For Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, The Mary Tyler Moore Show wasn’t just a classic sitcom, finding in some ways that it was a template for living. As a child, she would play “Mary and Rhoda” in her ...
Candice Bergen stopped by the "Today" show and paid her respects to Mary Tyler Moore, who died Wednesday. Bergen credited the ...
Sonny Curtis, the prolific songwriter behind "I Fought the Law" and The Mary Tyler Moore Show theme song, died Friday at age 88. His wife Louise Curtis confirmed his death to the Associated Press, ...
Sonny Curtis, a vintage rock 'n' roller who wrote the raw classic "I Fought the Law" and posed the enduring question "Who can turn the world on with her smile?" as the writer-crooner of the theme song ...
Sonny Curtis, the frontman of Buddy Holly’s band The Crickets who wrote classic songs including the theme for “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” has died. He was 88. Curtis died Friday “after a sudden ...
Sonny Curtis — the songwriter best known for The Mary Tyler Moore Show theme song and the frontman for Buddy Holly‘s band The Crickets — is dead at 88.
A prolific singer and songwriter who got his start with Buddy Holly, he also wrote “I Fought the Law,” “Walk Right Back” and hundreds of other songs. By Michael S. Rosenwald Sonny Curtis, a prolific ...
In 1980, Robert Redford directed for the first time in a film starring Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland, Timothy Hutton, and Judd Hirsch. Redford said he enjoyed the experience of directing these ...
In addition to “Love Is All Around,” the Texan wrote “I Fought the Law,” “Walk Right Back” and “More Than I Can Say,” hits for The Clash, The Everly Brothers and Leo Sayer, respectively. By Mike ...
Sonny Curtis, who wrote such classics as “I Fought the Law,” “Walk Right Back” and the theme for the “Mary Tyler Moore” show, “Love Is All Around,” died Friday after a sudden illness, according to a ...
Vintage rock 'n' roller also wrote the rebel anthem “I Fought the Law.” Sonny Curtis, a vintage rock 'n' roller who wrote the raw classic “I Fought the Law” and posed the enduring question “Who can ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results