Education
Leigh, born in the Bronx, New York, graduated from Hunter College High School, Queens College and New York University, and worked as a copy writer for radio stations and advertising agencies.
Leigh, born in the Bronx, New York, graduated from Hunter College High School, Queens College and New York University, and worked as a copy writer for radio stations and advertising agencies.
Always writing stories and poems, in 1951, when urged to write songs by a musical publisher who gave her a contract, she wrote I"m Waiting Just for You with Henry Glover, and two years later, Young at Heart. Her lyrics for Broadway shows include Peter Pan, Wildcat, Little Maine, and How Now, Dow Jones. The last was derived from an original idea of Leigh"s, though Max Shulman wrote the script.
In 1969 she wrote the lyrics for the musical "Gatsby" with the score by Lee Pockriss and the book by Hugh Wheeler.
She also wrote the lyrics for two other unproduced musicals, two other unproduced shows, Caesar’s Wife, again with music by Pockriss, about Caesar’s third wife, Calpurnia, and Juliet, based on the Fellini movie Juliet of the Spirits, with music by Morton Gould. At the time of her death, she was working with Marvin Hamlisch on the musical, Smile.
Leigh died on November 19, 1983, of a heart attack. How Now, Dow Jones (1968) - Tony Award for Best Original Score.