Friday 24 December 2021

Luminescence shines at Wesley


“Magnificat”

Luminescence Chamber Choir conducted by Roland Peelman

in association with the 

Canberra International Music Festival

Wesley Uniting Church, December 18.

Reviewed by Tony Magee

My first piano teacher, Wilfrid Holland, introduced me to his two cats, Magnificat and Oedipus when I was nine years old. 


I had an inkling that Magnificat must have been special, but it was some years later before I discovered the magnificence of musical settings bearing that name.


Conductor Roland Peelman - held choir in tight command. Photo: Peter Hislop


Singing Renaissance settings of the Magnificat, the Ave Maria and the Motet form, Luminescence swept the audience through the sublime and tender, delivering music so beautiful and uplifting, in glorious pitch-perfect polyphony.


6.30pm, show time, and the heavens opened with torrential rain, hail and thunder. The sound was deafening on the roof of Wesley. We patently waited 15 minutes.


Beginning with a short “Ave Maria” by Jean Mouton (c1459-1522), the singers enveloped the audience with exquisite sound in a mellifluous opening.


Robert Fayrfax (1464-1521) composed “Magnificat ‘O Bone Jesu’” in 1500. The choir performed his intricate polyphonic setting beautifully, the piece showcasing the combination of older style bare fifths cadence points contrasted with the modern, for the time, addition of thirds and sixths in the harmony.


The grand master of Renaissance choral composition, Joaquin Desprez (1450-1521) had a reputation for being difficult to get along with, erratic on delivery and very expensive when commissioned. Patrons of the day however turned to him when perfection was required.


His “Ave Maria, Virgo Serena” followed by the Motet “Illibata Dei Virgo Nutrix” displayed a towering compositional style, the choir capturing the essence of his lavish and sumptuous harmonies with authority and grace.


The final two pieces were delayed once more by another massive storm, this time with high winds driving the rain sideways through the ventilation shafts of the church and onto the audience seated on the right hand pews. A quick evacuation saw them re-seated to the left.


The “Ave Maria” setting by Robert Parsons (1535-1572) was composed around 1570. In this, the singers captured the delicacy of the piece wonderfully, with stylish delivery of harmony and counterpoint.


Luminescence Chamber Choir at Wesley. Photo: Peter Hislop


To close, a “Magnificat” from another master of the period, Michael Praetorius (1571-1621). This large and complex work was composed in 1611 and the choir performed the intricate polyphony in a commanding and elevated manner. 


The piece moves from quarter time to triple time in a number of places, the choir making the tempo and time changes with precision. In the finale, conductor and CIMF artistic director Roland Peelman extracted a magnificent crescendo from the performers which was exhilarating.


Throughout the concert, Peelman held the choir in tight command, his knowledge and commanding familiarity of the music being a key part of the success of this wonderful Christmas event. 


Peelman himself almost didn’t make it. His flight from Belgium arriving only days before was thought to have contained an Omicron-infected passenger and he was ordered to quarantine for two weeks. Only yesterday was he informed this was a mistake and he was cleared to conduct.


At the conclusion of this wonderful concert showcasing music dedicated to the glory of God, there was a general air of “we actually made it” from the performers, the audience and this reviewer. 


One was left feeling the weight of that old adage, God Works in Mysterious Ways.



First published in Canberra City News online edition, December 19, 2021


Also published at Canberra Critics Circle, December 24, 2021




Thursday 9 December 2021

Jaguar triumphs at Terribly British Day!

by Tony Magee

QUEANBEYAN Park was the venue for the British Motor Show on Sunday December 5. An excellent choice, the park offers great tree coverage and lovely grassy areas.

Hosted by the Triumph Car Club of the ACT in association with the Council of ACT Motor Clubs and dubbed the “Terribly British Day”, the event saw hundreds of people gather to view the many British marques on display.


E-type Jaguars on display at the Terribly British Day, Queanbeyan Park. Photo: Bob Sawyer

Included in the lineup were models from MG, Morris, Austin Healey, Rolls Royce, Bentley, Aston Martin, Triumph, Rover, Rochdale, Lotus, Jaguar and of course the iconic Mini. Several 1275 Coopers were included in the Mini display. Readers may remember those with fondness, the model being the featured get-away vehicles in the 1969 movie The Italian Job, starring Michael Caine.


