin James, and Leah Remini in The King of Queens (1998)

The King of Queens

7.4

TV Series

writer: "Laughter in the Rain" (uncredited)

2005

1 episode

 

One Hundred and Eighty: The Tour Documentary

Video

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo"

2005

 

EastEnders (1985)

EastEnders

4.8

TV Series

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo" (uncredited)

2005

1 episode

 

Comic Relief 2005: Is This the Way to Amarillo (2005)

Comic Relief 2005: Is This the Way to Amarillo

7.0

Music Video

writer: " (Is This the Way to) Amarillo"

2005

 

Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Dan Castellaneta, and Yeardley Smith in The Simpsons (1989)

The Simpsons

8.6

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

1998–2005

2 episodes

 

Margaret Richard in Body Electric (1984)

Body Electric

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"

2004

1 episode

 

Peter Kay in Peter Kay: Live at the Manchester Arena (2004)

Peter Kay: Live at the Manchester Arena

7.5

TV Special

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo"

2004

 

Standing Room Only

Video

writer: "You Never Done It Like That"

2004

 

Vince Vaughn, Carmen Electra, Ben Stiller, Snoop Dogg, Amy Smart, and Owen Wilson in Starsky & Hutch (2004)

Starsky & Hutch

6.1

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2004

 

Kelly Key: Ao Vivo (2004)

Kelly Key: Ao Vivo

Video

writer: "Medley Anos 60: Biquíni de Bolinha Amarelinha / Banho De Lua / Estúpido Cupido"

2004

 

Donkey Konga (2003)

Donkey Konga

7.4

Video Game

writer: "Stupid Cupid"

2003

 

Jason Bateman, Jeffrey Tambor, Will Arnett, Portia de Rossi, Michael Cera, David Cross, Tony Hale, Alia Shawkat, and Jessica Walter in Arrested Development (2003)

Arrested Development

8.6

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2003

1 episode

 

Lisbela and the Prisoner (2003)

Lisbela and the Prisoner

7.6

writer: "Oh Carol"

2003

 

I Love the '70s (2003)

I Love the '70s

7.8

TV Mini Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2003

1 episode

 

Andreas Wilson in Evil (2003)

Evil

7.7

writer: "Stupid Cupid"

2003

 

Lost Love (2003)

Lost Love

5.9

performer: "La terza luna"

2003

 

Frankie Muniz, Justin Berfield, Bryan Cranston, Jane Kaczmarek, Christopher Masterson, and Erik Per Sullivan in Malcolm in the Middle (2000)

Malcolm in the Middle

8.2

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2003

1 episode

 

OBLS

6.6

TV Series

writer: "Ring Ring"

2003

 

Jos sais kerran

TV Series

writer: "Prinsessa -65" (Queen of 1964)

2002

1 episode

 

Phoenix Nights (2001)

Phoenix Nights

8.6

TV Series

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo" (uncredited)

2002

1 episode

 

Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, and ABBA in ABBA: The Definitive Collection (2002)

ABBA: The Definitive Collection

9.0

Video

writer: "Ring Ring"

2002

 

Drew Barrymore in Riding in Cars with Boys (2001)

Riding in Cars with Boys

6.5

performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"

2001

 

Alexis Bledel and Lauren Graham in Gilmore Girls (2000)

Gilmore Girls

8.2

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

2001

1 episode

 

Julie Andrews and Anne Hathaway in The Princess Diaries (2001)

The Princess Diaries

6.4

writer: "Stupid Cupid"

2001

 

Rachael Leigh Cook, Tara Reid, and Rosario Dawson in Josie and the Pussycats (2001)

Josie and the Pussycats

5.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2001

 

Kirsten Dunst, Ben Foster, and Sisqó in Get Over It (2001)

Get Over It

5.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2001

 

Killing Cinderella (2000)

Killing Cinderella

6.4

performer: "Breaking Up is Hard to Do"writer: "Breaking Up is Hard to Do"

2000

 

Stars in Their Eyes (1990)

Stars in Their Eyes

5.2

TV Series

writer: "Is This the Way to Amarillo"writer: "That's When the Music Takes Me"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"

1990–2000

4 episodes

 

Playing Mona Lisa (2000)

Playing Mona Lisa

5.8

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

2000

 

Jon Anderson, Bill Bruford, Tony Kaye, Chris Squire, Peter Banks, and Yes in Top Ten (1995)

Top Ten

6.0

TV Series

writer: "Ring, Ring" (uncredited)

2000

1 episode

 

Suuri luokkakokous

TV Series

writer: "Amarillo"

2000

1 episode

 

Michail Marmarinos in Black Milk (1999)

Black Milk

4.9

performer: "One Way Ticket (To the Blues)"

1999

 

Tuttu juttu (1992)

Tuttu juttu

4.6

TV Series

writer: "Tuttu juttu" (Stupid Cupid)

1993–1999

2 episodes

 

Mila Kunis, Ashton Kutcher, Danny Masterson, Wilmer Valderrama, Topher Grace, and Laura Prepon in That '70s Show (1998)

That '70s Show

8.1

TV Series

performer: "Bad Blood"writer: "Bad Blood"performer: "Laughter in the Rain" ...

