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Fagin

Fagin /ˈfɡɪn/ is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist in Charles Dickens's 1838 novel Oliver Twist. In the preface to the novel, he is described as a "receiver of stolen goods". He is the leader of a group of children (the Artful Dodger and Charley Bates among them) whom he teaches to make their livings by pickpocketing and other criminal activities, in exchange for shelter. A distinguishing trait is his constant and insincere use of the phrase "my dear" when addressing others. At the time of the novel, he is said by another character, Monks, to have already made criminals out of "scores" of children. Nancy, who is the lover of Bill Sikes (the novel's lead villain), is confirmed to be Fagin's former pupil.

Fagin
Fagin in a watercolour by 'Kyd' (1889)
Created byCharles Dickens
Portrayed byLon Chaney (1922)
Ivan Berlyn (1922)
Irving Pichel (1933)
Alec Guinness (1948)
Max Adrian (1962)
Ron Moody (1960, 1968, 1983, 1984)
Clive Revill (1963)
Roy Hudd (1977)
Roy Dotrice (1978)
David Swift (1980)
George C. Scott (1982)
Jonathan Pryce (1994)
Richard Dreyfuss (1997)
Robert Lindsay (1997)
Gary Farmer (2003)
Ben Kingsley (2005)
Timothy Spall (2007)
Russ Abbott (2010/11)
Noah Berry (2011)
Rowan Atkinson (2009, 2010)
Omid Djalili (2009)
Griff Rhys-Jones (2009)
Neil Morrissey (2011/12)
Harry Moore (2012)
Anton Lesser (2015)
Michael Caine (2021)
Christopher Eccleston (2022)
Elio El Hajj (2022)
Raul Esparza (2023)
Gavin Lee (2023)
Voiced byDom DeLuise
In-universe information
Nickname
  • The Jew
  • The Old Man
  • The Old One[1]
GenderMale
OccupationCriminal
pickpocket
NationalityEnglish

Fagin is a confessed miser who, despite the wealth that he has acquired, does very little to improve the squalid lives of the children he guards, or his own. In the second chapter of his appearance, it is shown (when talking to himself) that he cares less for their welfare, than that they do not "peach" (inform) on him and the other children. Still darker sides to the character's nature are shown when he beats the Artful Dodger for not bringing Oliver back; in his attempted beating of Oliver for trying to escape; and in his own involvement with various plots and schemes throughout the story. He indirectly but intentionally causes the death of Nancy by falsely informing Sikes that she had betrayed him, when in reality she had shielded Sikes from the law, whereupon Sikes kills her. Near the end of the book, Fagin is captured and sentenced to be hanged, in a chapter that portrays him as pitiable in his anguish.

In popular culture, Fagin (or at least his name) is used in comparison with adults who use children for illegal activities.

Role in the novel Edit

Fagin is portrayed as a criminal mastermind who kidnaps orphaned children and trains them to be pickpockets in return for sheltering and feeding them; he keeps the ill-gotten money for himself. His "wards" include the novel's title character, the Artful Dodger, Charley Bates, and Nancy. He also trained the novel's main antagonist, housebreaker Bill Sikes, who later became his main source of stolen goods.

Oliver at first believes that Fagin is an artisan who makes wallets and handkerchiefs which are, in fact, stolen at Fagin's order, and goes along with his new teacher's orders. The only one in the gang to protect Oliver is Nancy, who is also Sikes's lover.

After Oliver is arrested for supposedly picking the pocket of a gentleman named Mr. Brownlow (an act actually committed by the Artful Dodger and Charley Bates), Brownlow takes pity on Oliver and brings him to his house, helping him recover from the abuse and malnourishment he has suffered. Fagin and Sikes, fearing that Oliver will betray him to the police, force Nancy to help Sikes kidnap the boy again. Oliver tries to run away, but Sikes almost beats him into submission, stopping only when Nancy begs him to show mercy while Fagin tries to cowardly smooth matters over between the two.

Fagin forces Oliver to help Sikes burgle a house owned by the wealthy, elderly widow Mrs. Maylie. After breaking into the house, Oliver is shot in the arm and Sikes abandons him while he makes his own escape. Mrs. Maylie and her niece Rose take Oliver in and raise him in a polite society. Fagin later meets with a fellow criminal, the mysterious Mr. Monks, and plots with him to destroy Oliver's newfound reputation.