To mark the 60th anniversary of the Jaguar E-Type, many owners lined up an impressive array of cars, all in beautiful restored condition. Judges deemed the Jaguar display top of the billing.


The E-type was first released in 1961 and production ran through to 1975.


With a top speed of 241 km/h and zero to 100 km/h acceleration in just under 7 seconds, its combination of beauty, high performance, and competitive pricing established the model as an icon of the motoring world.


Upon release, Enzo Ferrari is claimed to have called it “the most beautiful car ever made”.


Guests of honour, retiring Mayor of Queanbeyan-Palerang Cr Tim Overall and his wife Nichole Overall were chauffeured to the event in style using two E-type Jaguars.


Austin 7 Woody, "Splinter". Photo: Cheryl Olley


Several vintage vehicles were also on display, including a 1929 Austin 7 Woody, named Splinter! Restored and built by Gordon and Marilyn Love, it is now owned by Bob and Carolyn Hogan.


For racing enthusiasts, a 1968 Chevron B15B AM08 made an appearance, the car having been driven to many victories in the USA and Europe by Niki Lauda.


Proceeds from the event were donated  to Respite Care for Queanbeyan.




Warm welcome for youth orchestra's debut


“An Evening of Fairytales”

ACT Youth Orchestra with the Dance Development Centre

National Portrait Gallery

December 8, 2021


Reviewed by Tony Magee


Almost 200 guests crowded the foyer of the National Portrait Gallery to witness and enjoy the premiere performance of Canberra’s newest youth music ensemble, ACT Youth Orchestra, conducted by Rowan Harvey Martin.


Dancers from Dance Development Centre with members of the ACT Youth Orchestra 
in a sequence from Tchaikovsky's "Sleeping Beauty"


They were joined later in the program by Dance Development Centre, artistic director and choreographer Jackie Hallahan.


Orchestra Patron Lieutenant Colonel Ian McLean (ret.) AM, CSC welcomed guests and introduced His Excellency Dr Alexey V. Pavlovsky, Ambassador of the Russian Federation, who spoke with enthusiasm about the formation of a new youth orchestra in Canberra. 


Ambassador Pavlovsky mentioned that it was Tchaikovsky who championed raising music to an equal artistic status as the Bolshoi Ballet, saying that “music of the great composers inspires generation after generation of young players to take up orchestral instruments and share a love of music”, adding “Fairy Tales are the most charming of European cultural traditions”.


Formed at the beginning of November this year, the players managed to prepare an ambitious launch program in just five weeks.


Opening with the overture to Humperdinck’s opera Hänsel and Gretel, the orchestra bounced into life, the players all showing great enthusiasm and dedication as they showcased their accomplishments.


Prokofiev’s ballet setting of Cinderella premiered at the Bolshoi Theatre in November 1945 and is noted for its jubilant music.


Four movements were performed, the third being a beautiful waltz which morphed into “Midnight”, in quarter time, complete with harp glissandos, wood block ticking away as the hour approaches, timpani and piccolo plus the entire ensemble, creating a dramatic buildup to “pumpkin hour”!


Excerpts from “The Sleeping Beauty” by Tchaikovsky saw artists from Canberra Dance Centre join the orchestra for a thrilling finale.


The young dancers were costumed beautifully and performed with style and precision, sweeping through ballet sequences with grace and beauty.


Of note also were the excellent pizzicato passages from cellos and violas, a solid foundation from the contra-bass and well played contributions from the percussion section.


The opportunity to dance with a live orchestra and also for an orchestra to accompany ballet dancers was cherished by all and it was obvious that the union of these two ensembles was a great success and also something extremely special.


In conclusion, I should like to mention that throughout the concert, there were some  tuning and intonation issues within various sections of the orchestra which need to be addressed. In addition, rhythmic accuracy was compromised in places.


