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Charles Dickens
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CHARLES DICKENS'
Dickens writes "Oliver Twist"
"Oliver!"
Book, Music & Lyrics by
Lionel Bart
The curtain opens on the sinister interior of the workhouse with a bare
dining table, center stage, where the boys will sit. These pale-faced wretches
can be seen peering through the bars of a door at the back. Looming above
two curving stairways glows the legend "God Is Love" in rough letters. The
door is opened and the boys file to the table and sing Food, Glorious Food.
At the end of the song, the Widow Corney, who runs the workhouse and
Mr. Bumble, the parish beadle, enter and a thin gruel is served. Wolfing the
meagre fare, the boys hopelessly stack their bowls, but the hapless Oliver
approaches Bumble with the entreaty; "Please sir, I want some more." He is
instantly subdued. Oliver is locked behind the barred door as the rest of the
boys exit upstairs.
Oliver is brought forward, bag and baggage, and is led off by Bumble who
sings the haunting Boy for Sale. Walking through the streets of London, they
arrive at Mr. Sowerberry's, the undertaker. Oliver is "sold" to the undertaker.
Alone and frightened and surrounded by coffins on stage, he sings the plain-
tive Where Is Love?
Oliver runs away the very next morning, and is picked up hungry and tired
in the streets by the Artful Dodger who cheers him up with Consider Yourself.
The Dodger leads him through crowded streets to Fagin's kitchen. The boys
come in and Fagin himself appears and, with a mock solemn welcome to
Oliver, sings the fantastic You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two. Nancy, Bill
Sikes' girl and Bet arrive. The two of them, accompanied by the boys and ,
Fagin, celebrate their way of life in It's a Fine Life. The action moves to the
next morning when Fagin sends the boys off on a pocket-picking expedition,
Oliver among them. The stage now displays a city scene and we witness the
capture of Oliver, not for picking pockets, but for simply looking guilty. Oom.Pah-Pah. Fagin's boys pour down the stairs telling of Oliver's apprehension by the police, at the same time revealing that his innocence has been established and that he is presently ensconced in the home of a rich old gentleman. Fearful lest he give away their set-up, Fagin and Sikes dispatch Nancy
to get 0liver back.
Meanwhile, at the home of his new-found benefactor, the erstwhile ragged
Oliver has become a well-tailored, well-cared for little lad. Looking out of his
bedroom window he observes some passing street vendors crying their
wares; he sings Who Will Buy? A plea that his good luck and new situation
in life will be permanent. However, the moment he sets foot outside his benefactor's house, Oliver is seized and dragged off by Nancy to Fagin's.
In the next scene Fagin occupies the empty stage and considers going
straight in Reviewing the Situation. Subsequently, Bumble and Mrs. Corney,
now uncomfortably married, discover that Oliver is the scion of a rich family. Their scheme to get him back fails and Nancy, regretting her part in the
capture of Oliver, plans to return him to his benefactor at night on London
Bridge. Fearful of Sikes, she reprises As Long as He Neeqs Me. Sikes stalks
her and kills her. He grabs Oliver and, after a chase, is himself shot dead.
Oliver is restored to his benefactor and Fagin, now without boys, home and
money, reprises Reviewing the Situation.
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