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The secret of Marvin Hamlisch's success? The 'mazel factor'

The legendary, multi-award-winning composer/conductor is the creator of some of the best-known American show tunes.

September 27, 2011 10:23
Hamlisch: conductor of six orchestras

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

4 min read

The lyrics from his 1978 musical They're Playing Our Song - "Oh ho, they're playing my song, oh yeah, they're playing my song" - seem to be an apt way to describe Marvin Hamlisch. The legendary, multi-award-winning composer/conductor is the creator of some of the best-known American show tunes. He has written compositions and musical adaptations for approximately 45 film scores, including The Way We Were, an adaptation of Scott Joplin's ragtime music for The Sting - famously winning a combination of three Oscars in one night for both films - and Nobody Does It Better (the theme from the Bond movie, The Spy Who Loved Me). He is one of 13 people to have received all four of the major entertainment awards - Emmys, Grammys, Oscars, and Tonys, as well as Golden Globes and a Pulitzer Prize. Given his prodigious output, it is a fair assumption that somebody, somewhere is playing his song.

Sitting in a quiet, discreet room at the Ivy Club in Soho, close to the Theatre Royal Drury Lane where the London production of his musical, A Chorus Line, was first performed in 1976, Hamlisch explains that he is in town for just 24 hours. He will be returning in early October for a couple of concerts; firstly conducting Idina Menzel at the Royal Albert Hall and then performing for one evening with the singer Maria Friedman.

Hamlisch came from a very musical family. His parents moved to New York from Vienna and he says he was "thrown into music because my father was a musician; [he was an accordion player and a bandleader]. There was the piano, and that's how it began".

From an early age it was obvious he had talent. "I had a good ear for music and took to it very quickly." He could imitate what he heard, from his sister's piano lessons to songs on the radio. Just before he was seven he auditioned for the famed Juilliard School of Music, in New York, showing that he could play a contemporary hit song in any key.