Bobby Hart, Co-Writer of Monkees Hits, Dies at 86
He was not on the list.
Bobby Hart, who co-authored several hits for The Monkees with his co-writer Tommy Boyce, died on Sept. 11, 2025. His death was confirmed by the Monkees on the group’s Instagram page. They wrote:
“Very sad news to report: Bobby Hart, the songwriting dynamo
who was half of the duo responsible for so many Monkees songs, has died. With
partner Tommy Boyce, Bobby penned tracks like ‘I Wanna Be Free,’ ‘Last Train to
Clarksville, the iconic ‘Monkees’ theme, and so many more, in addition to his
solo songwriting career with hits like ‘Hurt So Bad’ for Little Anthony &
the Imperials. He will be remembered for his incredible talent and his innate
spirituality.”
No cause or place of death was cited in the post. Hart was
86.
Boyce and Hart, under their own names, also placed nine
singles on the Billboard chart, including the 1967-68 Top 10 “I Wonder What
She’s Doing Tonite.”
Hart was born Robert Luke Harshman in Phoenix, Ariz., on
Feb. 18, 1939. Following a stint in the Army, he relocated to Los Angeles to
become a singer. He and Boyce met in 1959 and the pair recorded together,
scoring their first chart single in 1962 with “Along Came Linda.” They wrote
songs for Chubby Checker and others but logged their first notable hit as a
songwriting team with “Come a Little Bit Closer,” for Jay and the Americans, in
1964 . Their “(I’m Not Your) Steppin’ Stone” was cut first by Paul Revere and
the Raiders but would also become a staple of the Monkees’ repertoire. In 1965,
Hart, with Teddy Randazzo, co-composed the above-noted “Hurt So Bad,” which
reached #10 on the singles chart.
Later in 1965, as the team putting together the pilot for
The Monkees coalesced, Boyce and Hart wrote, produced and performed what would
become “(Theme From) The Monkees” and “Last Train to Clarksville.” The group
members recorded their own vocals over the Boyce-Hart demos and the latter went
to #1 upon its release in 1966. Other Boyce-Hart songs cut by the Monkees
included “She” (on More of the Monkees), “Words” (on Pisces, Aquarius,
Capricorn & Jones Ltd.) and “Valleri” (from The Birds, the Bees & the
Monkees).
Together, Boyce and Hart appeared on the TV programs I Dream of Jeannie and The Flying Nun and wrote songs for several Columbia Pictures films.
In the mid-’70s, the songwriting/performing pair teamed up with the Monkees’ Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones in a new group appropriately titled Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart. They toured, released an album and starred in a TV special but failed to rekindle the success of the Monkees.
Hart wrote an autobiography called Psychedelic Bubble Gum: Boyce & Hart, The Monkees, and Turning Mayhem into Miracles.
Boyce died by suicide on Nov. 23, 1994.

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