Oscar Hammerstein II died on August 23, 1960 at the age of 65.
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Oscar Hammerstein II died on August 23, 1960 at the age of 65.
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Salute to Oscar Hammerstein II - 1972 TV was released on:
USA: 3 July 1972
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Out of My Dreams Oscar Hammerstein II - 2012 TV was released on:
USA: 3 March 2012
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Oscar Hammerstein has written:
'Songs of Oscar Hammerstein II' -- subject(s): Excerpts, Vocal scores with piano, Musicals
'You'll Never Walk Alone'
'The complete lyrics of Oscar Hammerstein II' -- subject(s): Librettos, Excerpts, Songs, Musicals, Texts
'Rodgers and Hammerstein's in my own little corner' -- subject(s): Children's songs, Songs and music, Texts, Songs, Imagination
'The Oscar Hammerstein II Collection'
'Rodgers and Hammerstein's The surrey with the fringe on top' -- subject(s): Children's songs, Texts, Songs
'Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II'
'Carousel'
'Lyrics' -- subject(s): Librettos, Excerpts, Popular music, Musicals, Texts
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The only Oscar to win an Oscar was the famed lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II.
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The well-known duo known as Rogers & Hammerstein. Richard Rogers composed the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics.
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Richard Rodgers composed the music ... Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics.
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Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II (and Joshua Logan) won the 1950 Pulitzer Prize in Drama for the musical, South Pacific. Rodgers and Hammerstein also won a 1944 Special Citation from the Pulitzer Board for their contribution to music.
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Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the musical Allegro in 1947. Allegro opened on Broadway that year in October. After this musical they continued to make more successful musicals.
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Oscar Hammerstein II was Jewish. He was born into a Jewish family, and his religious background influenced some of the themes and messages in his work as a lyricist and librettist for musical theater.
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Richard Rogers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote all of the lyrics and the book(script)
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Richard Rogers and Oscar Hammerstein
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mentor, he recognized Sondheim's talent and worked with him to develop it
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Richard Rodgers wrote the music; Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics. The story is from a novel by Philip Stong, adapted for the screen by Hammerstein and, perhaps, others.
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Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers
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The cast of The Legacy of Rodgers and Hammerstein - 2006 includes: Ted Chapin as himself Oscar Hammerstein II as himself Laurence Maslon as himself Bruce Pomahac as himself Richard Rodgers as himself
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Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and music by Richard Rodgers, from their show "Carousel."
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Oscar hammerstein II and Richard rodgers
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"The King and I" was written by the American musical theater duo Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. It premiered on Broadway in 1951.
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"State Fair" (1945). He shared the Best Original Song award for "It Might As Well Be Spring" with his longtime collaborator Oscar Hammerstein II.
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Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan shared a 1950 Pulitzer Prize in Drama for South Pacific.
Rodgers and Hammerstein also won a 1944 Pulitzer Special Award for their musical score and lyrics for Oklahoma.
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Richard Rodgers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics to the Broadway musical "The Sound of Music" in 1959. It became an Oscar-winning movie in 1965.
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Hammerstein's son jimmy went to school with Sondheim. they became friends and when Sondheim met jimmy's father, they connected. Sondheim didn't know his own father and held his mother in contempt (the feeling was mutual) so the Hammerstein's became like his adoptive family. When Sondheim was a teenager he decided he wanted to go into Oscar Hammerstein's line of work and from then on was mentored in the art of composing and writing lyrics and all other things theatre by Hammerstein.
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The PLAY was written and produced by the (Tolerance Twins) Dick Rogers and Oscar Hammerstein, who seemed to gravitate to offbeat and controversial plot lines- for example the admixture of studied ugliness in (Oklahoma), the Race-Mixing angle in South Pacific, and so on. The tale was inspired in part by the factual Von Trapp family but the play, as usual took some liberties with the facts as artistic license., Oddly a road company variant- identical in script, songs, characters, bore the different title-though very descriptive, (One Family Sings). I saw this in Williamsport, Pa. in l962 and it turned me off like a dead battery. so called Musical comedy had much music but almost negatory comedy touches.
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Rodgers and Hammerstein works are handled by RNH.
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Rodgers and Hammerstein met in college studying art and music.
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mentor, he recognized Sondheim's talent and worked with him to develop it
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The music was composed by Jerome Kern, with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II.
It comprises two acts based on a novel written by Edna Ferber.
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The cast of Salute to Oscar Hammerstein II - 1972 includes: Milton Berle as himself Janet Blair as herself Jean Fenn as herself Larry Hagman as himself Oscar Hammerstein II as himself Helen Hayes as herself Celeste Holm as herself Yaphet Kotto as himself Burt Lancaster as himself Johnny Mercer as himself Ricardo Montalban as himself Harve Presnell as himself John Raitt as himself Dinah Shore as herself Robert Stack as himself Leslie Uggams as herself Miyoshi Umeki as herself Ray Walston as himself Robert Young as Himself - Host
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The corn is as high as an elephant's eye, and it looks like it's climbin' clear up to the sky! Lyric by Oscar Hammerstein II.
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"Getting to Know You" is a song from the musical "The King and I," written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. It is typically performed by the character Anna Leonowens in the musical.
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For the same reason Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the poem "Climb Every Mountain." It's a song lyric, intended to be performed as a song during a theatrical performance. In Shakespeare's case, this is As You Like It; in Hammerstein's, The Sound of Music.
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Richard Rodgers partnered with two other men at different times: Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein II.
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Music composed by Jerome Kern, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein.
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