1998–1999

3 episodes

 

Tohuwabohu (1990)

Tohuwabohu

7.6

TV Series

performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do" (uncredited, uncredited)

1997–1998

2 episodes

 

Leslie Ash, Martin Clunes, Neil Morrissey, and Caroline Quentin in Men Behaving Badly (1992)

Men Behaving Badly

7.7

TV Series

writer: "Solitaire"

1998

1 episode

 

Sweet Nightmare (1998)

Sweet Nightmare

4.8

performer: "Oh Carol"

1998

 

The Way We Laughed (1998)

The Way We Laughed

6.8

performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do", "One Way Ticket"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"

1998

 

A Smile Like Yours (1997)

A Smile Like Yours

4.8

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1997

 

Jennifer Aniston in Picture Perfect (1997)

Picture Perfect

5.6

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1997

 

The Castle (1997)

The Castle

7.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1997

 

Boy Chico: Hulihin si Ben Tumbling (1997)

Boy Chico: Hulihin si Ben Tumbling

8.4

performer: "My World Keeps Getting Smaller Every Day"writer: "My World Keeps Getting Smaller Every Day"

1997

 

Rose McGowan in Lewis & Clark & George (1997)

Lewis & Clark & George

5.2

writer: "Where The Boys Are"

1997

 

Night Fever (1997)

Night Fever

7.7

TV Series

writer: "Oh! Carol"

1997

1 episode

 

Hotel de Love (1996)

Hotel de Love

6.0

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1996

 

Jamie Lee Curtis, Jennifer Tilly, Caroline Aaron, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Christopher McDonald, Kevin Pollak, Wallace Shawn, Mooky Arizona, Herbert Russell, Kyle Howard, Sheila McCarthy, Amy Sakasitz, Alex Seltz-Wald, Harry Winer, and Josh Wolford in House Arrest (1996)

House Arrest

5.8

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1996

 

Fairuza Balk, Neve Campbell, Robin Tunney, and Rachel True in The Craft (1996)

The Craft

6.5

writer: "Fallin'"

1996

 

Christina Applegate, David Faustino, Katey Sagal, and Ed O'Neill in Married... with Children (1987)

Married... with Children

8.1

TV Series

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl"

1996

1 episode

 

Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie (1995)

Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie

7.9

Video

Soundtrack ("Where the Boys Are")

1995

 

Oprah Winfrey in The Oprah Winfrey Show (1986)

The Oprah Winfrey Show

5.0

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"

1995

1 episode

 

Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1988)

Mystery Science Theater 3000

8.6

TV Series

music: "Where the Boys Are"

1994

1 episode

 

Food Rocks (1994)

Food Rocks

9.0

Short

performer: "Vegetables Are Good For You"writer: "Vegetables Are Good For You"

1994

 

Marilyn Monroe, Jason Priestley, Jerry O'Connell, and Gabriel Olds in Calendar Girl (1993)

Calendar Girl

5.2

performer: "Calendar Girl"writer: "Calendar Girl"

1993

 

Kuolema käy kuusi beessä (1993)

Kuolema käy kuusi beessä

4.4

writer: "Ehkä suukon antaa saan (Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen)"

1993

 

Tales of the City (1993)

Tales of the City

8.3

TV Mini Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1993

1 episode

 

Luke Perry, Jason Priestley, Shannen Doherty, Jennie Garth, Tori Spelling, Brian Austin Green, Ian Ziering, and Gabrielle Carteris in Beverly Hills, 90210 (1990)

Beverly Hills, 90210

6.6

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up is Hard To Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" (uncredited, uncredited)

1991–1993

3 episodes

 

Dana Dvorin, Ido Mosseri, Tomer Gottlieb, Tal Mosseri, Betty Cohen, and Shir Gottlieb in Lo Kolel Sherut (1990)

Lo Kolel Sherut

7.0

TV Series

writer: "Oh, Carol"

1993

1 episode

 

Will Smith in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1990)

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air

7.9

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

1993

1 episode

 

Crónicas del mal (1992)

Crónicas del mal

5.6

TV Series

writer: "Oh Carol"

1992

1 episode

 

Peter Frödin and Hella Joof in Bullerfnis (1990)

Bullerfnis

7.6

TV Series

music: "Løb Samson løb"

1992

1 episode

 

Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick in Pyrates (1991)

Pyrates

4.7

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1991

 

Reginald VelJohnson, Jaimee Foxworth, Telma Hopkins, Rosetta LeNoire, Bryton James, Darius McCrary, Jo Marie Payton, Jaleel White, and Kellie Shanygne Williams in Family Matters (1989)

Family Matters

6.6

TV Series

lyrics: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"music: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" (uncredited, uncredited)

1991

1 episode

 

Queen: Rare Live - A Concert Through Time and Space (1989)

Queen: Rare Live - A Concert Through Time and Space

9.4

Video

writer: "Big Spender / Jailhouse Rock / Stupid Cupid"

1989

 

Rowan Atkinson, Jeff Goldblum, Emma Thompson, Kim Thomson, and Emil Wolk in The Tall Guy (1989)

The Tall Guy

6.2

writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"

1989

 

