Composer Marvin Hamlisch dies at 68

Written By Unknown on Tuesday, August 7, 2012 | 10:20 AM

Composer Marvin Hamlisch's career spanned four decades.
Composer Marvin Hamlisch's career spanned four decades.
  • NEW: Hamlisch died Monday in his home in Los Angeles, his agent said
  • On Broadway, he wrote music for the Pulitzer Prize-winning show "A Chorus Line"
  • He was 68
  • "Music is truly an international language," Hamlisch said

(CNN) -- Marvin Hamlisch, a prolific composer who put together musical ensembles for an array of movies, television and theater shows, died at his home in Los Angeles, his agent said Tuesday.

His work over a four-decade career earned him three Oscars, four Grammys, four Emmys, a Tony and three Golden Globe awards, composing more than 40 scores for films that include "The Way We Were" and "The Sting."

On Broadway, Hamlisch wrote music for the Pulitzer Prize-winning show "A Chorus Line," as well as "They're Playing Our Song" and "The Goodbye Girl."

He died Monday at the age of 68.

"Music is truly an international language," Hamlisch said on his official website. "And I hope to contribute by widening communication as much as I can."

Share your memories of Marvin Hamlisch

Social media was abuzz Tuesday with reflections about the legendary composer and the legacy he left.

"The evenings we spent with you and the Pittsburgh Pops are memories that will last forever," Jean Elliot Boyer wrote on his official Facebook page."Your banter with the audience and your down-to-earth style will stay with me forever."

"The world will miss your gift," wrote Gail Dwyer.

The Juilliard School of Music graduate held the principal pops conductor post at various American orchestras, including the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and the Pasadena, San Diego and Seattle Symphonies.

He was also a musical director and arranger of Barbra Streisand's 1994 concert tour and television special, and had recently worked on a musical adaption of the production of "The Nutty Professor," a musical comedy directed by Jerry Lewis.

CNN's Rachel Wells contributed to this report

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