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  2. Frederick Loewe (/ ˈ l oʊ /, originally German Friedrich (Fritz) Löwe German pronunciation:; June 10, 1901 – February 14, 1988) was an American composer.

  3. Frederick Loewe (born June 10, 1901, Berlin, Germany—died February 14, 1988, Palm Springs, California, U.S.) was a German-born American composer and collaborator with Alan Jay Lerner on a series of hit musical plays, including the phenomenally successful My Fair Lady (1956; filmed 1964).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Welcome to the official website for composer Frederick Loewe. Song folios. Dedicated to the genius of Frederick Loewe, composer. of many of the finest musicals of all time.

    • For The Record…
    • Restroom Confusion Led to Meeting
    • Wrote The Fairest One of All
    • Loewe Retired, Lerner Moved on
    • Selected Scores
    • Sources

    Alan Jay Lemer born August 31, 1918, in New York, NY; died June 14, 1986; son of Joseph and Edith Lerner; married Ruth Boyd, 1940 (divorced 1947); married Marion Bell, 1947 (divorced 1950); married Nancy Olson, 1950 (divorced 1957); married Micheline Muselli Posso de Borgo, 1957 (divorced 1965); married Karen Gundersen, 1966 (divorced 1974); marrie...

    In his autobiography, The Street Where I Live, Lerner described how he met Fritz Loewe: “One day late in August of 1942, I was having lunch in the grill [of the Lambs Club] when a short, well built, tightly strung man with a large head and hands and immensely dark circles under his eyes strode to a few feet from my table and stopped short. His dest...

    For Lerner and Loewe, putting on a show was much more than simply writing melodies and lyrics for songs. They not only had to find backers, but also all of the other people to make a show work. When they decided to turn George Bernard Shaw’s play Pygmalion into My Fair Lady, they put together more than the score. They hand picked the cast, director...

    After Camelot, Lerner and Loewe separated. Fritz Loewe retired to enjoy the money he had worked to so hard to earn, dividing his time between his house in Palm Springs, California, and the Mediterranean coast. He told the New York Times, “Too many people have gone in for this senseless chasing of rainbows. How many rainbows does one need?… [I am] h...

    Stage

    Life of the Party,1942. What’s Up,1943. The Day Before Spring,1945. Brigadoon,1946. Paint Your Wagon,1951. My Fair Lady,1956. Camelot,1960. Gigi,1973.

    Film

    Gigi,1958. My Fair Lady,1964. Camelot,1968. Paint Your Wagon,1969.

    Scores by Alan Lerner

    (With Burton Lane) On a Clear Day You Can See Forever,1965. (With Andre Previn) Coco,1969. (With Leonard Bernstein) 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue,1976. (With Charles Strouse) Dance A Little Closer,1983.

    Books

    Ewen, David, Great Men Of American Popular Song,Prentice-Hall, 1970. Lees, Gene, Inventing Champagne: The Worlds of Lerner and Loewe, St. Martin’s, 1990. Lerner, Alan Jay, A Hymn to Him: Lyrics of Alan Jay Lerner,edited by Benny Green, Pavilion Books, 1987. Lerner, Alan Jay, The Musical Theater: A Celebration,McGraw Hill, 1986. Lerner, Alan Jay, The Street Where I Live,W. W. Norton, 1978. The New Grove Dictionary of American Music,edited by H. Wiley Hitchcock and Stanley Sadie, Macmillan, 1986.

    Periodicals

    New York Times,October 1, 1964; July 9, 1993; January 9, 1994. New Yorker,January 17, 1994. Newsweek,June 23, 1986; December 20, 1993. Time,July 21, 1986; January 10, 1994. Variety,February 17, 1988. —Robin Armstrong

  5. Lerner and Loewe is the partnership between lyricist and librettist Alan Jay Lerner and composer Frederick Loewe. Spanning three decades and nine musicals from 1942 to 1960 and again from 1970 to 1972, the pair are known for being behind the creation of critical on stage successes such as My Fair Lady , Brigadoon , and Camelot along with the ...

  6. By the age of 15, "Fritz" had composed a hit popular song, "Katrina", and was getting considerable attention as a promising young piano virtuoso. Like the young Kurt Weill, who was one year his senior, Loewe studied in Berlin with the great Italian-German composer and pianist Ferruccio Busoni.

  7. Austrian-American composer Frederick Loewe (b. Berlin, Germany, June 10, 1904; d. Palm Springs, California, February 14, 1988) was the creator, along with American librettist and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, of some of the most durable and beloved works of the American musical theatre in the twentieth century.

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