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  1. Climb Ev’ry Mountain. Lyrics By Oscar Hammerstein II Music By Richard Rodgers. When Maria returns to the Abbey, confused by her feelings for Captain von Trapp, the Mother Abbess assures her that loving another person can be part of what God wants us to do. “You must find the life you were born to live,” she says before singing this ...

  2. リチャード・チャールズ・ロジャース ( Richard Charles Rodgers, 1902年 6月28日 - 1979年 12月30日 )は、 アメリカ合衆国 の 作曲家 。. ミュージカルの作曲で広く知られる。. ブロードウェイ・ミュージカル43作品、「900曲以上を作曲」しており、20世紀のアメリカの ...

  3. Richard Charles Rodgers was born in New York City on June 28, 1902. His earliest professional credits, beginning in 1920, included a series of musicals for Broadway, London and Hollywood written exclusively with lyricist Lorenz Hart. In the first decade of their collaboration, Rodgers & Hart averaged two new shows every season, beginning with ...

  4. Something Good. Music and Lyrics by Richard Rodgers. As the Captain and Maria confess their unexpected love to each other, they quietly agree that their good fortune is due to having done “Something Good” in their pasts. Written by Richard Rodgers alone for the 1965 film, “Something Good” is a beautiful, quiet duet for Maria and the ...

  5. Do-Re-Mi Richard Rodgers (Composer), Oscar Hammerstein II (Lyrics)Frederick Dvonch (Conductor)Mark Hellinger Theatre OrchestraMark Hellinger Theatre Cast Ens...

    • 6 min
    • 47,2K
    • Classic Soundtrack Collector
  6. "The Sound of Music" opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on November 16, 1959, and ran for 1,443 performances. The production shared the Tony Award for Best Musical with Fiorello!. It also won for Best Actress in a Musical (Mary Martin), Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Patricia Neway), Best Scenic Design of a Musical (Oliver Smith), and Best Musical Direction.

  7. I Have Confidence. Music and Lyrics by Richard Rodgers. “I Have Confidence” was written specifically for the film by Richard Rodgers alone, since Oscar Hammerstein II had died six months after the show’s Broadway opening. The filmmakers suggested the song as a way to visualize Maria’s journey from the Abbey to the von Trapp villa.