Oliver | Who Will Buy? - Full Song | Indoor Recess
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- In this ode to the working class, the many merchants of London wake Oliver with their iconic musical number "Who Will Buy?", but all is not as pleasant as it seems as Bill Sikes and Fagin have found Oliver's new home.
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Experience the high-spirited adventures of Oliver Twist in this Oscar®-winning musical adaptation of Charles Dickens' classic tale! Young Oliver (Mark Lester) is an orphan who escapes the cheerless life of the workhouse and takes to the streets of 19th-Century London. He's immediately taken in by a band of street urchins, headed by the lovable villain, Fagin (Ron Moody), his fiendish henchman, Bill Sikes (Oliver Reed), and his loyal apprentice, The Artful Dodger (Jack Wild). Through his education in the fine points of pick-pocketing, Oliver makes away with an unexpected treasure... a home and a family of his own. Set to a heartfelt score that includes such favorites as "Consider Yourself," "Where Is Love?" and "As Long As He Needs Me," OLIVER! leads us on a journey in search of love, belonging and honor among thieves. Winner of six Academy Awards® (1968), including Best Picture and Best Score, OLIVER! will steal your heart!
#Oliver #Musical
Oliver | Who Will Buy? - Full Song | Indoor Recess
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the pure innocence is so overwhelming. they just dont make movies like this anymore. beautiful song, beautiful scene!
Agreed😢
They don’t make them like this anymore because no one will see them unfortunately
So true
Sad...! And why not?
Ah yes, stealing murder and kidnaping. I just love me some innosence :3
The guy playing the flute in the tree was John Heawood, a great friend of mine. He was a well-known choreographer, originally from Canada, and choreographed Julie Andrews in The Boyfriend musical on Broadway. I worked many times with him on many stage shows. He died back in the 1990s, but I still remember him with affection.
He was superb. R I p John..best wishes to you
Such sweet words for a friend :}
Wow thank you so much for sharing your wonderful stories about John, I’d love to have been a fly on the wall back in those times during show business, I’m sure you have so many incredible memories!
It sounds like you had an amazing career/life! The stories you must have!! ❤
That’s amazing.
I love how "Ripe Strawberries Ripe" is the same rhythm as "Food Glorious Food" symbolising the first time Oliver has nice food to try!
I have only just noticed that 🤯🤯
Great Observation!
I love those lines to” ripe strawberries ripe”
One of the best musicals to win the Oscar for BP. This is one of the best numbers in the whole movie.
My favorite movie as a kid and still at 65. Left a strong impact on my mind and heart.
How a child should awaken every morning. Brilliant. One of my favorite musicals.
Yeah but he was later abducted by Bill Sykes and Nancy.
Mark Lester and I are about the same age. My childhood was almost as idyllic as that. Having loving parents, and a close family will give every child that safe and wonderful feeling.
@garyferguson1105
A propos the musical "Oliver", the point is that Oliver Twist was an orphan, born in a brutal workhouse. He did NOT have ANY parents or family, let alone a close one. His "wonderful morning" was waking up in a comfortable warm bed for the first time in his LIFE, in the house of Mr Brownlow, a kind, wealthy stranger. In the actual plot of the Oliver Twist story, there are no loving parents or family.
@@AndriyValdensius-wi8gw I know Oliver was an orphan. A friend of mine directed a local production of the musical. You missed my point. I was saying every child should wake up to that safe and joyful feeling.
@garyferguson1105
I agree that every child should awake to a safe and loving environment. The thing is, that a child in a loving family, will know nothing else. S/he will take it as normal, or take it for granted. The point is, that in the dramatic context of Oliver, you have this little boy, whose life up to now has been Hell. He suddenly finds himself waking up in a lovely bedroom, in a warm bed, in a room in an expensive house, overlooking an elegant square, in one of London's most upper class districts. His life had been Hell, and he wakes up in Heaven.
Love this bit. For probably the first time since he can remember, Young Oliver gets to wake up and watch the world go by. Where before that night, he would of been in the workhouse or down there with them trying to survive.
“Who will buy this wonderful morning” beautiful ❤️ favourite musical as a kid
Still one of my favorites.
It's nice to be rich. 🙂
A favorite movie memory. If you really watch this, you can see so much detail going on, in this 9-minute scene. It's pretty amazing. I first saw it a Xmas time, 1968 and we had the soundtrack LP. I was 4 years old. An early movie memory, I loved movies, at an early age.
There are so many background dancers and singers and so many other things happening in the background. I don't know how many extras and dancers and singers are on screen, but there's a lot.
