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Bart, Lionel (1930-1999)
 

Composer, Writer

Main image of Bart, Lionel (1930-1999)

Though unable to read music, East-Ender Lionel Bart (born on 1 August 1930) had a very successful career in West End musicals, above all with Oliver!, a famously tuneful if morally and dramatically diluted version of Oliver Twist. Very much a phenomenon of the '60s, he never reached again the heights of Oliver! which was adapted to Oscar-winning effect by Carol Reed in 1968, and by the early '70s he was bankrupt.

His first film score was for The Tommy Steele Story (d. Gerard Bryant, 1957); he wrote the title song for From Russia with Love (d. Terence Young, 1963); and his own stage musical, the period romp Lock Up Your Daughters!, was filmed in 1969 (d. Peter Coe), though not with his songs, which were replaced by a Ron Grainer score.

Brian McFarlane, Encyclopedia of British Film

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Selected credits

Thumbnail image of From Russia With Love (1963)From Russia With Love (1963)

James Bond battles Russian dissidents for control of a vital decoding device

Thumbnail image of Oliver! (1968)Oliver! (1968)

Lionel Bart's Oscar-winning musical adaptation of Dickens' Oliver Twist

Thumbnail image of Sparrows Can't Sing (1962)Sparrows Can't Sing (1962)

Lively slice of East End life starring a pre-Carry On Barbara Windsor

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