
Died at 98
male
Charles Strouse (June 7, 1928 — May 15, 2025) was an American composer and lyricist, best known for Broadway hits as Bye Bye Birdie, Applause and Annie, films including Bonnie and Clyde (1967), The Night They Raided Minsky’s (1968), and All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), and for the TV series All in the Family (1971–79). Strouse was born in New York City, the son of Ethel (Newman) and Ira Strouse. After graduating from the Eastman School of Music in 1947, he received two scholarships to Tanglewood, where he studied under composer Aaron Copland. Subsequently, Copland arranged for Strouse to get a scholarship with legendary teacher, Nadia Boulanger, in Paris. Strouse met songwriting partner, lyricist Lee Adams, at a party in 1949, and the duo began a longtime collaboration starting with writing songs for summer resorts in the Adirondacks. Strouse and Adams contributed material to numerous Off-Broadway musical revues, including Catch a Star, Shoestring Revue, The Littlest Revue and Kaleidoscope, and wrote specialty material for Kaye Ballard, Carol Burnett, Jane Morgan and Dick Shawn. Strouse was passionate about collaboration and would earn Tony Award nominations for his scores with lyricists: David Rogers, Charlie & Algernon (1980), based on the novel Flowers for Algernon, Steven Schwartz, for Rags (1986), with book writer Joseph Stein starring Teresa Stratas, and Nick and Nora (1991), a musical based on Dashiell Hammett’s The Thin Man characters, written with Richard Maltby, Jr. In addition to his awards, Strouse was the recipient of several honorary doctorates. He was a longtime member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, inducted in 1985, and the Theatre Hall of Fame. Strouse also composed orchestral works, chamber music, piano concertos, and an opera. His original piano work, Concerto America, was composed in 2002 to commemorate 9/11 and premiered at The Boston Pops in 2004. His opera Nightingale (1982), starring Sarah Brightman, had a successful run in London, followed by many subsequent productions.

Charles Strouse

Songwriter
for Songwriter in Saving Lord Cucuface: The Madeline Movie
Suggested by user_249936

In the 1990s, a little girl named Jocinda Siff (portrayed by AnnaSophia Robb) lives in a mansion with Aunt Zilda and Grandpa Henry near Walt Disney Studios, in Orlando, Florida, and dreams of becoming a movie star as she portrays Madeline in the original specials based on the books by Ludwig Bemelmans, the adapted television series, and other special movies, with the help of French Tickner (Tom Hanks), the director of the Madeline originals who plays Lord Cucuface, Stevie Vallance (Judith Mason) playing Miss Clavel, and Michael Siff (Gavin Butler), playing Pepito in the series. Jocinda's friends Riley, Sarah, and Brittany play three of Madeline's peers, Chloe, Nicole, and Danielle. The Madeline series has songs written by various songwriters, composers, and lyricists. In the television series, every episode only has one song per episode. The series was located in Paris, France. This movie was shot at Walt Disney World.





