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Marvin Hamlisch (born June 2, 1944) is a successful composer of film scores.//Hamlisch was born in New York City to Viennese Jewish parents. His was a musical family with his father being an accordionist and bandleader. Marvin Hamlisch was something of a child prodigy and by age five he began mimicking music he heard on the radio on the piano. A few months before he turned seven, in 1951, he became the youngest person ever accepted to the Juilliard School. However anxiety issues kept him from pursuing a career as a concert pianist leading him to instead focus on composition, specifically for film and theater.Although Liza Minnelli's debut album included a song he did in his teens, his first hit did not come until he was 21 years old. This song was done by Lesley Gore, in the form of Sunshine, Lollipops, and Rainbows. (The song, in Lesley Gore's version, later figured prominently in the "Marge on the Lam" episode of The Simpsons) His first film score was for The Swimmer although he had done some music for films as early as 1965. Later he did music for some of Woody Allen's early films like Take the Money and Run.The 1970s would be his peak period as a composer. This is most true of the first half of the decade. The best known work he did in this period might be adaptations of Scott Joplin's ragtime music for the motion picture The Sting, including its theme song, "The Entertainer". In award terms he had his greatest success with The Way We Were in 1974. For that he won two of his three 1974 Academy Awards. He also won 4 Grammy Awards in 1974, two of them for "The Way We Were." He continued having hits in the late 1970s after this. He co-wrote "Nobody Does It Better" with his then-wife Carole Bayer Sager. It went on to be nominated for an Oscar in 1977. He also had Broadway success with A Chorus Line and a score for a Neil Simon play
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Event NEWS :- |
LL, P.E. INDUCTED INTO L.I. MUSIC HALL: Rap acts go in with other Long Island products Pat Benatar, and Marvin Hamlisch.
*LL Cool J and Public Enemy were among a number of artists from Long Island who were inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame Thursday night during a star-studded gala at the Garden City Hotel.
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Taking a bite out of Broadway
Who is Neil Berg? And why are several dozen shimmering alumni of Broadway musicals constantly orbiting around him, like planets around a sun?
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Florence Henderson: All The Lives of Me...A Musical Journey
November 06, 2008 Reviewed by David Finkle Midway through All the Lives of Me ... A Musical Journey , the autobiographical act currently occupying Feinstein's at Loews Regency, Florence Henderson sings "Eight Shows a Week" by musical director-accompanist Glen Roven and Bruce Vilanch.
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'Role Models' has 'surprisingly strong finish'
Rating: 2 1/2 stars (fair-good) Like "Soul Men," this week's other crass comedy with loads of heart, "Role Models" wobbles like crazy en route to a surprisingly strong finish. In this case the film-saving sequence is a medieval battle re-enactment, full of Dungeons & Dragons freaks spouting phony Elizabethan argot. The sweetest of the obsessives, Augie, is played by Christopher Mintz-Plasse, ...
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New on DVD this week
GET SMART (2008, Warner, PG-13, $29) — In Hollywood's latest TV-to-movie transfer, Maxwell Smart (Steve Carell) is marooned behind a desk, at least until he and Agent 99 (Anne Hathaway) are unexpectedly tasked with saving the world from the evil spy group KAOS. Would you believe that Carell and Hathaway have a nice chemistry and manage to turn a Tango contest into the film's comic highpoint?
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