Record is in great shape the sleeve has wear on corners and edge. Shipped the next business day! We own a small family book store and sell our extra books and media that have been on our shelves for too long.
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Product description: Lyricist and composer Lionel Bart created the delightful '60s hit musical Oliver! and wrote the theme song for the 1963 James Bond movie From Russia With Love. Bart is credited with helping to revive the English musical. Born Lionel Beglieter in 1932, the son of a Jewish tailor in London's East End, Bart had no formal musical education. Becoming a successful songwriter, he wrote hit songs for Tommy Steele and Anthony Newley. Bart's first musical, Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be, premiered in 1959 and ran for two years in London. Another musical, Lock up Your Daughters, opened the same year. In 1960 his signature work Oliver! opened. Based on Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist, the musical was an immediate success. The long-running play had two successful revivals in 1967 and 1977. A New York version of the play opened on January 6, 1963, and was a Broadway hit, earning Bart a Tony Award. More Bart musicals followed: Blitz! in 1962, Maggie May in 1964, Twang! in 1965, and La Strada in 1969. In an ill-advised move, Bart sold his rights to Oliver! and other properties, in part to finance a musical about Robin Hood, Twang!, in 1965. In 1968, Columbia Pictures released the movie version of Oliver!. Directed by Carol Reed, the film starred Ron Moody as Fagin, Jack Wild as the Artful Dodger, Oliver Reed as Bill Sykes, Shani Wallis as Nancy, and Mark Lester as Oliver. A huge hit, the film received 11 Academy Award nominations including Best Actor (Ron Moody), Best Supporting Actor (Jack Wild), and Best Adapted Screenplay (Vernon Gilbert Harris), and won for Best Picture, Art Direction (Terence Marsh, Ken Muggleston), Sound (John Cox), Musical Score (John Green), and Choreography (Onna White). The Oliver! soundtrack album includes some of the most enduring music from the Broadway stage: "Consider Yourself," "Food," the often-covered "Where Is Love?," and others.