Annie Potts, Delta Burke, Jean Smart, and Dixie Carter in Designing Women (1986)

Designing Women

7.3

TV Series

writer: "Where The Boys Are"

1989

1 episode

 

Kevin Kline and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio in The January Man (1989)

The January Man

5.5

writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited)

1989

 

Emu's Wide World (1987)

Emu's Wide World

5.9

TV Series

writer: "My Friend" (uncredited)

1988

1 episode

 

Paul Fusco and Mihaly 'Michu' Meszaros in ALF (1986)

ALF

7.4

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up is Hard to Do"

1988

1 episode

 

Brigitte Nielsen, Kris Kristofferson, Miguel Bosé, and Sabrina Salerno in Super 88 (1987)

Super 88

TV Special

writer: "Oh Carol"

1987

 

Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (1987)

Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story

7.7

Short

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1987

 

Bronson Pinchot and Mark Linn-Baker in Perfect Strangers (1986)

Perfect Strangers

7.2

TV Series

writer: "Oh! Carol" (uncredited)

1986

1 episode

 

Emu's All Live Pink Windmill Show (1984)

Emu's All Live Pink Windmill Show

7.4

TV Series

writer: "Love Is Spreading Over the World"writer: "That's When the Music Takes Me" (uncredited, uncredited)

1985–1986

2 episodes

 

John Cusack, Curtis Armstrong, Diane Franklin, Yuji Okumoto, Dan Schneider, and Amanda Wyss in Better Off Dead (1985)

Better Off Dead

7.1

performer: "Breakin' Up Is Hard To Do"writer: "Breakin' Up Is Hard To Do"

1985

 

Marcus Groth in Häng dej, pojkfan (1985)

Häng dej, pojkfan

5.7

Short

writer: "Stupid Cupid"

1985

 

Lynn-Holly Johnson, Lisa Hartman, Lorna Luft, Wendy Schaal, and Russell Todd in Where the Boys Are (1984)

Where the Boys Are

4.3

writer: "Where The Boys Are"

1984

 

Craig Sheffer and Pia Zadora in Voyage of the Rock Aliens (1984)

Voyage of the Rock Aliens

5.2

performer: "New Orleans"

1984

 

Emu's World (1982)

Emu's World

6.6

TV Series

writer: "That's When the Music Takes Me"writer: "All You Need Is the Music"writer: "You Gotta Make Your Own Sunshine" (uncredited, uncredited, uncredited)

1983

3 episodes

 

Champs-Elysées (1982)

Champs-Elysées

6.5

TV Series

writer: "Tous besoin de musique (All You Need Is The Music)"

1983

1 episode

 

Stuck on You! (1983)

Stuck on You!

4.1

lyrics: "Love Will Keep Us Together"music: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1983

 

Johnny Carson in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962)

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson

8.5

TV Series

writer: "Breaking Up is Hard to Do"

1982

1 episode

 

Miracle (1982)

Miracle

7.9

music: "Where the Boys Are"

1982

 

Mireille Allonville, Ted Rogers, and Dusty Bin in 3-2-1 (1978)

3-2-1

5.6

TV Series

writer: "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen"

1982

1 episode

 

Saturday Night Live (1975)

Saturday Night Live

8.0

TV Series

performer: "Breaking up is hard to do"writer: "Breaking up is hard to do"performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do", "Lonely Night (Angel Face)" (uncredited, uncredited) ...

1976–1982

2 episodes

 

Neil Sedaka: In Concert

Music Video

performer: "I'm A Song (Sing Me)", "Standing On The Inside", "Laughter In The Rain", "Hits Medley (Oh! Carol / Stairway To Heaven / Hey Little Devil / Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen / Calendar Girl)", "New York City Blues", "Love Will Keep Us Together", "Solitaire", "Bad Blood", "The Immigrant", "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do", "That's When The Music Takes Me"

1981

 

Prince of the City (1981)

Prince of the City

7.4

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited)

1981

 

Jon 'Bowzer' Bauman and Sha-Na-Na in Sha Na Na (1977)

Sha Na Na

6.8

TV Series

writer: "Next Door To An Angel" (uncredited)

1980

1 episode

 

Frank Oz, Jim Henson, Dave Goelz, Louise Gold, Richard Hunt, Kathryn Mullen, Jerry Nelson, and Steve Whitmire in The Muppet Show (1976)

The Muppet Show

8.4

TV Series

writer: "Puppet Man"writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together" (uncredited, uncredited)

1979–1980

2 episodes

 

Bobby Vinton in The Gossip Columnist (1980)

The Gossip Columnist

6.5

TV Movie

music: "You've Never Done It Like That"

1980

 

Fred Grandy, Bernie Kopell, Ted Lange, Gavin MacLeod, and Lauren Tewes in The Love Boat (1977)

The Love Boat

6.3

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1979

1 episode

 

Shirley

7.3

TV Series

writer: "(I Was) Born to Be Bad"

1979

1 episode

 

Billy Crystal in Breaking Up Is Hard to Do (1979)

Breaking Up Is Hard to Do

5.7

TV Movie

performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"

1979

 

Frankie Lymon in Good Old Days Part II (1978)

Good Old Days Part II

6.0

TV Special

writer: "Breaking Up is Hard to Do", "Since You've Been Gone"

