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Grammy- and Academy Award-winning songwriter Will Jennings began his Hollywood career with 1976's The Commitment, and soon after, he teamed with composer <a href="spotify:artist:7CaZ7TA2S50MLud2RZcU5H">Richard Kerr</a> to author <a href="spotify:artist:3alW3LYQS8K29z8C8NSLIX">Barry Manilow</a>'s 1977 pop chart-topper "Looks Like We Made It"; two years later, <a href="spotify:artist:3alW3LYQS8K29z8C8NSLIX">Manilow</a> returned to the Top Ten with the duo's "Somewhere in the Night." After earning his first Academy Award nomination for the song "People Alone" from 1980's The Competition, Jennings collaborated with <a href="spotify:artist:5gxynDEKwNDgxGJmJjZyte">Steve Winwood</a> for several songs on the singer's acclaimed 1981 album Arc of a Diver; they reunited the following year for Talking Back to the Night, which generated the hit "Valerie." In tandem with <a href="spotify:artist:2GVyv9OLNp6cmxfUDbGrXM">Jack Nitzsche</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:5exO2eW84QucBhrRhcK76x">Buffy Sainte-Marie</a>, Jennings next scored his first Oscar for "Up Where We Belong," the <a href="spotify:artist:3pFCERyEiP5xeN2EsPXhjI">Joe Cocker</a>/Jennifer Warren blockbuster from the film An Officer and a Gentleman; after working with <a href="spotify:artist:28AyklUmMECPwdfo8NEsV0">Jimmy Buffett</a> on 1984's Riddles in the Sand and its follow-up Last Mango in Paris, he reunited with <a href="spotify:artist:5gxynDEKwNDgxGJmJjZyte">Winwood</a> for 1986's enormously popular Back in the High Life, earning a Grammy nomination for Song of the Year for the number one smash "Higher Love." In 1991, Jennings paired with <a href="spotify:artist:6PAt558ZEZl0DmdXlnjMgD">Eric Clapton</a> for the cathartic "Tears in Heaven," culled from the motion picture Rush. His biggest song, however, remains 1997's Titanic theme "My Heart Will Go On"; written with composer <a href="spotify:artist:3PhL2Vdao2v8SS8AptuhAr">James Horner</a> and sung by <a href="spotify:artist:4S9EykWXhStSc15wEx8QFK">Celine Dion</a>, the song earned a boatload of Oscars, Grammys, and Golden Globes on its way to becoming the most-played radio hit in history. Jennings died on September 6, 2024; he was 80 years of age. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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