Stephen Oliver (composer)

Stephen Michael Harding Oliver (10 March 1950 29 April 1992) was an English composer, best known for his operas.

Life and career

Oliver was born in Chester, the son of Charlotte Hester (Girdlestone), a religious education adviser, and Osborne George Oliver, an electricity board official.[1] His maternal great-grandfather was William Boyd Carpenter, a Bishop of Ripon and a court chaplain to Queen Victoria.[1] Oliver was educated at St Paul's Cathedral, Ardingly College and at Worcester College, Oxford, where he read music under Kenneth Leighton and Robert Sherlaw Johnson. His first opera, The Duchess of Malfi (1971), was staged while he was still at Oxford. Later works include incidental music for the Royal Shakespeare Company (including The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby). a musical, Blondel (1983; with Tim Rice), and over forty operas, including Tom Jones (1975), Beauty and the Beast (1984), Lady Jane (1986) and Timon of Athens (1991). Oliver also wrote music for television, including several of the BBC's Shakespeare productions (Timon among those), and some chamber and instrumental music.

He was a good friend of Simon Callow who commissioned the piece Ricercare No4 for Cantabile.

He also composed the score for the thirteen-hour radio dramatization of Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1981. The work combined a main theme with many sub-themes, all composed within the English pastoral tradition.

In Tony Palmer's Film 'Wagner' (made 1982-3), Oliver can be seen playing the part of conductor Hans Richter and conducting in the pit of Wagner's theatre at Bayreuth.

Oliver was a frequent guest on BBC Radio 4's light discussion programme Stop The Week. He died of AIDS-related complications in London.

In 2006, Oliver's archive of original scores and papers was presented to the British Library by his family.

His nephew is comedian John Oliver.[2]

Further reading

References

External links



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