1978

 

Ron Howard, Henry Winkler, Marion Ross, Tom Bosley, Erin Moran, Don Most, and Anson Williams in Happy Days (1974)

Happy Days

7.4

TV Series

writer: "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen"writer: "Calendar Girl" (uncredited, uncredited)

1977–1978

3 episodes

 

Jeff Bridges and Farrah Fawcett in Somebody Killed Her Husband (1978)

Somebody Killed Her Husband

4.9

performer: "Love Keeps Getting Stronger Every Day"writer: "Love Keeps Getting Stronger Every Day"

1978

 

Tisha Sterling in Over Easy (1977)

Over Easy

6.6

TV Series

writer: "Solitaire"

1977

1 episode

 

Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, and ABBA in ABBA: The Movie (1977)

ABBA: The Movie

6.5

writer: "Ring Ring"

1977

 

An Evening with Glen Campbell (1977)

An Evening with Glen Campbell

7.8

TV Special

writer: "That's When the Music Takes Me"

1977

 

Sextette (1977)

Sextette

3.9

writer: "Happy Birthday Twenty One" ("Love Will Keep Us Together")

1977

 

Get It Together (1977)

Get It Together

5.2

TV Series

writer: "My World (Keeps Getting Smaller Everyday)"

1977

1 episode

 

Florence Henderson, Susan Olsen, Robert Reed, Christopher Knight, Mike Lookinland, Maureen McCormick, Geri Reischl, and Barry Williams in The Brady Bunch Variety Hour (1976)

The Brady Bunch Variety Hour

3.8

TV Series

writer: "Laughter in the Rain"

1977

1 episode

 

Larry Gelman, Candice Rialson, and Rip Taylor in Chatterbox! (1977)

Chatterbox!

5.1

writer: "Sad Eyes"

1977

 

Dolly Parton in Dolly (1976)

Dolly

8.2

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1976

1 episode

 

Maurice Colbourne in Gangsters (1976)

Gangsters

8.1

TV Series

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1976

1 episode

 

Neil Sedaka Steppin' Out

9.2

TV Special

performer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1976

 

Charo in Charo (1976)

Charo

TV Movie

writer: "Love Will Keep Us Together"

1976

 

Waar heb dat nou voor nodig (1973)

De ondergang van de Onan

6.7

TV Movie

writer: "Oh Carol" (uncredited)

1976

 

The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour (1971)

The Sonny and Cher Show

6.9

TV Series

writer: "Lonely Nights (Angel Face)"writer: "Solitaire"performer: "The Hungry Years / Breaking Up Is Hard To Do / Sad Eyes / Calendar Girl / Laughter In the Rain / That's When the Music Takes Me" Medley ...

1976

4 episodes

 

ABBA in Australia

7.5

TV Special

writer: "Ring Ring"

1976

 

Super Bowl (1976)

Super Bowl

7.6

TV Movie

writer: "Laughter in the Rain"

1976

 

Cruisin' 57

6.9

performer: "The Diary"writer: "The Diary" (uncredited, uncredited)

1975

 

The Benny Hill Show (1969)

The Benny Hill Show

7.6

TV Series

writer: "Going Nowhere"

1975

1 episode

 

Ernie Sigley in The Ernie Sigley Show (1974)

The Ernie Sigley Show

6.9

TV Series

writer: "I'm a Song (Sing Me)"writer: "Standing on the Inside"writer: "Laughter in the Rain" ...

1974–1975

7 episodes

 

Shang-a-Lang (1975)

Shang-a-Lang

6.7

TV Series

writer: "I Go Ape"

1975

1 episode

 

Graham Kennedy in The Graham Kennedy Show (1972)

The Graham Kennedy Show

6.8

TV Series

writer: "I'm a Song (Sing Me)"writer: "Standing on the Inside"writer: "Working on a Groovy Thing" ...

1973–1975

7 episodes

 

The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club (1974)

The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club

7.5

TV Series

writer: "(Is This the Way To) Amarillo" (uncredited)

1975

1 episode

 

Spede show (1968)

Spede show

6.9

TV Series

writer: "Ring, Ring"

1974

1 episode

 

María José Cantudo, Ángela Carrasco, and Victoria Vera in ¡Señoras y señores! (1974)

¡Señoras y señores!

5.9

TV Series

writer: "Ring, Ring"

1974

1 episode

 

Spotlight (1968)

Spotlight

6.6

TV Series

writer: "Ring Ring"

1973

1 episode

 

The Partridge Family (1970)

The Partridge Family

6.6

TV Series

lyrics: "Workin' On A Groovy Thing"music: "Workin' On A Groovy Thing"lyrics: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do" ...

1970–1973

3 episodes

 

Robert Wagner in It Takes a Thief (1968)

It Takes a Thief

7.5

TV Series

lyrics: "The Puppet Man"music: "The Puppet Man"

1970

1 episode

 

Jeff Phillips and The Lido Dancers in Sounds Like Us (1969)

Sounds Like Us

TV Series

writer: "Workin' On a Groovy Thing"

1969

1 episode

 

Ed Sullivan in The Ed Sullivan Show (1948)

The Ed Sullivan Show

7.9

TV Series

writer: "Workin' on a Groovy Thing"

1969

1 episode

 

33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee (1969)

33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee

5.8

TV Movie

writer: "I Go Ape" (uncredited)

1969

 

Playgirl Killer (1967)

Playgirl Killer

4.5

performer: "Waterbug"

1967

 

Bandstand (1958)

Bandstand

7.9

TV Series

writer: "Calendar Girl"performer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"writer: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" ...