These blemishes aside, conductor Rowan Harvey Martin managed to rescue those situations admirably. It is also a credit to the players, that when they were in difficulty, they knew they had a formidable maestro to help them out and continue on successfully.


It is within the pressure of a live performance, with an audience, that real learning can take place.


Administratively, the absence of a program was disappointing. Not only does it make life difficult for the reviewer, but the enjoyment of a concert for the audience is also hindered badly. In addition, a program would have made a great and long lasting memento for such an auspicious occasion.


ACT Youth Orchestra has great potential and this launch concert is to be treasured as a great opening to a great future. It is to be hoped that this will be realised during their exciting and ambitious 2022 program.


An uplifting and joyous end to the year.


Also published in City News, December 9, 2021




Wednesday 8 December 2021

The best of Betty goes under the hammer

Maquette "Bonds of Friendship"

by Meredith Hinchliffe and Tony Magee

WHEN Betty Beaver died in October last year, aged 96, “CityNews” craft writer, Meredith Hinchliffe, described her as “a Canberra arts and music champion”.

Already a trained musician, Betty and her husband Ron Beaver arrived in Canberra during the 1960s, where she taught piano and studied ceramics and design, while helping to found the establishment of the Craft Association of the ACT.

Gallery initiatives began when with daughter Karen, she opened Narek Gallery in Narrabundah, then in the 1970s, Beaver Galleries in Red Hill, which later moved to the purpose-designed gallery complex in Deakin which became a local legend.

Meantime Betty’s musical life continued through the Canberra Recorder and Early Music Society Baroque Ensemble and the Canberra International Music Festival, for whom she commissioned a work from Elena Kats-Chernin titled “Beaver Blaze”, a continuing tradition at the festival.

Hundreds of unique and collectable art pieces from the estate of Betty Beaver went under the hammer last week, December 1, in a massive online auction hosted by AllBids Canberra.

“CityNews” music writer Tony Magee was there to observe…


Potential buyers were able to bid on paintings, etchings, wood carvings, glasswork, ceramics, stoneware, furniture, sculptures, textiles and mixed media.


Among the paintings were “Interior with Platonic Solids”, an oil on canvas by Brian Dunlop and  “Pigeon House Mountain”, an etching and aquatint by Pamela Griffith,  “Thirroul” by Garry Shead, “Relic VI” by John Winch, “We’ll Never Sell” by Leon Pericles. Other artists represented included Dianne Fogwell, Lorna Nimmo, Raymond Leroy, Inga Hunter, John Borrack, Chris J Denton, David Rose, and Jamie Boyd.

Pieces from the collection “Exhibition of Tasmanian Furniture” at Beaver Galleries included a bespoke Tasmanian blackwood and brass armchair. Two sculptural pièces de résistance came in the form of a 48cm bronze torso by Phillip Piperides and a bird steel sculpture by Michael Murphy.

Betty Beaver was a passionate collector of glasswork and many of the beautiful objects sold included a black glass vessel by Mel Douglas and a kiln-formed glass sculpture by Judi Elliott.

Other glasswork included pieces by Peter Docherty, Tom Rowney, Peter Crisp, Knell Engman, Chris Pantano, Maureen Williams, Benjamin Edols & Kathy Elliot, Oiva Toikka, Julio Santos, Colin Heaney and Stanislav Melis.

One of the most interesting pieces was the bronze sculpture, “Bonds of Friendship”, 1980, by John Robinson. The piece being auctioned was the maquette, but there are two much larger outdoor versions in the world by the same artist, one in Portsmouth, UK, and its twin in Sydney.

On pick-up from the O’Malley home, proud new owners were seen meeting and conversing about what they’d added to their collections. A common theme amongst buyers was the joy and honour they felt by now owning a piece from the Betty Beaver Collection.

First published in City News, December 7, 2021


Monday 6 December 2021

With a wink and a nod, Sally maintains the mystery!


The Strawberry Thief for piano trio 

by Sally Greenaway

Live Music Stream

December 3, 2021


Reviewed by TONY MAGEE

Canberra’s Sally Greenaway has revealed, cleverly in reverse order, the final instalment, which is actually the first, of her composition “The Strawberry Thief”.

