Composer André Previn dies at 89

The conductor and composer André Previn has died at the age of 89. His manager told reporters that, he died at his home in New York on Thursday morning.

Previn was known for his career in Hollywood, his love of classical music and as a jazz pianist. He won four Academy Awards, reports BBC.

But many will remember him attempting to perform Grieg’s piano concerto with Morecambe and Wise. He conducted the London Symphony Orchestra and was married five times.

The jazz singer, Betty Bennett, became his first wife; the couple quickly had two daughters and, just as swiftly, split.

A few years later, the lyricist Dory Langdon became his second wife and song-writing partner.

Together they wrote Oscar-nominated numbers for the films Pepe (1960) and Two For the Seesaw (1962).

He won Oscars for Gigi, Porgy and Bess, Irma La Douce and My Fair Lady.

One of his more famous marriages was to actress and activist Mia Farrow, former wife of Frank Sinatra.

Following his death, Farrow shared a picture of her and Previn together and wrote: “See you in the Morning beloved Friend. May you rest in glorious symphonies.”

The couple were married from 1970 to 1979 and had three biological children.

They also adopted three other children, including Soon-Yi, who went on to marry Woody Allen, Farrow’s partner – after her break-up with Previn.

Previn later married Heather Mary Hales, and they divorced 17 years later.

His final marriage, in 2002, was to the violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, whose musical ability he greatly admired. The couple lived in Germany – the land of his birth – but divorced after 6 years.

He was the one of the most talented all-round musicians of the twentieth century; a household name rarely off television sets in the 1970s.

He became well known on British television with a series called Music Night – in which he played and conducted classical pieces and introduced a range of musical guests.

But nothing compared with Morecambe and Wise.

Their Christmas shows were a British institution and regularly watched by more than twenty-five million people.

In 1971, Previn was invited to perform in a sketch which involved an orchestra: the serious-minded maestro playing straight man to Eric and Ern.

‘ALL THE RIGHT NOTES’

His tight schedule meant they couldn’t rehearse, so Previn learned his lines on the way from the airport in the back of a taxi – arriving with one condition: they could make as much fun of him as they liked but they were not to mock the music.

“If anyone thinks we are trying to be funny, we’re finished,” explained Eric. “We have to act as though it is very serious.” The great composer had the good sense to listen.

Morecambe played an inept soloist – booked to play Grieg’s piano concerto as a late replacement for Yehudi Menuhin. With a flourish, he introduced Previn as “Mr Andrew Preview” and treated the orchestra with customary disdain.

“Not too heavy on the banjos,” instructed Morecambe before hopelessly failing to hit his cue. He insisted the bemused conductor leap in the air so he could see him over the piano lid and then turned in such a bizarrely jaunty version of the music that Previn exploded.

“You’re playing all the wrong notes,” he exclaimed. “I’m playing all the right notes,” came Morecambe’s legendary reply. “But not necessarily in the right order.”

If Previn had smirked and cracked a smile, the sketch would have been ruined. Eric had been right: the key was to play it with deadly earnest – no easy task with the audience in stitches. André deadpanned himself to comic glory and Morecambe & Wise’s biographer described the show as their finest hour.

Previn kept up a hectic schedule of live performances well into his eighties. He tried his hand at opera, with versions of A Streetcar Named Desire and Brief Encounter – to mixed reviews.

The London Symphony Orchestra released a statement to say they were “deeply saddened” to hear of his death.

Kathryn McDowell, managing director of the LSO, said: “André Previn is a hugely important part of the LSO story, long before LSO Discovery was established André Previn was reaching out to new audiences far and wide through television.

“A particular highlight for those of us lucky to be in the audience or listening on BBC Radio 3 in June 2015 was his glorious performance of Rachmaninov No 2 in his final concert with us.”

The Pacific Symphony also paid respects to the “great pianist and conductor”.

R&B singer, Dionne Warwick thanked the composer for writing the theme song for Valley of Dolls, as well as other “amazing scores for film”.

Comedian and actor Stephen Fry paid his respects by referencing the Morecambe and Wise sketch, saying: “Farewell, Andre Previn. He played all the right notes, and usually in the right order. What a life.”

Opera singer Renee Fleming said she was “very saddened” by the loss, she said: “The NYTimes says his music knew no boundaries, but I would say that of his talent and humanity as well.”

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