1960–1967

4 episodes

 

Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith, Peter Tork, and The Monkees in The Monkees (1965)

The Monkees

7.5

TV Series

producer: "When Love Comes Knocking (At Your Door)" (credit only)writer: "When Love Comes Knocking (At Your Door)" (credit only)

1967

1 episode

 

Sting of Death (1966)

Sting of Death

4.4

performer: "Do the Jellyfish"writer: "Do the Jellyfish"

1966

 

Rings Around the World (1966)

Rings Around the World

7.8

performer: "The Canvas Sky"

1966

 

Hollywood a Go Go (1964)

Hollywood a Go Go

7.8

TV Series

music: "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"performer: "The World Through a Tear", "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"performer: "Calendar Girl", "Let the People Talk" ...

1965

2 episodes

 

Shindig! (1964)

Shindig!

8.0

TV Series

writer: "I Go Ape"performer: "Let the People Talk", "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"writer: "Let the People Talk", "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" ...

1964–1965

4 episodes

 

Il giovedì (1964)

Il giovedì

7.2

performer: "I tuoi capricci"

1964

 

Lando Buzzanca, Marino Masé, Marisa Merlini, and Ugo Tognazzi in The Monsters (1963)

The Monsters

7.4

performer: "I tuoi capricci"

1963

 

George Hamilton, Jim Hutton, Connie Francis, Dolores Hart, and Yvette Mimieux in Where the Boys Are (1960)

Where the Boys Are

6.7

music: "Where the Boys Are", "Turn On the Sunshine"

1960

 

The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show (1956)

The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show

7.7

TV Series

writer: "Fallin'" (uncredited)

1960

1 episode

 

The Dick Clark Show (1958)

The Dick Clark Show

7.6

TV Series

writer: "Frankie" (uncredited)

1959

1 episode

 

Writer

Cover that One Cupid

Music Video

written by

2023

 

Producer

Neil Sedaka: The Show Goes On (2008)

Neil Sedaka: The Show Goes On

8.2

Video

executive producer

2008

 

Thanks

Secrets of New York (2013)

Secrets of New York

TV Series

special thanks

2013

1 episode

 

Legends (2006)

Legends

6.4

TV Series

thanks

2010

1 episode

 

Smile (1975)

Smile

7.1

acknowledgment: is heard through the courtesy of Polydor International / Rocket Records

1975

 

Self

Good Day New York (1988)

Good Day New York

4.9

TV Series

Self

2025

1 episode

 

ABBA Silver, ABBA Gold (2023)

ABBA Silver, ABBA Gold

7.7

Self - SingerSelf - Songwriter

2023

 

Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast Live: A Tribute to Gilbert (2022)

Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast Live: A Tribute to Gilbert

8.9

Video

Self - Guest

2022

 

This Is Pop (2021)

This Is Pop

6.9

TV Series

Self - Legendary SingerSelf - Songwriter

2021

1 episode

 

Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, and ABBA in ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes It All (2019)

ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes It All

7.3

TV Movie

Self

2019

 

Gilbert Gottfried in Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast (2014)

Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast

9.6

Podcast Series

Self - Guest

2019

1 episode

 

207 15th Anniversary (2018)

207 15th Anniversary

TV Special

Self

2018

 

The Boulevard (2018)

The Boulevard

TV Mini Series

Self

2018

 

Neil Sedaka: King of Song (2014)

Neil Sedaka: King of Song

7.1

TV Movie

Self

2014

 

Geraldo Rivera Reports (2003)

Geraldo Rivera Reports

2.4

TV Series

Self

2014

1 episode

 

Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie in Today (1952)

Today

4.6

TV Series

Self - Musical Guest

2014

1 episode

 

Susanna Reid and Ben Shephard in Good Morning Britain (2014)

Good Morning Britain

3.0

TV Series

Self

2014

1 episode

 

Art Laboe in My Music: Doo Wop Discoveries (2012)

My Music: Doo Wop Discoveries

TV Movie

Self

2012

 

The Joy of the Single (2012)

The Joy of the Single

6.5

TV Movie

Self

2012

 

Huckabee (2008)

Huckabee

3.6

TV Series

Self

2012

1 episode

 

Sunset Strip (2012)

Sunset Strip

6.8

Self

2012

 

Elvis Costello, John Lydon, Sex Pistols, and The Cure in How the Brits Rocked America (2012)

How the Brits Rocked America

7.3

TV Mini Series

Self

2012

1 episode

 

The Nation's Favourite Bee Gees Song

9.0

TV Movie

Self

2011

 

The Joy of Easy Listening (2011)

The Joy of Easy Listening

7.2

TV Movie

Self

2011

 

Carolina Escobar, María Luisa Godoy, and Gonzalo Ramírez in Buenos días a todos (1992)

