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It’s a fine life playing Fagin

Comedian Steve Furst is revelling in the role of the Dickensian villan. Francine White meets him

November 30, 2023 16:43
Oliver!  Musical performed at the Playhouse Theatre, Leeds, UK
©ALASTAIR MUIR Contact alastair@alastairmuir.com

ByFrancine White, Francine White

4 min read

As Musicals go, Lionel Bart’s Oliver! has a lot to commend it: a great story and instantly memorable songs. The 1968 film version starring Ron Moody won six Oscars. There’s just the issue of Charles Dickens’s villain, the Jewish crook Fagin. Yes, he’s played for laughs, but don’t we all prefer it when a Jew is trusted with the part?


Rest assured, Fagin in the new Leeds Playhouse production is the Jewish comedian Steve Furst. He is no stranger to musicals having starred in Matilda and Made In Dagenham in London’s West End. He’s well-known as a comedian and actor having appeared in scores of TV shows, notably Little Britain and Manhunt. His talents also extend to radio presenting and writing.


Furst, 56, who often performs as his alter-ego Lenny Beige, has a face born for comedy — lugubrious, both melancholic and gleeful. Like a lot of comedians, he’s absolutely serious in conversation; thoughtful but open and friendly.


He grew up in north London and performing is in his DNA. “My father, Janos Furst, was a Hungarian Jew from Budapest and was a conductor and a fiddle player. He was orphaned during the Second World War — one of his parents died in a camp and the other was shot. But he stayed in Hungary because he was a prodigy.