From left: David Shaw, Edward Neeman and Samuel Payne. Live stream from the Larry Sitsky Recital Room, ANU School of Music.
Video still from camera work by Luke Patterson. Bird animation by Geraldine Martin

The piece opens with sixths and a tonic foundation in C major from the cello, which I interpreted as a cheeky and fleeting nod to Sebastian Bach, followed by tentatively fluttering flute murmurs and gentle piano whispers.


Later, there is also a “wink at you” composer’s nod to Ross Edwards!


This cautious prelude offers a glimpse into the secretive world of the strawberry thief as it begins planning the morning’s activities.


Flute melody floats above, accompanied by rippling piano alternating between major and minor in an effective and supportive accompaniment. Tremolo from the cello morphs into arpeggiated lines, splashed with counterpoint against the flute.


Hearing the trilogy together as a suite in three parts, I began to wonder who or what is said thief? I don’t think foxes like strawberries. Perhaps some of the birds from The Secret Garden? No, there is another mystery being hinted at in the opening piece. Listeners will have to decide who they think that could be.


Edward Neeman on piano, Samuel Payne on cello and David Shaw on flute all played superbly, evocatively bringing to life the essence of the music. In addition, excellent camera work by Luke Patterson and wonderful animations by Geraldine Martin, Matthew Koh and Marisa Martin added immeasurably to the listening experience.


Sound quality for this production was also first rate, engineered by Duncan Lowe and Kimmo Vennonen.


I’ll leave the final words to Scottish composer Greg Harradine, who taking full advantage of the streaming technology, listening live from Edinburgh, aptly commented during the performance, “The Secret Garden is full of understated beauty, a subtle blooming of quiet radiance.”


“The Strawberry Thief Suite” is available on Greenaway’s forthcoming CD, “Delights and Dances” or for purchase via unlimited streaming from sallygreenaway.bandcamp.com


First published in Canberra City News, December 4, 2021




Monday 29 November 2021

Stephen Sondheim, central figure in American musical theatre, dies at 91




By Tim Page

November 26, 2021 at 7:51 p.m. EST


Actress-singer Bernadette Peters, star of Broadway's “Sunday in the Park With George,” leans forward to discuss the recording of the show’s album with composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim, left, and album producer Thomas Z. Shepard in 1984. (Photo: Marty Reichenthal/AP)

Stephen Sondheim, whose intricate and powerful lyrics, venturesome melodies and sweeping stage visions made him a central figure in contemporary American musical theater, died Nov. 26 at his home in Roxbury, Conn. He was 91.


Rick Miramontez, a publicist for the current Broadway production of Mr. Sondheim’s musical “Company,” confirmed his death but did not cite a cause.

In a career spanning more than five decades, Mr. Sondheim was associated with many of the most celebrated and enduring musicals of his time.


He won his initial fame as the lyricist for “West Side Story” (1957), with music by Leonard Bernstein, and followed up by writing the lyrics for Jule Styne’s “Gypsy” (1959). His primary achievement lies in the works for which he created both music and lyrics, including “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” (1962), “Company” (1970), “Follies” (1971), “A Little Night Music” (1973), “Sweeney Todd” (1979), “Sunday in the Park With George” (1984), “Into the Woods” (1987) and “Passion” (1994).


Unlike most of the earlier Broadway songwriters, including George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II (the last of whom was his first great mentor), Mr. Sondheim was less interested in creating stand-alone popular “hits” than in fashioning unified works that maintained a firm, near-operatic structural integrity throughout.


To be sure, earlier Broadway productions had aspired to high seriousness, with Jerome Kern and Hammerstein’s “Show Boat” (1927) and the Gershwins’ “Of Thee I Sing” (1931) at the top of the list. Mr. Sondheim not only bound music, lyrics and book inextricably together, but he explored in far greater depths the human condition in all its anxieties and moral complexities.

His characters could be jaded, ironic, self-lacerating and acerbic, defining character traits captured in lyrics to “Now You Know” from his 1981 musical “Merrily We Roll Along.” The character Mary Flynn, an alcoholic critic and writer, sings:


I mean, big surprise:

People love you and tell you lies.