Buenos días a todos

5.7

TV Series

Self - Musical Guest

2011

1 episode

 

The One Show (2006)

The One Show

3.6

TV Series

Self - Guest

2009–2011

2 episodes

 

Neil Diamond: Solitary Man (2010)

Neil Diamond: Solitary Man

7.8

TV Movie

Self

2010

 

Harry Belafonte, Smokey Robinson, Arianna Huffington, Jesse Jackson, Tavis Smiley, Cornel West, Newt Gingrich, Suze Orman, Richard Haass, Jim Wallis, and Connie Rice in Tavis Smiley (2004)

Tavis Smiley

5.7

TV Series

Self

2010

1 episode

 

Talk Stoop (2009)

Talk Stoop

4.0

TV Series

Self

2010

1 episode

 

The Alan Titchmarsh Show (2007)

The Alan Titchmarsh Show

3.7

TV Series

Self

2010

1 episode

 

Legends (2006)

Legends

6.4

TV Series

Self

2010

1 episode

 

Kaye Adams, Nadia Sawalha, Ruth Langsford, and Charlene White in Loose Women (1999)

Loose Women

2.1

TV Series

Self - Performer

2006–2009

2 episodes

 

Mark Consuelos and Kelly Ripa in Live with Kelly and Mark (1988)

Live with Kelly and Mark

4.5

TV Series

Self

1989–2009

3 episodes

 

Robin Williams, Juliet Huddy, and Mike Jerrick in The Morning Show with Mike & Juliet (2007)

The Morning Show with Mike & Juliet

4.4

TV Series

Self

2009

1 episode

 

Bonnie Hunt in The Bonnie Hunt Show (2008)

The Bonnie Hunt Show

6.5

TV Series

Self

2008

1 episode

 

Neil Sedaka: The Show Goes On (2008)

Neil Sedaka: The Show Goes On

8.2

Video

Self

2008

 

American Idol Rewind (2006)

American Idol Rewind

3.2

TV Series

Self - Guest Judge

2008

1 episode

 

The View (1997)

The View

2.4

TV Series

Self

2007

1 episode

 

Long Island Music Hall of Fame's 1st Induction Awards Gala

TV Special

Self

2006

 

Cat Deeley, Alison Hammond, Dermot O'Leary, and Ben Shephard in This Morning (1988)

This Morning

4.3

TV Series

Self

2006

1 episode

 

John Stamos in Jake in Progress (2005)

Jake in Progress

6.0

TV Series

Self

2005

1 episode

 

Tony Danza in The Tony Danza Show (2004)

The Tony Danza Show

3.6

TV Series

Self

2005

1 episode

 

Elvis: 50 Years in Show Business

8.2

Video

Self

2004

 

Songwriters Hall of Fame

TV Special

Self

2004

 

Lionel Richie, Ryan Seacrest, Carrie Underwood, and Luke Bryan in American Idol (2002)

American Idol

4.3

TV Series

Self - Guest Judge

2003–2004

2 episodes

 

Legends in Concert: Neil Sedaka Up Close and Personal

Self

2004

 

God Only Knows: Vocal Harmony - The Voice

TV Movie

Self

2003

 

Biography (1987)

Biography

7.7

TV Series

Self

1998–2002

2 episodes

 

Neil Sedaka: The Show Must Go On (2001)

Neil Sedaka: The Show Must Go On

TV Movie

Self

2001

 

The Songmakers Collection (2001)

The Songmakers Collection

8.6

Video

Self

2001

 

Walk on By: The Story of Popular Song (2001)

Walk on By: The Story of Popular Song

8.5

TV Series

Self

2001

2 episodes

 

Keith Chegwin, Chris Evans, Gaby Roslin, Peter Smith, and Paula Yates in The Big Breakfast (1992)

The Big Breakfast

6.9

TV Series

Self

1993–1995

2 episodes

 

The James Whale Show (1995)

The James Whale Show

4.9

TV Series

Self

1995

1 episode

 

Cilla Black in Surprise! Surprise! (1984)

Surprise! Surprise!

5.1

TV Series

Self - Performer

1995

1 episode

 

The History of Rock 'n' Roll (1995)

The History of Rock 'n' Roll

8.2

TV Mini Series

Self

1995

1 episode

 

The 22nd International Emmy Awards

TV Special

Self

1994

 

Don't Forget Your Toothbrush (1994)

Don't Forget Your Toothbrush

6.3

TV Series

Self

1994

1 episode

 

Moving Image Salutes Steven Spielberg

TV Special

Self

1994

 

Milton Berle, Oliver Hardy, Johnny Cash, Bobby Darin, Ralph Edwards, Shirley Jones, Stan Laurel, and Jayne Mansfield in This Is Your Life (1950)

This Is Your Life

6.9

TV Series

Self

1993

1 episode

 

Rock with Laughter

TV Series

Self

1993

1 episode

 

The Connie Francis Scrapbook

Video

Self

1992

 

Des O'Connor Tonight (1977)

Des O'Connor Tonight

5.7

TV Series

Self

1990–1992

3 episodes

 

Ein Kessel Buntes (1972)