To make sure Oliver never learns of his true parentage, Fagin and Monks conspire to buy a locket and a ring left to the boy by his late mother from Mr. Bumble and his wife the former Mrs. Corney, and Monks throws them in the river. Nancy, ashamed of her role in Oliver's kidnapping, tells Mr. Brownlow and Rose that Oliver is in danger, and secretly joins them in a plan to rescue him. Fagin becomes suspicious of Nancy and has Noah Claypole, who has recently joined his gang, follow her to one of her meetings with Brownlow and Rose. Upon learning what Nancy is up to, Fagin lies to Sikes that she intends to turn him over to the police, provoking Sikes to kill her.

Fagin and Monks attempt to flee London, but both are arrested. Monks, after being forced to confess his part, is given a second chance thanks to Mr. Brownlow and Oliver, but Fagin is sentenced to be hanged for his crimes. The night before Fagin's execution, Oliver visits him in prison, and Fagin rages against the entire world for the sorry end he has come to. The following day, he is hanged.[2]

 
Fagin waits to be hanged.

Historical basis Edit

Fagin's name comes from one of Dickens's friends he had known in his youth while working in a boot-blacking factory.[3]

Fagin's character might be based on the criminal Ikey Solomon, who was a fence at the centre of a highly publicised arrest, escape, recapture, and trial.[4][5] Some accounts of Solomon also describe him as a London underworld "kidsman" (a kidsman was an adult who recruited children and trained them as pickpockets, exchanging food and shelter for goods the children stole). The popularity of Dickens's novel caused "fagin" to replace "kidsman" in some crime circles, denoting an adult who teaches minors to steal and keeps a major portion of the loot.[citation needed]

Other sources, such as Howard Mancing in The Cervantes Encyclopedia, claim that Fagin is assumed to be modelled on Monipodio, one of the main characters in Miguel de Cervantes' Rinconete y Cortadillo (1613). Monipodio is the leader of a criminal gang in 17th-century Seville that includes cutpurses and cape stealers.[6]

Allegations of antisemitism Edit

 
Fence Ikey Solomon, on whom Fagin has often been said to be based

Fagin has been the subject of much debate over antisemitism, during Dickens' lifetime and in modern times. In an introduction to a 1981 Bantam Books reissue of Oliver Twist, for example, Irving Howe wrote that Fagin was considered an "archetypical Jewish villain."[7] The first 38 chapters of the book refer to Fagin by his racial and religious origin 257 times, calling him "the Jew", against 42 uses of "Fagin" or "the old man". Dickens, who had extensive knowledge of London street life, wrote that he had made Fagin Jewish because: "it unfortunately was true, of the time to which the story refers, that the class of criminal almost invariably was a Jew".[8] It is often argued that Fagin was based on a specific Jewish criminal of the era, Ikey Solomon.[9] Dickens also claimed that by calling Fagin "the Jew" he had meant no imputation against the Jewish people: "I have no feeling towards the Jews but a friendly one. I always speak well of them, whether in public or private, and bear my testimony (as I ought to do) to their perfect good faith in such transactions as I have ever had with them..."[10]

In later editions of the book, printed during his lifetime, Dickens excised over 180 instances of 'Jew' from the text.[11] This occurred after Dickens sold his London home in 1860 to a Jewish banker, James Davis, who objected to the emphasis on Fagin's Jewishness in the novel. When he sold the house, Dickens allegedly told a friend: "The purchaser of Tavistock House will be a Jew Money-Lender."[12]

Dickens became friends with Davis's wife, Eliza, who told him in a letter in 1863 that Jews regarded his portrayal of Fagin a "great wrong" to their people. Dickens then started to revise Oliver Twist, removing all mention of "the Jew" from the last 15 chapters; he later wrote in reply: "There is nothing but good will left between me and a People for whom I have a real regard and to whom I would not willfully have given an offence". In one of his final public readings in 1869, a year before his death, Dickens cleansed Fagin of all stereotypical caricature. A contemporary report observed: "There is no nasal intonation; a bent back but no shoulder-shrug: the conventional attributes are omitted."[13][10]

