On October 12, 1983, eight months after Karen's death, the Carpenter family celebrated the unveiling of the Carpenters' new star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame. Richard said in his speech, "This is a sad day, but at the same time a very special and beautiful day to my family and [me]. My only regret is that Karen is not physically here to share it with us, but I know that she is very much alive in our minds, and in our hearts." On June 26, 1986, Carpenter started recording the solo album
Time and finished it on July 5, 1987. The album features
Dusty Springfield singing "
Something in Your Eyes",
Dionne Warwick singing "In Love Alone",
Scott Grimes singing "That's What I Believe" and a song Richard created – dedicated to Karen – called "When Time Was All We Had", which starts off
a cappella, but then Richard's piano fades in as well as
Herb Alpert's
flugelhorn. Lyrics include: In 1989, Carpenter arranged, produced and performed on Scott Grimes's eponymous debut album. In 1996, at the suggestion of music writer
Daniel Levitin, Carpenter recorded and released
Richard Carpenter: Pianist, Arranger, Composer, Conductor, which included reworkings of many Carpenters favorites, including hits and album tracks, and ends with "Karen's Theme", which Carpenter composed for the television film
The Karen Carpenter Story (1989). Carpenter released the DVDs
Gold: Greatest Hits (2002), a repackaging of the
VHS/
Betamax Yesterday Once More (released in 1985, two years after Karen's death in 1983) that contains all the videos from
Yesterday Once More, and
Interpretations (2003), which updates the original, VHS/cassette tape released in 1995 and includes footage from the Carpenters' five TV specials and TV series from 1971 to 1980. The DVD follows the compilation album of the same name, which had been released earlier the same year, and includes eleven Carpenters' tracks never before available on DVD (including "From This Moment On", an outtake from the Carpenters' fifth television special), all of them digitally enhanced and remastered in stereo audio. On his 62nd birthday in October 2008, at a luncheon for The Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan, Carpenter announced plans for "his career comeback – dubbed 'Richard Carpenter Strikes Back'"—which included "the re-release of a Carpenters Christmas album and a tribute album featuring other versions of Carpenters songs."
Documentaries The 43-minute film
Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (1987) was directed by
Todd Haynes and was withdrawn from circulation in 1990, after Haynes lost a
copyright infringement lawsuit filed by Richard. The film's title is derived from
the Carpenters' 1971 hit song, "
Superstar". Over the years, it has developed into a
cult film and is included in
Entertainment Weekly's 2003 list of top 50 cult movies. Carpenter helped in the productions of the documentaries
Close to You: Remembering the Carpenters (1997) and
Only Yesterday: The Carpenters Story (2007). The most recent documentary is
Karen Carpenter: Starving for Perfection (2023) on
Amazon Prime.
Scholarship/talent show Carpenter funds an annual scholarship/talent show for people with artistic abilities that is held at the Thousand Oaks Civic Center. ==Musical instruments==