I saw a 35mm screening again, in about 1984. I have seen this film at least 20x.
I wrote to Mark Lester, who played OLIVER, and Ron Moody, who played FAGIN. They both sent me signed pictures, via mail. I also collected the signatures of the other main cast members, via eBay.
My little girl is turning 3 in a couple weeks and loves this film and the soundtrack. It’s all we listen to now 😂
Brilliant ! I must watch again. We had the LP soundtrack when I was a kid too. It was there in vinyl along with the Sound Of Music LP and Shirley Bassey, Tom Jones and The Best Of The Bossa Novas. My Mum and Dad had some vinyl and we (all 8 kids and two parents) all loved watching these movies. Good times.
@@Uppercut443 yeah I have got the soundtrack on vinyl too haha
I knew the words to this song at the time. I even recorded it on tape in a falsetto voice. I am about the same age as Mark Lester. He's four months older as a matter of fact.
The 1958 club.
I was in highschool when this was released; it's such a great movie.
Nice that you wrote Ron Moody and Mark Lester. Very kind that they responded.
Moody, Wild, and a few others have gone to heaven, but Mark Lester is still around.
gives me goosebumps. Amzing to think they built this set, it's huge
It's not a set - it's Regents Crescent in London.
@@englishincontext4025 It's actually not, it was a set built from scratch at Shepperton Studios.
@@englishincontext4025 I think it's the Circus in Bath
This is one of the most wonderful scenes of any movie.
Truly a masterpiece. The singing, choreography, the movie set, everything.
A bit later in the movie, you see Oliver greeting the flower-seller in the street - a nice little touch, I always thought.
This film is an absolute masterpiece!
Definitely a masterpiece 1of my favourite films.Mark Lester iz a brilliant actor as Oliver
Mark Lester was great, but Jack Wild as Dodger stole the film !
@@mpatey63Oliver Reed for me. Followed by Ron Moody
Definitely Ron Moody. "I am reviewing the situation.." 🎼🎵🎶🎵
These days that kind of thing might be seen as a tad "anti- semitic". Just imagine the song sung by Bibi Netanyahu.
This film was a GEM ! The choreography was so so good ! 👍
I was about Oliver's age when this movie came out and have loved it ever since. Still have the souvenir book that they sold in the theater, and it has lots of "behind the scenes" photos showing how the London sets were constructed. Very clever and astonishingly realistic, making you feel you were really in Victorian England.
The housekeeper was so sweet to Oliver. She loved him like her own son.
In the original Dickens novel she had grown children of her own.
I was a dancer at the London Palladium who shared a dressing room with a couple of dancers who were in this. Better dancers than I. To do this sort of stuff you really need a classical training, but as a working-class lad who started too late I never developed that - though I did do some good work. I would have loved to have been in this movie. The organisation and synchronisation of the dancers is a logistical miracle. My only movie work was in Mahler, directed by Ken Russell. That was interesting.
The Dancers were outstanding, The Academy Awards gave an Honourary Award for Choreography for Oliver, along with six Academy Awards.
...to say the least!
@@indigocheetah4172I hope the camera team got an Oscar! Outstanding cinematography, especially as filmed way back in 1968.
Back when they knew how to make musical numbers big and make them work. People like to say that all the big roadshow movie musicals after "Sound of Music" were flops, but this one was huge, as it deserved to be.
Don't forget Fiddler on the Roof and My Fair Lady! Masterpieces one and all! Oh! and the Music Man!!! Loved that one too!
I always like to point out that *Oliver!* (1968) won six Oscars -- one more than *The Sound of Music* (1965).
I watched this film as a child. I was struck hard by the horror that ran alongside all the pretty, shiny, glossy scenes. The story of Oliver Twist is filled with the grotesque cruelty and hypocrisy of Victorian London. As an adult I feel the same but understand it beyond the surface level I perceived as a child. The story is not innocent, no matter how pretty this scene is, it actually makes me recoil, knowing exactly how life was for the multitude.
No it is not innocent, not least because it trades on the idea that Oliver received the above gentility - and was capable of appreciating it to the full - because he actually came from "a good family", even if one that fell uponvery hard times.
There was a lot of hypocrisy at that time.
Still, if they are trying to tell us that London was a hive of activity, well that is right.
And if they are trying to persuade us that some order could be imposed upon it all, well that is probably right too.
But to be honest I love the scene anyway... even though I know fully that it is fake in every way.