Bricks can fall out of clear blue skies.

Put your dimple down,

Now you know.

Okay, there you go —

Learn to live with it,

Now you know.

It’s called flowers wilt,

It’s called apples rot,

It’s called thieves get rich and saints get shot,

It’s called God don’t answer prayers a lot,

Okay, now you know.


“Without question, Steve is the best Broadway lyricist, past or present,” the playwright Arthur Laurents, who worked with Mr. Sondheim on four productions, once observed. “Steve is the only lyricist who writes a lyric that could only be sung by the character for which it was designed, who never pads with unnecessary filters, who never sacrifices meaning or intention for a clever rhyme, and who knows that a lyric is the shortest of one-act plays, with a beginning, a middle and an end.”


Mr. Sondheim’s music was never intended to make the hit parade, but on occasion it did. His most famous single song is the bittersweet “Send in the Clowns” from “A Little Night Music,” which was recorded by Judy Collins a full year after the original production had closed and made the pop charts in 1975 and 1977.


Since then, it has become one of the most familiar melodies in the repertory and recorded hundreds of times. And yet the composer had determined that “Send in the Clowns” would always make its strongest impression when heard in the context of “A Little Night Music,” where it is sung by an aging actress as she reflects upon an unfulfilled love affair (“Isn’t it rich? Are we a pair? ...”). Indeed, Mr. Sondheim wrote the song specifically for the limited but affecting voice of Glynis Johns, who created the role on Broadway.


Mr. Sondheim, left, with cast members of “Pacific Overtures” after the closing performance
of the musical’s revival in New York in 1984. (AP and Associated Press)

Other Sondheim works explored the difficulties of creating and maintaining romantic relationships (“Company”); a reunion of aging actors in a theater scheduled for demolition (“Follies”); the beginnings of American imperialism in Asia (“Pacific Overtures,” 1976); the creative process as exemplified in the career of the French postimpressionist painter Georges Seurat (“Sunday in the Park With George”); and the history of political murder in the United States (“Assassins,” 1990), complete with roles for John Wilkes Booth, Lee Harvey Oswald and other villains.


All were unusual subjects for commercial theater. “Sweeney Todd,” a ghoulish “musical thriller” that tells the tale of a London barber who slits the throats of his clients and then his accomplice, Mrs. Lovett, bakes them into pies and sells them, might be Mr. Sondheim’s masterpiece. Tim Burton translated it into a 2007 film (although those who knew the original play were dismayed by Burton’s many cuts). Still, Mr. Sondheim’s dark humor was not necessarily a universal sell to audiences who wanted tamer fare to accompany their evenings out.


And so Mr. Sondheim’s shows never ran as long and as widely as “Cats,” “Evita” and “Phantom of the Opera” by Andrew Lloyd Webber, “Les Miserables” by Claude-Michel Schönberg or “A Chorus Line” by Marvin Hamlisch. Yet few doubted his primacy in the field.


President Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Mr. Sondheim at
the White House in 2015. (Photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

He won the Kennedy Center Honors for Lifetime Achievement in 1993 and was the subject of a “Sondheim Celebration” there in 2002, where six of his works were presented in repertory staging, to exhilarated reviews and sold-out houses; the Signature Theater in Arlington, Va., meanwhile, became a major staging ground for many of his works. He and James Lapine shared the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1985 for “Sunday in the Park With George.”


In addition to a 2008 Tony Award for lifetime achievement, Mr. Sondheim received eight Tonys for his music and several others for his lyrics. In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.


His influence on other composers is difficult to assess, as his art was so personal, immaculate and unpredictable. There is very little that could be mistaken for Mr. Sondheim in the present-day commercial musical theater, although a revue created from his songs, “Side by Side by Sondheim,” helped inspire Stephin Merritt’s varied and virtuosic three-hour cycle “69 Love Songs” that Merritt created for his group Magnetic Fields.


Mr. Sondheim said he never “wrote down” to his public and mistrusted music that he found too easy.


