The song was produced by Quincy Jones, who also worked with Michael Jackson and Frank Sinatra. When speaking of Jones in a 2008 interview with Pop Entertainment, Gore said, "This is a man who had exhaustive talents in the jazz world. He had already arranged for Dinah Washington and Count Basie. He was going to steer me down a road that was a little bit more of what he enjoyed as well. We found a roadway that brought Quincy's unique talents to the simplification of a pop song. However he got a performance out of me, he did. Three takes later, we were finished."
In addition to creating iconic music, Gore became a prominent figure in the LGBT+ community. She was with her partner, Lois Sasson, for over 30 years, until Gore passed away. In the 2000s, she also hosted several episodes of In the Life, a television show focused on LGBT+ issues.
"I did officially come out, and that would be on The Life,” she explained. “I only hosted a few of them, but I told them that I would be proud to come out, because the show is such a huge help to so many people in the interior of this country. It felt pretty natural by that time. And I also thought, if somebody has a problem with it, well, too bad.”
Gore passed away in 2015 at the age of 68 after a battle with lung cancer.
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