Ein Kessel Buntes

5.5

TV Series

Self - Musician

1992

1 episode

 

Queridos padres

TV Series

Self

1992

1 episode

 

Guest Night (1992)

Guest Night

TV Series

Self

1992

1 episode

 

Pebble Mill at One (1972)

Pebble Mill at One

6.2

TV Series

Self

1991–1992

2 episodes

 

Top of the Pops (1964)

Top of the Pops

6.9

TV Series

Self

1972–1991

3 episodes

 

Primetime

TV Series

Self

1991

1 episode

 

Debbie Gibson in One on One with John Tesh (1991)

One on One with John Tesh

2.1

TV Series

Self

1991

1 episode

 

Cue the Music

5.8

TV Series

Self (1993)

1991–1995

 

The Garden Party

TV Series

Self

1991

1 episode

 

Eamonn Andrews in This Is Your Life (1955)

This Is Your Life

6.4

TV Series

Self

1991

1 episode

 

The Howard Stern Show (1990)

The Howard Stern Show

6.9

TV Series

Self

1991

1 episode

 

Saturday Matters (1989)

Saturday Matters

TV Series

Self

1989

1 episode

 

The Songwriter's Hall of Fame 20th Anniversary... The Magic of Music

TV Special

Self

1989

 

Lou Rawls Parade of Stars (1980)

Lou Rawls Parade of Stars

2.4

TV Series

Self

1988

1 episode

 

Live! On City Line

TV Series

Self - Guest

1987

1 episode

 

American Bandstand's 33 1/3 Celebration (1985)

American Bandstand's 33 1/3 Celebration

8.6

TV Special

Self

1985

 

Star Search (1983)

Star Search

5.7

TV Series

Self - Introducer

1984

1 episode

 

The Gift of Song

TV Special

Self

1984

 

Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon (1966)

Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon

6.8

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

Na sowas! (1982)

Na sowas!

6.4

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

On Stage America (1984)

On Stage America

5.8

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

Live from Her Majesty's (1982)

Live from Her Majesty's

7.0

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

Breakaway (1983)

Breakaway

6.1

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

Weekend with the Stars Telethon

TV Special

Self - Co-Host

1984

 

Salute!

TV Series

Self

1983

1 episode

 

Neil Sedaka Says: All You Need Is the Music

TV Special

Self

1983

 

Hour Magazine (1980)

Hour Magazine

7.4

TV Series

Self

1982

1 episode

 

Neil Sedaka: In Concert

Music Video

Self

1981

 

The Roots of Rock 'n' Roll

TV Series

Self - Host

1981

 

The Monte Carlo Show

7.3

TV Series

Self

1981

1 episode

 

Deborah Jenssen and Darcel Wynne in Solid Gold (1980)

Solid Gold

6.8

TV Series

Self - Co-Host

1981

1 episode

 

The Toni Tennille Show (1980)

The Toni Tennille Show

6.8

TV Series

Self

1980

1 episode

 

Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon (1980)

Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon

6.3

TV Special

Self

1980

 

Mike Douglas in The Mike Douglas Show (1961)

The Mike Douglas Show

7.0

TV Series

Self - Co-HostSelf - SingerSelf - Songwriter ...

1968–1980

26 episodes

 

Johnny Carson in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962)

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson

8.5

TV Series

Self - Musical GuestSelf - Guest

1965–1980

10 episodes

 

Live Wednesday (1978)

Live Wednesday

5.0

TV Series

Self

1978

1 episode

 

Dinah Shore in Dinah! (1974)

Dinah!

7.0

TV Series

Self

1975–1978

3 episodes

 

Michel Legrand in Concert

TV Special

Self - Musician

1978

 

Robin Roberts, George Stephanopoulos, and Michael Strahan in Good Morning America (1975)

Good Morning America

4.4

TV Series

Self

1978

1 episode

 

The People's Command Performance

TV Special

Self

1978

 

Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

TV Special

Self

1977

 

Donny Osmond and Marie Osmond in Donny and Marie (1975)

Donny and Marie

6.2

TV Series

Self

1977

1 episode

 

Deniece Williams in The Val Doonican Music Show (1975)

The Val Doonican Music Show

5.7

TV Series

Self

1977

1 episode

 

Carol Burnett in The Carol Burnett Show (1967)

The Carol Burnett Show

8.7

TV Series

Self

1977

1 episode

 

Bob Hope's Christmas Comedy Special

6.9

TV Special

Self

1976

 

Neil Sedaka Steppin' Out

9.2

TV Special

Self

1976

 

The Midnight Special (1972)

The Midnight Special

8.6

TV Series

Self

1975–1976

2 episodes

 

Phonzeit (1975)

Phonzeit

TV Series

Self - Musician

1976

1 episode

 

The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour (1971)

The Sonny and Cher Show

6.9

TV Series

SelfSelf - Various Characters

1976

1 episode

 

Saturday Night Live (1975)

Saturday Night Live

8.0

TV Series

Self - Musical Guest

1976

1 episode

 

"Tony Orlando and Dawn" Show. Joyce Vincent, Tony Orlando, Thelma Hopkins

Tony Orlando and Dawn

6.5

TV Series

Self

1975

2 episodes

 