In 1865, in Our Mutual Friend, Dickens created a number of Jewish characters, the most important being Mr Riah, an elderly Jew who finds jobs for downcast young women in Jewish-owned factories. One of the two heroines, Lizzie Hexam, defends her Jewish employers: "The gentleman certainly is a Jew, and the lady, his wife, is a Jewess, and I was brought to their notice by a Jew. But I think there cannot be kinder people in the world."[10]

The comic book creator Will Eisner, disturbed by the antisemitism in the typical depiction of the character, created a graphic novel in 2003 titled Fagin the Jew. In this book, the back story of the character and events of Oliver Twist are depicted from his point of view.[14]

Media portrayals Edit

 
Oliver Twist (Jackie Coogan) held captive, by Fagin (Lon Chaney) and his criminal gang in Oliver Twist (1922 film)

Numerous prominent actors have played the character of Fagin. Lon Chaney portrayed Fagin in a silent film version Oliver Twist. Alec Guinness portrayed Fagin in David Lean's 1948 film adaptation of Oliver Twist, with controversial make-up by Stuart Freeborn which exaggerated stereotypical Jewish facial features.[15] The release of the film in the USA was delayed for three years on charges of being antisemitic by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith and the New York Board of Rabbis. It was finally released in the United States in 1951, with seven minutes of profile shots and other parts of Guinness' performance cut.[16]

For the BBC's at the time controversial 1962 serial, Fagin was portrayed in a fashion very faithful to the novel by Irish actor Max Adrian.

Ron Moody's portrayal in the original London production of the musical Oliver! by Lionel Bart, which he repeated in the Oscar-winning 1968 film, is recognisably influenced by Guinness's portrayal. However, the antisemitic quality of Guinness' portrayal was considerably toned down in the musical, partly because of Moody being Jewish himself; he was in fact the first Jewish actor to portray Fagin on film since Irving Pichel.[citation needed] While Fagin remains an unrepentant thief, he is a much more sympathetic and comic character than he is in the novel. His plot with Monks is deleted and his role in Nancy's death is similarly excised, and he is portrayed as being cowardly and deeply afraid of Bill Sikes. Fagin is completely innocent of Nancy's murder and is horrified when he finds out. He even admonishes Sikes saying that: "[He] should not have done that." Bart's musical also deletes Fagin's arrest and the musical ends with Fagin, faced with beginning again, pondering the possibility of going straight. The film version reverses this ending, with Fagin briefly considering reformation, but then gleefully teaming up again with Dodger to start their racket again. Moody's performance as the character is often considered the most critically acclaimed. He won a Golden Globe for his performance, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. When Oliver! was brought to Broadway in 1964, Fagin was portrayed by Clive Revill, but in a 1984 revival, Moody reprised his performance opposite Tony Award winner Patti LuPone, who played Nancy. Moody later stated: "Fate destined me to play Fagin. It was the part of a lifetime."[17]

Ben Kingsley's portrayal of Fagin in Roman Polanski's 2005 screen adaptation was also inspired by the 1948 version.[18]

In the 1980 ATV series The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist, Fagin was played by David Swift. In this 13-episode series, Fagin has escaped his hanging by pretending to have had a stroke, which has left him paralyzed (and therefore unfit to be executed) and is in hiding at The Three Cripples, tended to by Barney.[19]

In the 1982 made-for-TV movie version, Fagin is portrayed by George C. Scott. Although the character is generally portrayed as elderly, diminutive, and homely, Scott's version of the character was markedly younger, stronger, and better-looking. Also, this version of the character had him more caring of his orphan charges, feeding them well and treating them with obvious concern.[20]

Ron Moody reprised the role of Fagin in the 1983 Channel 4 television program 'The Other Side of London'[21]

In the 1985 miniseries, Fagin is portrayed by Eric Porter.[22]

In Disney's animated version, Oliver & Company (1988), Fagin is a kind-hearted but poor man living in New York City. He lives in poverty with his five dogs and is desperately searching for money to repay his debts to a ruthless loan shark. This version does away with the moral quandary of child exploitation as all the characters are dogs who have no real need for money and genuinely want to help their owner. Informed by earlier portrayals, he retains a large nose, red hair, and a green coat, but his racial characteristics, religion or "Jewishness" play no role in his character. He is voiced by the Italian-American Dom DeLuise.[23]

