In 1957, Riddle and his orchestra were featured on
The Rosemary Clooney Show, a 30-minute syndicated program. In 1962, Riddle orchestrated two albums for
Ella Fitzgerald,
Ella Swings Brightly with Nelson and
Ella Swings Gently with Nelson, their first work together since 1959's
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the George and Ira Gershwin Song Book. The mid-1960s would also see Fitzgerald and Riddle collaborate on the last of Ella's
Songbooks, devoted to the songs of
Jerome Kern (
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Jerome Kern Song Book) and
Johnny Mercer (
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Johnny Mercer Song Book). In 1963, Riddle joined Sinatra's newly established label
Reprise Records, under the musical direction of
Morris Stoloff. The following year, Riddle partnered with
Tom Jobim, who is considered to be one of the great exponents of Brazilian music and one of the main founders of the
bossa nova movement. The record, titled
The Wonderful World of Antônio Carlos Jobim, was released in 1965. In 1966, Riddle was hired by television producer
William Dozier to create the music for the
Batman television series starring
Adam West. (
Neal Hefti had written the
Batman theme song and was originally hired for the series, but became unavailable.) Riddle did the first two seasons of
Batman (sans two episodes scored by Warren Barker), along with the theatrically released
Batman: The Movie. Billy May did the third season's music. Re-recordings of Riddle's music from
Batman were issued on one soundtrack LP and a 45 rpm single. There was a "Batmanesque" tone in the soundtrack for
Howard Hawks'
John Wayne film
El Dorado, also scored by Riddle in 1966, due to his continued heavy use of brass. Riddle was the musical director for 16 episodes of
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour between 1967 and 1969. His television work in the 1960s included his hit theme song and incidental music for
Route 66,
The Untouchables and
The Rogues. His film work in the 1960s included the scores for the
Rat Pack motion pictures
Robin and the 7 Hoods and the original ''
Ocean's 11. In 1969, he arranged and conducted the music to the film Paint Your Wagon''. In the latter half of the 1960s, the partnership between Riddle and Frank Sinatra grew more distant as Sinatra began increasingly to turn to
Don Costa,
Billy May and an assortment of other arrangers for his album projects. Although Riddle would write various arrangements for Sinatra until the late 1970s,
Strangers In The Night, released in 1966, was the last full album project the pair completed together. The collection of Riddle-arranged songs was intended to expand on the success of the title track, which had been a number one hit single for Sinatra arranged by
Ernie Freeman.
Nelson Riddle Conducts The 101 Strings was recorded in London in 1970. Riddle had been without a recording contract for the first time in more than 25 years. It had been two years since his
Liberty Records contract ended. That year, he flew to London and recorded an album with the
101 Strings Orchestra. Produced by Jack Dorsey, it was released on
Marble Arch Records. Biographer Peter J. Levinson offered a sober assessment of the project, arguing that Riddle was "out of his depth" with the fusion of contemporary and classical instrumentation. The album went through several re-issues on the
Alshire label (including
Nelson Riddle Arranges and Conducts 101 Strings (1970);
Bridge Over Troubled Water (1971); and ''Swingin' Songs'' (1972), minus "Bridge Over Troubled Water") and the
Vogue Records label. During the 1970s, Riddle's film and television efforts included the nostalgic adaptation score for the 1974 version of
The Great Gatsby, which earned him his first
Academy Award, after five nominations. In 1973, he served as musical director for the
Emmy Award-winning
The Julie Andrews Hour. He wrote the theme songs for the 1972 television series
Emergency! and the 1975 television series
Caribe, and scored the 1977 miniseries
Seventh Avenue. The Nelson Riddle Orchestra also made numerous concert appearances throughout the 1970s, some of which were led and contracted by his good friend,
Tommy Shepard. In March 1977, Riddle arranged and conducted his last arrangements for Sinatra. "Nancy", "Emily", "
Linda", "
Sweet Lorraine" and "Barbara" were intended for an album of songs with women's names. For this Sinatra project Riddle also wrote an arrangement of "Tina". The album was never completed. "Sweet Lorraine" was released in 1990 and the others were included in
The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings, released in 1995. In 1978, Riddle was musical director for the
50th Academy Awards ceremony, the only occasion on which he performed the task. In December 1979, Sinatra recorded Riddle’s string arrangement of "
Something" for the 1980 album "Trilogy". And in 1981 Sinatra recorded Riddle’s arrangement of "The Gal That Got Away" with "It Never Entered My Mind" for the album "She Shot Me Down". The final time these two men worked together was when Nelson conducted for Frank at the Presidential Inaugural Gala in January 1985. 1982 saw Riddle work for the last time with
Ella Fitzgerald, on her last orchestral
Pablo album,
The Best Is Yet to Come. Riddle had composed most of the
incidental music for
Newhart (whose theme music was composed by
Henry Mancini); the show's 71st episode was dedicated to his memory. ==Career revival==