Songwriter: Michael Bolton Doug James

Producer: Mike Piccirillo Gary Goetzman

All my life
I wondered if love would ever show
In your eyes
I found all I ever need to know

Feeling the love I've always missed
Feeling you touch my heart like this
All of the emptiness of yesterday
Seems so far away

At last you’re mine
And in the love we make together
You and I will find
Love enough to last forever
'Til the end of time
You're the one I’ve waited for
At last you're mine

Loving you
Feels like a dream I've had so long
Coming true
And I won't be dreamin' from now on

Everything I've been waiting for
You give it all and so much more
Now with my heart in your hand
You're taking me where I wanna be

At last you're mine
And in the love we make together
You and I will find
Love enough to last forever
’Til the end of time
You’re the one I've waited for
At last you’re mine

Feeling you touch my heart like this
Feeling the love I've always missed
I thought with my heart if tomorrow never comes
Forever has just begun

(At last you're mine)
At last you're mine
(You and I will find)
You and I will find
Love enough to last forever
’Til the end of time
You're the one I've waited for
At last you're mine

At last you're mine
In the love we make together
You and I will find
Love enough to last forever
'Til the end of time
You're the one I've waited for
At last you're mine

At last you're mine
You and I will find

Cheryl Lynn

Cheryl Lynn (born Lynda Cheryl Smith; March 11, 1957) is an American singer. She is best known for her songs during the late 1970s through the mid-1980s, including the 1978 R&B/disco song “Got to Be Real”. Lynn’s singing career began with her church choir when she was a girl. Her professional singing career started in 1976 when she obtained a job as a backing vocalist for the national touring company of the musical drama The Wiz. Eventually she obtained the role of Evillene, the Wicked Witch of the West, during the six-month national tour.

Prior to her appearance in The Wiz, Lynn taped an episode of The Gong Show during early 1976. She scored a perfect 30 singing Joe Cocker’s “You Are So Beautiful”; a previous act (a singing juggler) had also scored 30, and in the audience applause tie-break the juggler was deemed the winner. After the episode was broadcast, during the fall of 1976, record industry executives were interested in contracting her.