In 1994, Oliver! was revived in London. Fagin was played by many noted British actors and comedians, including Jonathan Pryce, George Layton, Jim Dale, Russ Abbot, Barry Humphries (who had played Mr Sowerberry in the original 1960 London production of Oliver!) and Robert Lindsay, who won an Olivier Award for his performance. The different actors playing Fagin were distinguished by their different costumes, especially their coats. Pryce used a patched red and brown coat, while Lindsay used the traditional dark green overcoat seen in the 1968 film version.[24]

In the 1996-1997 Saban's Adventures of Oliver Twist series, Fagin is voiced by Brian George. In this version, he appears as a wise, old, and kind red fox. [25]

In Disney's live action television production Oliver Twist (1997), Fagin is played by Richard Dreyfuss.[26]

In the film Twisted (1996), a film loosely based on Dickens's Oliver Twist, the Fagin character is played by actor William Hickey.[27]

In the miniseries Escape of the Artful Dodger (2001), Fagin is played by actor Christopher Baz.[28]

In the film Twist (2003), a film also loosely based on Dickens' Oliver Twist, Fagin is played by actor Gary Farmer.[29]

In a 2007 BBC television adaptation, Fagin is played by Timothy Spall. Contrary to his appearance in the novel, he is beardless and overweight in this version. He is also a more sympathetic character.[30]

In December 2008, Oliver! was revived at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London with Rowan Atkinson playing the character. This role was taken over by Omid Djalili in July 2009. He was succeeded by Russ Abbot in June 2010.[31][32][33][34]

In 2015–16, BBC2's Dickensian Fagin was played by the actor Anton Lesser.[35]

In 2023, in the New York City Center Encores! revival of Oliver!, Fagin was played by Raúl Esparza and Gavin Lee.[36][37]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Fagin Character Analysis in Oliver Twist". Sparknotes. from the original on 2 February 2017.
  2. ^ "Oliver Twist".
  3. ^ Ackroyd, Peter (3 September 1990). Dickens. Sinclair-Stevenson Ltd. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-1-85619-000-8.
  4. ^ Sackville O'Donnell, Judith (2002). The First Fagin: the True Story of Ikey Solomon. Acland. ISBN 978-0-9585576-2-7.
  5. ^ Montagu, Euan; Tobias, John J (28 March 1974). The Prince of Fences: Life and Crimes of Ikey Solomons. Vallentine Mitchell. ISBN 978-0-85303-174-1.
  6. ^ "Who Was The Real Fagin?". Londonist. 24 October 2017. from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  7. ^ Dickens, Charles (22 January 1982). Oliver Twist. Bantam USA. ISBN 978-0-553-21050-7.
  8. ^ Howe, Irving (31 May 2005). "Oliver Twist – introduction". ISBN 9780553901566. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  9. ^ Donald Hawes, Who's Who in Dickens, Routledge, London, 2002, p. 75.
  10. ^ a b c Johnson, Edgar (1 January 1952). "Intimations of Mortality". Charles Dickens: His Tragedy and Triumph. Simon & Schuster. Retrieved 8 February 2009.
  11. ^ Nunberg, Geoffrey (15 October 2001). The Way We Talk Now: Commentaries on Language and Culture. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-618-11603-4.
  12. ^ Lebrecht, Norman (2019). Genius & Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847-1947. Simon & Schuster. p. 49. ISBN 9781982134228.
  13. ^ Lebrecht, Norman (29 September 2005). "How racist is Oliver Twist?". La Scena Musicale. Retrieved 8 February 2009.
  14. ^ Fagin the Jew, reviewed by John Stuart Clark, in New Internationalist; March 2006 issue; p. 18
  15. ^ "'Junior Angel' as Film Oliver Twist". e.g. The Sunday Herald. e.g. National Library of Australia. 30 January 1949. p. 5 Supplement: Magazine Section. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  16. ^ Sragow, Michael (11 January 1999). "Oliver Twist". Criterion Collection. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Oliver! actor Ron Moody dies aged 91". BBC News. 11 June 2015.
  18. ^ "Kingsley remained Fagin off-camera in "Oliver Twist" filming". The Denver Post. 22 September 2005. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
  19. ^ Saul, Marc (22 March 2020). "The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist". Television Heaven. from the original on 24 March 2020.
  20. ^ O'Connor, John J. (23 March 1982). "TV: George C. Scott in 'Oliver Twist'". The New York Times.
  21. ^ Ron Moody. "The Other Side of London". Bright Thoughts.
  22. ^ "Oliver Twist (TV Mini Series 1985)". IMDb.[unreliable source?]
  23. ^ "Oliver & Company". IMDb. Retrieved 31 January 2020.[unreliable source?]
  24. ^ "Oliver! – 1994 West End – Backstage & Production Info". Broadway World. from the original on 20 October 2021.
  25. ^ Saban's Adventures of Oliver Twist, retrieved 24 September 2023
  26. ^ "Oliver Twist". Rotten Tomatoes.
  27. ^ "Twisted (1996)". IMDb.[unreliable source?]
  28. ^ "Escape of the Artful Dodger (TV Series 2001)". IMDb.[unreliable source?]
  29. ^ "Twist". Rotten Tomatoes.
  30. ^ Wollaston, Sam (19 December 2007). "Last night's TV: Oliver Twist". The Guardian.
  31. ^ Petillo, Faetra (30 October 2008). "Full Casting Announced for Theatre Royal Drury Lane's OLIVER!". Broadway World. from the original on 20 October 2021.
  32. ^ Iqbal, Nosheen (11 February 2009). "Omid Djalili pockets Fagin role in Oliver!". The Guardian.
  33. ^ "Griff Rhys Jones Takes Over Oliver!'s Fagin, 14 Dec". Whats on Stage. 15 September 2009. from the original on 19 July 2018.
  34. ^ Cole, Caroline (25 May 2010). "Russ Abott Returns to the West End as Fagin in OLIVER!". Broadway World. from the original on 20 October 2021.
  35. ^ Burrel, Ian (1 December 2015). "'Dickensian' is the BBC's biggest Christmas offering: When Fagin met Scrooge". The Independent.
  36. ^ Gans, Andrew (23 February 2023). "Lilli Cooper, Raúl Esparza, Tam Mutu, More Will Star in Oliver! at New York City Center Encores!". Playbill.
  37. ^ Gavin Lee To Go On as 'Fagin' Tonight in OLIVER! at New York City Center

