While working with The Monkees, Boyce and Hart embarked on a successful career as recording artists in their own right, releasing three albums on
A&M Records:
Test Patterns, ''I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight
, and It's All Happening on the Inside
(released in Canada as Which One's Boyce and Which One's Hart?''). The duo also had five charting singles; the most well-known of these was "
I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight", which reached No. 8 in early 1968. It sold over one million copies and was awarded a
gold disc. "Out & About" (#39) and "Alice Long" (#27) were their other
Top 40 hits. The duo also performed "I'll Blow You a Kiss in the Wind" on the television show
Bewitched, in one of several TV series appearances that included guest spots on
The Flying Nun and
I Dream of Jeannie ("Jeannie the Hip Hippie" performing "Girl, I'm Out To Get You"). All of these shows were produced by
Screen Gems, the television subsidiary of
Columbia Pictures. Each of the three sitcom guest appearances featured their music, including two unreleased covers they performed on
The Flying Nun. Boyce and Hart had filmed video promos for their songs "Out and About" and "Alice Long". Boyce and Hart were involved in producing music for Columbia Pictures' motion pictures during the mid-late 1960s, including two
Matt Helm movies (
The Ambushers and ''
Murderers' Row), Winter A-Go-Go
and Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows
. They also provided the music score for a TV movie called Three's a Crowd'' starring
Larry Hagman and
Jessica Walter. Boyce and Hart did promos for the U.S. Army Reserve and Coca-Cola. This included the creation of two Coca-Cola commercial jingles, one being a powerful psychedelic song, "Wake Up Girl", while the other was their single "Smilin'" with totally different lyrics. In 1971 a sitcom named
Getting Together appeared on
ABC-TV, starring
Bobby Sherman and
Wes Stern as two struggling songwriters, who were friends of
The Partridge Family (and were introduced on their show in the last episode of the show's first season). The series was reportedly based loosely on Boyce and Hart's partnership. At this point, they decided to work on various solo projects. Hart co-wrote the 1974
Helen Reddy hit "
Keep On Singing" with Danny Janssen. ==Dolenz, Jones, Boyce, and Hart==