It carries some divine goodness with it, and that's OK...
my grandmother took me to see this , i have watched it many many times, will never get sick of seeing it,,,, absolutely fantastic movie
This is still one of my favorite movie musicals of all time. The story is riveting, the songs are memorable, the dance sequences like this one are fantastic. And the characters (and actors who played them) such as Oliver, Dodger, (especially) Fagin, Bill and (oh my heart) Nancy live on in our minds forever. So deserving of Best Picture. Even almost 60 years later, it is still amazing to watch.
If I woke up and saw this I would be broke by lunch buying everything.
The blokes with ladders are members of the National Union of Burglars. They wait til the owners are out and then they rob the houses.
London innit ?
Mark Lester was so angelic. I was 6 when this movie came out and when he sang "Where is Love," it broke my little heart (truthfully, I thought he was singing "where is mom").
Actually I believe a girl actress gave his voice and sang, but yes, he was angelic.
@@mariamartinusz9699Kathe Green sung Oliver’s vocals since Mark Lester couldn’t sing.
Yes. I believe it was the director’s daughter who did the singing for Oliver.
Saw this in the movie theatre when it first came out in the 1960s. It was tremendous back then, as it still is, even now. 😊
A treasure of childhood memories..
This is a masterpiece. Still a delight for the eyes and ears.
One of my absolute favorite scenes in this movie, I’ve watched it at least 5 times over. Really brings back so many fond memories 💕
I love the base of that man “Knives to grind, any knives to grind”
Most beautiful scene in the whole movie!
OH MY GOD A COMMERCIAL RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF THIS WONDERFUL SONG! AND ANOTHER COMMERCIAL! SOMEONE NEEDS TO BE FIRED!
Get Adblocker.
@@indigocheetah4172 does that work on RUclips?
Mark Lester, Oliver Reed, Jack Wild, Ron Moody, Harry Secombe, Shani Wallis in the Hit Musical Oliver in 1968. Mark Lester was 8 years of age when he did this masterpiece. Just brilliant!!!
This song makes me cry it is so beautiful! The most powerful and mesmerizing song in any movie! A cinematic masterpiece!
Agree! Heartstoppingly, breathtakingly beautiful!! I occasionally replay sequence this just for that! The joys of RUclips!
When Oliver sings, I go into a trance
One of the few musicals where book, music, and lyrics were all by the same person. Lionel Bart was amazing.
Brilliant Movie!
2024 and I think of my father every time I remember this movie.
This would make an awesome flash mob
Haha!
It kind of *is* a flash mob!!
❤❤ I WAS IN THE 'OLIVER'___ play in 🌟Summer 1970**_____
I remember this movie fondly. They don't make them like this anymore. I loved Jack Wild.on HR Puffinstuff
The bass drummer served on the Royal Yacht with the Royal Marines band and a few years later taught my brother to play the bassoon
At my HS musical, we used the whole auditorium to stage this number, all the sellers as they entered and the audience did not expect who was going to enter next, and they paraded throughout, with their roses, strawberries, song sheets, knives, milk, they loved it. It was captivating and the audience was amazed!!
I miss old films like these from the 1960s, 50s, 40s and 30s.
Oi! Flower woman! I'm trying to sleep!
You all know that Oliver isn't really singing it's another's voice.
So what.
Being Upper-Middle-Class in Victorian England was the BOMB!
Some were upper middle class
It was a rising class in 19th century London. Many luxurious terrace houses were the London houses of aristocrats with huge piles in the country.
And to think everything you see in this clip is a film set. Absolutely astonishing and for its time probably one of the best film sets in history. The music wasn't too bad either.
Incredible that's a set! I originally thought it was shot in London or Bath! I guess today, it would green-screened CG! Really not the same!
A wonderful film, everyone in the cast was on top form, this song was just one of a number of spectacular routines
Why can't I wake to a fully-staged song-and-dance number every morning?
Breathtakingly beautiful scene... The absolute perfection of the first "Who will buy" Flower seller, and then the low angle and moves of the "any mi-ilk" dancers is jaw-droppingly wonderful... particularly, as I still remember, seen from the cinema stalls on a giant screen above you! Cinema and choreographic perfection!
This piece is just so very well constructed in every way. Perfection.
Best part af the film for me... very uplifting.
Along with consider yourself 🌹
Lionel Bart was a musical genius.
Years ago remember seeing his "This is your life" and somehow I kept noticing how it fell short of the more-spectacular British ones, let alone the ones done in America.
Nobody on it really seemed too impressive.
So it took me years and years and quite a bit of maturing to realise that what you say above was ... is ... nevertheless true
The knife guy nailed it
Yes!
I totally agree, I really loved his base
Playing him in a local production. So excited.
No! Knives don’t nail things! Only hammers do!
