The crooner best known for the theme song also won two Grammys in the Sixties for his songs “Lollipops and Roses” and “Wives and Lovers”
Jack Jones, the singer and actor best-known for performing the famed “Love Boat” theme song, has died, his family confirmed. He was 86.
Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Jones’s stepdaughter Nicole Whitty said that Jones died after fighting Leukemia for the past two years.
Jones was born into a family of performers, the son of actress Irene Harvey and the actor-singer Allan Jones. He won two Grammys in the early Sixties for vocal performance on his songs “Lollipops and Roses” and “Wives and Lovers.” The artist was nominated five times in total, including the 41st Grammys in 1999 for the album Jack Jones Paints a Tribute to Tony Bennett.
Several of his songs landed on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, including “Lady,” “The Race Is On,” “Dear Heart,” and “The Impossible Dream (The Quest)”.
Jones was best known for his iconic performance of the theme song for Eighties television show The Love Boat, giving a relaxed croon about the whimsical adventure of love and singing about the feeling being “exciting and new” and “life’s sweetest reward.” Jones’ version served as the theme for Seasons One through Eight, but Dionne Warwick took over the vocals for Season Nine.
It wouldn’t be the only theme song he leant his vocals for though, with some younger listeners associating his voice with the delightfully mysterious “Into The Unknown,” the theme for Cartoon Network’s beloved cult classic Over The Garden Wall.
Jones had been married six times, the last of which was his wife Eleonora; the two resided in the Coachella Valley in California. He’s survived by Eleonora as well as his two daughters, two stepdaughters and his grandchildren.