In his 2010 book “Finishing the Hat” — an anthology of Mr. Sondheim’s lyrics from his student days through “Merrily We Roll Along” — he enumerated the three principles he considered necessary for a lyric writer: “Content Dictates Form; Less is More; God Is in the Details — all in the service of Clarity, without which nothing else matters.”


Mr. Sondheim in 1957, the year he wrote the lyrics for “West Side Story.” (AP)

Stephen Joshua Sondheim was born in New York on March 22, 1930, the only child of Herbert Sondheim and his wife, the former Etta Janet Fox, known as Foxy.


Both parents were in the fashion industry, and Stephen grew up wealthy in the San Remo apartment building on Central Park West. An acrimonious divorce in the early 1940s left Stephen living with his mother. He grew to despise her, to the point of cutting off all ties with her and refusing to attend her funeral in 1992.


“When my father left her, she substituted me for him,” he told biographer Meryle Secrest. “And she used me the way she had used him, to come on to and to berate, beat up on me, you see. What she did for five years was treat me like dirt, but come on to me at the same time.”


This period shaped much of his personality and especially his mordant wit. As an adult, he acknowledged a gift from his friend Mary Rodgers by writing back: “Thanks for the plate, but where was my mother’s head? Love, Steve.”


Mr. Sondheim was 15 and attending the private George School in Newtown, Pa., when he wrote his first musical (entitled “By George” and set at the school). He gave it to the playwright and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II, who was the father of a childhood friend.


From left, composer Richard Rodgers, playwright Arthur Laurents and Mr. Sondheim in 1964
as they begin work on the new musical “Do I Hear a Waltz?” in New York. (AP)

“I went home with delusions of grandeur in my head,” he later told the critic Craig Zadan. “I could see my name in lights. Next day when I got up he called and I went over to his house and he said, ‘Now you want my opinion as though I really didn’t know you? Well, it’s the worst thing I’ve ever read.’ And he probably saw that my lower lip began to tremble and he said, ‘Now I didn’t say that it was untalented, I said it was terrible. And if you want to know why it’s terrible I’ll tell you.’


Hammerstein then proceeded to go through every stage direction, every song, every scene, every line of dialogue. “At the risk of hyperbole,” Mr. Sondheim later recalled, “I’d say that in that afternoon I learned more about songwriting and the musical theater than most people learn in a lifetime.”


In 1950, Mr. Sondheim graduated magna cum laude from Williams College in Massachusetts and moved back to New York, where he studied with the modernist composer Milton Babbitt.


Mr. Sondheim’s first musical was called “Saturday Night” (1954) but it would not be produced until 1997. By then he had come to know Laurents, who had been planning a modernized version of the “Romeo and Juliet” tale for the better part of a decade with Bernstein.


Choreographer Jerome Robbins had recently joined the team and it had been decided that Bernstein’s lyrics were not on a level with his music. Laurents remembered Mr. Sondheim from a tryout for “Saturday Night” and suggested a meeting.


“I left with mixed feelings,” Mr. Sondheim recalled in 2010. “I wanted to be asked to the party; I just didn’t want to go. The fact was, and still is, that I enjoy writing music much more than lyrics and even though ‘Saturday Night’ seemed as if it were dead in the water, I was planning other projects. I had the good sense to discuss all this with Oscar and it was he who persuaded me that if I was offered the job, I should leap at it. ... Here was a chance to work with three of the most gifted and experienced men in music and theater. My desire to compose could be satisfied at any time.”


“West Side Story,” which opened in Washington in August 1957, proved a radical and life-changing project for the young man, although Mr. Sondheim would always be embarrassed by some of his lyrics, particularly those for “I Feel Pretty.”


“I had this uneducated Puerto Rican girl singing ‘It’s alarming how charming I feel,’” he said. “You know, she would not have been unwelcome in Noël Coward’s living room,” referring to the prolific British wit and author.


It would take five more years before Mr. Sondheim wrote both music and lyrics for a show: “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” a vaudevillian-style comedy starring Zero Mostel and based on the ancient Roman farces of Plautus. It was a critical and commercial success and ran on Broadway for two years before being turned into a film, also with the irrepressible Mostel.