This musical is better than A Sound of Music. I. Will. Die. On. This. Hill.
I'll be right beside you
I’m with you on that hill, friend!! ❤
Did this in a school production I had the pleasure of being Nancy and this scene is beautiful like all the harmony and everything. The choreography as well. Props to the actual movie choreographers they deserve much more than a medal from the 1970s
Actually, this was made and released in the late 60's.
@@philiprandall9994 yeah but they got an award in the 1970s.. i do know this was made late 60s i’m not that dumb
The choreography here is by the great theatrical choreographer Onna White, who in fact received an honorary Academy Award for her work on the film.
At school we did a pe dance lesson and had to make up a dance to Queens "Another one bytes the dust". That was fun.
Playfight and for some reason teacher wanted us to throw our hats in the air at the finish.
Me too! I played Bett, Nancy's friend
The cries of London, how beautiful. Many people are now weeping over a London Lost.
Less poverty, less disease and the introduction of an effective sewage system was alright. Yet to be implemented in the time period this film is set.
@@adamdavis9838Yeah, those are peddlars and servants and laborers in the street singing this idyllic song. They're probably just scraping by.
subtext isn't your strong point i'm guessing?
The OP is talking about the current Londonistan.
Completely agree. My London with its real Londoners has all but disappeared.
Back in the day, every other film was a musical. Now, every other film is about torture and killing. How far they have fallen. Innocence and decency are things of the past.
I love this musical. I was fortunate to see the movie and I had the LP of the musical with all of the songs. I was disappointed to find out later that a young girl did the singing of the songs of Oliver and not the actor himself. However, other than that, it was a true master piece with brilliant acting and singing. The story line was very poignant and showed that poverty and hardship wasn't just for black people.
Wow I never knew this! I went to see a production of this in Leeds UK this week and it was amazing. The boy who sang this had an incredible voice.
@@franparkinson2040 Yes, we too saw the Leeds Playhouse production a few weeks ago! A truly fabulous production! This scene beautifully done there too!
this coreogeaphy topped itself. Like they wanted to see how far they could go. We want films like this again.
I like that when gets out of bed at 0:30 his hair looks like a tangled rat’s nest and when they cut back to him at 0:52 his hair is combed and flat.
Person goes up to one of the sellers: "I would like to buy-"
Seller: *keeps singing and walks away*
Person: "Oh...okay then....carry one..."
I can see the horrible contradiction of the society. Oliver has gone from being a pauper to being a rich pampered and privileged child. But all those people on the street singing are struggling to provide for their own life. And we are supposed to feel sympathetic to Oliver who is now accepting all those privileges without embarrassment? I love the music. I like the movie. But showing the contrast between privilege and the reverse should make us all cringe in horror.
It’s supposed to. Juxtaposed moods and harsh realities of poverty are why Oliver hits so hard. He escaped but so many are still there.
Enjoy this (mostly) feel good movie . If you want to be depressed read 'Hard Times '. Why should Oliver feel embarrassed ,he's just a ten year old lad .
@@chrisgoff6544 I have read victor Hugo and Charles Dickens and Marcus Clarke. Any person who accepts privilege without embarrassment is part of the problem. They grow up and feel that they have EARNED their privilege. Which is worse than a joke. I feel far more sorry for Fagin. Who actually did a lot more for these poor children than the official society ever did.
@@smitajky Indeed, this Fagin was played quite sympathetically.
Irony is that we went all out for a meritocracy, and the effects of that are probably worse than what you describe.
Now people with an education think they are better and more worthy than everyone else, who they can feel free to write of as failures...
Mark lester is so cute.
And people say England has no culture. What a crock. In other news this whole crescent of houses was built as part of the set, it isn’t a real place in London which surprised me. Amazing film. Always with the fond memories, imagine if they remade it now. Oliver would probably be a black trans woman. 😂
I’m playing the Knife Grinder in my school’s production. So excited!
Can we talk about the headbanging from that woman second to the right @5:46? Jeez, she is SO into it XD
Omg right!?? She’s literally the only one I can ever look at!! Can’t keep my eyes off her! I’m glad someone else noticed 😂😂😂
😂 never noticed that but hilarious
She is a treasure.
Imaginative and delightfully realised, one of the many scenes in a film that reminded the world that Britain
could make a great musical film given the right source and talent. Timeless enjoyment!
I did this song when I was a boy soprano before my voice broke. I love oliver always will😊
I love this musical.
