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Eric Maschwitz
Eric Maschwitz
English entertainer, writer, editor, broadcaster and broadcasting executive
1
Jack Strachey
Jack Strachey
English composer and songwriter
2
Ivor Novello
Ivor Novello
Welsh composer and actor (1893-1951)
3
George Gershwin
George Gershwin
American composer and pianist (1898-1937)
4
Richard Rodgers
Richard Rodgers
American composer of songs and Broadway musicals
5
Edward German
Edward German
English musician and composer
6
Eric Coates
Eric Coates
British composer
7
George M. Cohan
George M. Cohan
American entertainer, composer and playwright
8
Cole Porter
Cole Porter
American composer and songwriter
9
Otto Harbach
Otto Harbach
American lyricist (1873-1983)
10
Fred Ebb
Fred Ebb
American musical theatre composer
11
Lily Pons
Lily Pons
American opera singer and actress (1898-1976)
12
Franz von Suppé
Franz von Suppé
Austrian composer and conductor
13
Erich Wolfgang Korngold
Erich Wolfgang Korngold
American composer of Austro-Hungarian birth
14
Howard Shore
Howard Shore
Canadian composer and conductor noted for his film scores (born 1946)
15
Spike Hughes
Spike Hughes
Composer, Author, Music Critic
16
Sigmund Romberg
Sigmund Romberg
Hungarian-born American operetta composer
17
John Bettis
John Bettis
American lyricist
18
Rupert Holmes
Rupert Holmes
British-American composer, singer-songwriter, musician, dramatist and author
19
Carl Stalling
Carl Stalling
American composer and arranger (1891-1972)
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Noël Coward
Noël Coward
English playwright, composer, director, actor and singer (1899-1973)
21
Ray Noble
Ray Noble
English bandleader, composer, arranger, radio comedian, and actor (1903-1978)
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Andrew Lloyd Webber
Andrew Lloyd Webber
English composer and impresario of musical theatre (born 1948)
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Alfred Newman
Alfred Newman
American composer (1901-1970)
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Granville Bantock
Granville Bantock
British composer and conductor
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Duncan Sheik
Duncan Sheik
American singer-songwriter and composer
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Dean Pitchford
Dean Pitchford
American songwriter, screenwriter, director, actor, and novelist
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Irving Berlin
Irving Berlin
Russian-born American songwriter
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Ferde Grofé
Ferde Grofé
American composer, arranger, pianist and instrumentalist
George Posford
British composer

George Posford

Intro
British composer

George Posford, born Benjamin George Ashwell (23 March 1906 in Folkestone – 24 April 1976 in Worplesdon), was an English composer. He was married to Rene Ray.

Graduating from Cambridge University, Posford planned a law career but the successful interpolation in an early 1930s touring version of Lavender of a song he had written with Rodney Hobson prompted him towards a new career. After studying at the Royal College of Music, Posford composed many songs, often with librettist-lyricist Eric Maschwitz. For radio, they wrote Goodnight Vienna, which then became a 1932 film, starring Anna Neagle and Jack Buchanan (US title: Magic Night), and a stage show. Posford and Maschwitz then wrote The Great Hussar (1933), which, revised and with additional music by Bernard Grun, opened at London’s Adelphi Theatre as Balalaika (1936) where it ran for 570 performances. The hit song, hastily written by Posford and Maschwitz, was "At The Balalaika". The 1939 film version starred Nelson Eddy and Ilona Massey. Maschwitz, Posford and Grun also composed Paprika (1938), which flopped, but a revised version, Magyar Melody, ran at His Majesty’s Theatre for 105 performances. To the original score was added "Mine Alone", composed by Manning Sherwin, which outlived the show.

Posford and Harry Parr-Davies composed Full Swing (1940), starring Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, which had 468 performances during the London blitz. After the war, Posford co-composed Evangeline (1946) with Harry Jacobson. Starring Frances Day, this was a reworking by Maschwitz of James Laver’s Nymph Errant. In 1951, Posford was again in collaboration with Maschwitz, writing Zip Goes a Million. Starring George Formby, the show ran for 544 performances at the Palace Theatre and the songs included the title song, "Ridin’ Into Town", "The Thing About You", "It Takes No Time To Fall In Love", "Nothing Breaks But The Heart", "I Owe You", "Big Business", "Trouble With My Heart", "Thou Art For Me", "Ordinary People" and "I’m Saving Up For Sally". Posford and Maschwitz also collaborated on Happy Holiday (1954), a musical version of Arnold Ridley’s The Ghost Train. Among the songs from this show was "Sew A Silver Button On the Moon". Staged over Christmas, the show was another failure. Some of Posford’s melodies and themes appeared in the films The Good Companions and Britannia of Billingsgate (both 1933), and Invitation to the Waltz (1935). Posford also composed for the concert platform, these works including Transatlantic Rhapsody and Broadcasting House.