“Anyone Can Whistle” (1964), which followed and featured a book by Laurents, was a spectacular flop, although it has won many admirers in the years since it closed on Broadway after only nine performances. It starred Angela Lansbury as the mayor of a decrepit small town.


In 1970, with “Company,” Mr. Sondheim began an 11-year partnership with the producer and director Harold Prince, one that lasted until the flop “Merrily We Roll Along”; they would reunite for “Bounce” in 2003, which never reached Broadway.


From 1984 to 1994, Mr. Sondheim’s most significant collaborator was Lapine, who pushed him increasingly toward the avant-garde. He preferred working with people he knew; Lansbury, Bernadette Peters, Lee Remick and Len Cariou were among his favorite actors, and he favored the orchestrator Jonathan Tunick for most of his career. (Mr. Sondheim composed for voice and piano.)


Although he was an erudite conversationalist, Mr. Sondheim regularly insisted that he much preferred puzzles of all sorts to reading books. “The walls of the lower level of his home are covered with 19th-century game boards,” Zadan reported in his book “Sondheim & Company.” “About the house are such artifacts as a skittle-pool table, obscure puzzles, a slot machine, jackpot games of various sizes, a gigantic chess set, antique ninepins, a ship’s telegraph, a glass harmonica (an 1820s set of tuned glasses) and a bicycle (Sondheim’s favorite form of transportation).”


Mr. Sondheim was an enthusiastic drinker for most of his life. “Unfortunately, I had, and still have, a great capacity for liquor, which is not good for the health,” he admitted. In his youth, he was also a heavy smoker but quit after suffering a heart attack at 49.


In addition to his theater work, he wrote a film with his friend, actor Anthony Perkins. Entitled “The Last of Sheila” (1973), the complicated mystery starred James Coburn and Richard Benjamin and was neither a critical nor a popular success.


Mr. Sondheim also wrote the soundtrack for Alain Resnais’s film “Stavisky” (1974) and five songs for Warren Beatty’s “Dick Tracy” (1990) one of which, “Sooner or Later (I Always Get My Man),” won him an Academy Award for best original song.


Actor Nathan Lane, left, and Mr. Sondheim perform during a Dramatists Guild benefit dinner in 2004.
(Photo: Scott Gries/Getty Images)

In 2010, Alfred A. Knopf published Mr. Sondheim’s “Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes.” The title comes from a song in “Sunday in the Park With George,” and the volume includes much valuable and illustrative self-criticism of Mr. Sondheim’s work, as well as frank and sometimes withering assessments of his creative forbears (W.S. Gilbert and Coward come in for particularly harsh treatment).

“Performing acts of literary self-criticism can be a tricky business, akin to being one’s own dentist,” Paul Simon, who has himself been writing distinguished songs for half a century, observed in a review for the New York Times. “After reading ‘Finishing the Hat,’ I felt as if I had taken a master class in how to write a musical. A class given by the theater’s finest living songwriter.”


Like many gay men of his era, Mr. Sondheim was guarded about his sexuality and reportedly lived alone until he was in his 60s. In 2017, he married Jeffrey Romley, who survives him. Information on additional survivors was not immediately available.


Despite his prodigious production, Mr. Sondheim always referred to himself as a lazy writer who was “usually dragged in kicking and screaming” into a project and then procrastinated until deadline pressure forced a creative spark.


For Mr. Sondheim — and his grateful listeners — the process was invariably worth it. As he wrote in “Finishing the Hat”: “To be part of a collaboration is to be part of a family and for me — the only child of constantly working and mostly absent parents, a kid who grew up without any sense of family — every new show provides me with one. It may be a temporary family, but it always gives me a solid sense of belonging to something outside of myself.”


Tim Page is a distinguished visiting professor at the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1997 for his writings about music for The Washington Post.


Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said that the barber Sweeney Todd slits the throats of his clients and then sells their bodies for meat. He slits their throats, and then his accomplice, Mrs. Lovett, bakes them into pies and sells those. This version has been corrected.


First published in The Washington Post, November 26 2021