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"Dear Heart" is a song written by Henry Mancini, Ray Evans, and Jay Livingston and performed by Andy Williams. It appears on the 1965 Andy Williams album, Andy Williams' Dear Heart . The song was the theme to the 1964 movie Dear Heart .
Dear Heart is a 1964 American romantic-comedy film starring Glenn Ford and Geraldine Page as lonely middle-aged people who fall in love at a hotel convention. It was directed by Delbert Mann, from a screenplay by Tad Mosel. Its theme song "Dear Heart" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Andy Williams' Dear Heart is the sixteenth studio album by American pop singer Andy Williams and was released in the spring of 1965 by Columbia Records [5] and was the last of his Columbia releases that remained exclusively within the realm of traditional pop.
Dear Heart is a 1964 American movie. Dear Heart may also refer to: "Dear Heart" (song), the theme from the movie, sung by Andy Williams; Andy Williams' Dear Heart, a 1965 album containing the song; Dear Heart, a 1981 Filipino movie directed by Danny Zialcita starring Gabby Concepcion and Sharon Cuneta
The title song from the album had been released as a single that March and entered the Easy Listening chart in the issue of Billboard dated April 5, 1969, spending 14 weeks there and two of those weeks at number one. [6] The song entered the Billboard Hot 100 one week later and reached number 22 over the course of 11 weeks. [7]
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The song was co-written and produced by British writers Jim Irvin and Julian Emery who collaborated with Branch on several songs on the album. In the webcast, Branch also mentioned songs on the album called "Mastermind" and "The Story Of Us" and also added that "Through The Radio" would be a hidden track on the CD.
According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Heart Song received "universal acclaim" based on a weighted average score of 81 out of 100 from five critic scores. [1] In Exclaim!, Peter Ellman scored this album a 9 out of 10, for the lyrical strength on the songs, stating that "by carving out her insides, she demonstrates agency, action and an embittered sense of hope". [2]