In the 1960s, Brooks composed advertising jingles for clients including
Pepsi ("You've Got a Lot to Live") and
Maxwell House ("Good to the Last Drop Feeling"). He received numerous
Clio Awards for his work, as well as a
People's Choice Award. Credited as "Joey Brooks", he also wrote the song "
My Ship Is Comin' In", a Top Ten UK hit in 1966 for
the Walker Brothers. In the 1970s, after becoming wealthy from his advertising work (at one point claiming to have 150 commercials on the air), He wrote "Blue Balloon (The Hourglass Song)", sung by
Robby Benson as the theme song for the film
Jeremy (1973), and claimed to have written, cast, and directed most of
Jeremy, although Arthur Barron is the sole writer and director of record.
New York Times film critic
Roger Greenspun recognized Brooks's claim, writing, "it seems fair to suggest that, in whatever proportion, both men were involved in the authorship of the film." Brooks next developed his own film project,
You Light Up My Life, which he wrote, produced, directed, and scored on a budget of about $1 million. The romantic drama about an aspiring singer, starring
Didi Conn, was a box-office success despite poor reviews. Brooks's
title song for the film was an even bigger success; a
cover version by
Debby Boone reached #1 on the U.S.
Billboard Hot 100 chart and held that position for 10 consecutive weeks, at that time tied for the longest Number One reign in the chart's history. With sales of over five million copies, the song was the biggest hit of the 1970s and earned Brooks a
Grammy Award for Song of the Year, an
Academy Award for Best Original Song, a
Golden Globe Award, and an
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) award. Brooks attempted to follow up his success with a similar romantic drama,
If Ever I See You Again (1978), which he not only co-wrote, produced, directed, and scored, but also starred in, as a composer of TV commercial jingles much like himself, despite no significant acting experience. which was never released.
Robert Simonson wrote in Brooks's
Playbill obituary that
In My Life was "generally regarded as one of the strangest shows ever to have graced a Broadway stage." When it was panned by critics, including
Ben Brantley of
The New York Times, who called it "jaw-dropping moments of whimsy run amok", His career was curtailed in 2008 by a stroke. ==Sexual assault indictment==