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By Terry Miller
Marvin Hamlisch, composer of ‘ A Chorus Line’ is dead at 68. The incredibly prolific composer who was also best known for songs like “ The Way We Were” collapsed after a brief illness and died Monday evening.
In a career that covered film, television, theater and recorded music, Hamlisch won every award possible. He was a 12-time Academy Award nominee, for his score and song contributions to films as varied as “The Spy Who Loved Me” and “Sophie’s Choice” and a three-time Oscar winner for the score of “The Sting”. He won four Emmy Awards, four Grammy Awards and a Tony Award for his score to the musical “A Chorus Line.”
Hamlisch had just started with the Pasadena Pops and as the season has been so successful at the new location for the Pops, Hamlish had just signed for three more years as the conductor.
During a press conference announcing his new gig as Pops Conductor earlier this summer Hamlisch showed not only his marvelous talent on the piano but also his branded sense of humor kept the small gathering in stitches.
Hamlisch held the title of principal pops conductor for the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, the Pasadena Symphony and Pops, and the Seattle Symphony and the San Diego Symphony.
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