I love how at 6:58 you can tell that they’re in Islington because a young Jeremy Corbyn is up in a tree playing the flute
He should have stayed up there 🙄😂🤣
They're on a movie lot, and the flutist is John Heawood
La vi en 1968 y desde entonces la he visto más de 1000 veces, está pelicula ganadora del Oscar es muy Excelente....
No gano un Óscar, ganó 5 😉
Some things you just can't sell some things are just not for sale😮
An 1840s constable's uniform from the City of London Police, on display in the City of London Police Museum. The original City of London uniform was blue, to differentiate from the red worn by the army. The collar was high and contained a leather stock to guard against garrotting (strangling with a wire or something similar). This was the most common form of attack against a police officer. These were removed from the uniform by the 1870s.
These are the traditional melodies. look up the Pathe film of London Street Cries from 1931.
Way back then when there were no iphones social media covid and internet at the time being!
Just so marvelous to me, except when things like with Bill Sikes such other things like arguments crimes and war that happens!
I've seen a non musical version of this in book form.
By a bloke called Charles Dickens.
It's not as good.
Not everyone knows that Oliver's voice IS NOT that of the interpreter of the role, Mark Lester. But of a little girl: the ten-year-old daughter of the film's director, Carol Reed. Lester played back to her voice.
It was the 22 year old daughter of the music director, Kathe Green.
I love this scene so much, deffo my fave scene alongside consider yourself
I love this original arrangement of “Who Will Buy “ . But for one note that has never been a part of arrangements of this piece since (as far as I can tell). It’s the second vocal reprise of “ripe, strawberries ripe “ when a bass woodwind bassoon hits such a mournful note. I absolutely love it , but it’s never been included in subsequent arrangements. Such a beautiful phrase from an underused instrument.
You’re absolutely right!! I don’t think it’s is in any other arrangement!! It is, for me also, one of the best parts! And agree wholeheartedly that the Bass bassoon is extremely underused!! It’s tone is unmatched I think, when trying to create an atmosphere of sorrow or mourning.
A Gorgeous Sunny Morning in Victorian London.
The Academy Awards gave an Honourary Award for Choreography for Oliver, along with six Academy Awards.
The English people were so good in this movie.
rest in power-to the actor who played robert forever in my heart
9 minutes and 15 seconds of pure joy 😍 no matter how many times I’ve seen it I still smile from ear to ear and I still have tears in my eyes! This song is a masterpiece ❤ while I love every single second of it my very favourite person is the “Knifes to grind” man! I get goosebumps when his voice comes in at 1:59, the way it cuts through the beautiful high pitched voices of the woman before him is so perfect ❤❤
I cant get over the trailers off Ferrero rocher outside the houses !!
The Ambassador was going to spoil a lot of people. 😆😛
I love the idea that Bill and Dodger have just been off to the side watching this big musical number take place 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
The women with the roses 🌹 😍
Absolutely... and then the milk maids... Quite wonderful!
I love the old days, 4 and making a movie called Unicorn Revolution and there's soap beginning of time, called Cherie Amouage 3 and I change to a woman and 2 took a bath with Cherie bubble bath, and shower gel and 3. I love shower gel and with Joe Pastnernak, I need soap!
6:17 This is my favorite part
I love this classic movie.
Blijft schitterend ? Helemaal in deze tijden. De schoonheid en onschuld raken je hart !
Groeten uit Amsterdam Oost
6:23, that's not water they are throwing out,
And the Godfather to Michael Jacksons kids…. Yes: I saw this movie when it came out: I loved it then. I am 66.. I love it now!!!
The 1968 classic movie Oliver! is one of my all-time favorite movies! I love it! I was born in 1978. Thank you for posting and sharing this beautiful and classic movie musical number!
I passed my English Literature GCE O level thanks to this film.
One of the set books we didn't study in my school was Oliver Twist. Having seen the film several times, I wrote an essay in the exam answering a question about the book and got a grade A 😂
What? No John Wick? Noi Michael Bayes production?.. lol...I do love the classics....
Lookd very much like The Circus in Bath, but it's actual Shepperton studios.
The houses in this scene look like the cresent i used to live in both in Bristol and bath in Avon England, the old mer hangs houses, lovely houses but massive ceilings you needed a ladder to change a light bulb, some front rooms15 to18 foot high, and sodsto keep warm in winter
I have my musicals mixed up old age has caught up to me smh!!!!
I'm only here because i just watched The Union movie starring Halle berry and Mark whalberg, theirs a scene where they leave a London house into a very familiar looking square, had a look on filming locations online, it appears this set is based on Fitzroy Square, near the BT tower.
I'd love to wake up and people sing this
This is near the end of the movie, i have it on DVD, got it for a dollar.