The Mac Davis Special

9.0

TV Special

Self

1975

 

Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington in Bicentennial Minutes (1974)

Bicentennial Minutes

8.9

TV Series

Self - Narrator

1975

1 episode

 

AC/DC, Mark Evans, Phil Rudd, Bon Scott, Angus Young, and Malcolm Young in King of Pop 1975 (1975)

King of Pop 1975

TV Special

Self

1975

 

The Dick Cavett Show (1968)

The Dick Cavett Show

8.3

TV Series

Self

1975

1 episode

 

In Concert (1970)

In Concert

7.6

TV Series

Self

1975

1 episode

 

Lulu (1975)

Lulu

TV Series

Self

1975

1 episode

 

Merv Griffin in The Merv Griffin Show (1962)

The Merv Griffin Show

6.6

TV Series

Self

1975

1 episode

 

American Bandstand (1952)

American Bandstand

7.5

TV Series

Self - Musical Guest

1963–1975

6 episodes

 

Moods of Love

TV Series

Self - Guest

1974

1 episode

 

They Sold a Million (1973)

They Sold a Million

TV Series

Self

1973–1974

2 episodes

 

Look, Mike Yarwood!

6.0

TV Series

Self

1974

1 episode

 

The Old Grey Whistle Test (1971)

The Old Grey Whistle Test

8.1

TV Series

Self

1974

1 episode

 

The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour (1971)

The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour

7.1

TV Series

Self

1973

1 episode

 

Hey Brian!

TV Series

Self

1973

1 episode

 

David Frost in The David Frost Show (1969)

The David Frost Show

7.1

TV Series

Self

1969–1971

2 episodes

 

Graham Kennedy in In Melbourne Tonight (1957)

In Melbourne Tonight

8.0

TV Series

Self

1969

2 episodes

 

The Dennis Wholey Show (1969)

The Dennis Wholey Show

TV Series

Self

1969

1 episode

 

The Bob Braun Show (1967)

The Bob Braun Show

2.4

TV Series

Self - Vocalist

1968

1 episode

 

Bandstand (1958)

Bandstand

7.9

TV Series

Self - Singer

1968

1 episode

 

The Peter Martin Show

TV Series

Self

1968

1 episode

 

Rings Around the World (1966)

Rings Around the World

7.8

Self

1966

 

The Lloyd Thaxton Show (1961)

The Lloyd Thaxton Show

8.1

TV Series

Self

1964–1966

3 episodes

 

Where the Action Is (1965)

Where the Action Is

8.2

TV Series

Self

1965–1966

3 episodes

 

Clay Cole in The Clay Cole Show (1959)

The Clay Cole Show

TV Series

Self

1965–1966

2 episodes

 

Upbeat (1964)

Upbeat

TV Series

Self

1965

1 episode

 

Hollywood a Go Go (1964)

Hollywood a Go Go

7.8

TV Series

Self - Singer

1965

2 episodes

 

ABC's Nightlife (1964)

ABC's Nightlife

2.6

TV Series

Self

1965

2 episodes

 

Shindig! (1964)

Shindig!

8.0

TV Series

Self - SingerSelf - Pianist

1964–1965

3 episodes

 

I've Got a Secret (1952)

I've Got a Secret

7.9

TV Series

Self - Guest Star

1965

1 episode

 

Instant Love (1964)

Instant Love

5.1

Self

1964

 

Scopitone (1964)

Scopitone

TV Series

Self - Special Guest

1964

 

Ed Sullivan in The Ed Sullivan Show (1948)

The Ed Sullivan Show

7.9

TV Series

Self - SingerSelf - Piano Player

1963

3 episodes

 

Helen Atkinson Wood, Nell Campbell, Simon Hickson, Brian Travers, and Trevor Neal in Juke Box Jury (1959)

Juke Box Jury

7.4

TV Series

Self - Panellist

1962

1 episode

 

Bruce Forsyth, Frankie Howerd, Des O'Connor, Jimmy Tarbuck, and Norman Wisdom in Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium (1955)

Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium

7.3

TV Series

Self

1962

1 episode

 

Scopitones

TV Series

Self - Performer

1960–1969

 

The Dick Clark Show (1958)

The Dick Clark Show

7.6

TV Series

Self - Guest

1958–1960

6 episodes

 

Cita con las estrellas

TV Series

Self - Guest

1956–1971

 

Archive Footage

A Year in Music (2019)

A Year in Music

6.7

TV Series

Self (archive footage)

2022

1 episode

 

Donna Summer in Greatest Hits of the 70s (2021)

Greatest Hits of the 70s

7.3

TV Movie

Self (archive footage)

2021

 

Dusty Springfield in My Music: 60s & 70s Slow Songs (2015)

My Music: 60s & 70s Slow Songs

TV Movie

Self (archive footage)

2015

 

My Yearbook 1960-1963 (2015)

My Yearbook 1960-1963

TV Movie

Self (archive footage)

2015

 

My Music: 50s & 60s Rock Rewind (2014)

My Music: 50s & 60s Rock Rewind

TV Movie

Self (archive footage)

2014

 

Bandstand (1958)

Bandstand

7.9

TV Series

Self - Singer (archive footage)

1969

1 episode