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Fagin at Wikimedia Commons

fagin, other, uses, disambiguation, fictional, character, secondary, antagonist, charles, dickens, 1838, novel, oliver, twist, preface, novel, described, receiver, stolen, goods, leader, group, children, artful, dodger, charley, bates, among, them, whom, teach. For other uses see Fagin disambiguation Fagin ˈ f eɪ ɡ ɪ n is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist in Charles Dickens s 1838 novel Oliver Twist In the preface to the novel he is described as a receiver of stolen goods He is the leader of a group of children the Artful Dodger and Charley Bates among them whom he teaches to make their livings by pickpocketing and other criminal activities in exchange for shelter A distinguishing trait is his constant and insincere use of the phrase my dear when addressing others At the time of the novel he is said by another character Monks to have already made criminals out of scores of children Nancy who is the lover of Bill Sikes the novel s lead villain is confirmed to be Fagin s former pupil FaginFagin in a watercolour by Kyd 1889 Created byCharles DickensPortrayed byLon Chaney 1922 Ivan Berlyn 1922 Irving Pichel 1933 Alec Guinness 1948 Max Adrian 1962 Ron Moody 1960 1968 1983 1984 Clive Revill 1963 Roy Hudd 1977 Roy Dotrice 1978 David Swift 1980 George C Scott 1982 Jonathan Pryce 1994 Richard Dreyfuss 1997 Robert Lindsay 1997 Gary Farmer 2003 Ben Kingsley 2005 Timothy Spall 2007 Russ Abbott 2010 11 Noah Berry 2011 Rowan Atkinson 2009 2010 Omid Djalili 2009 Griff Rhys Jones 2009 Neil Morrissey 2011 12 Harry Moore 2012 Anton Lesser 2015 Michael Caine 2021 Christopher Eccleston 2022 Elio El Hajj 2022 Raul Esparza 2023 Gavin Lee 2023 Voiced byDom DeLuiseIn universe informationNicknameThe Jew The Old Man The Old One 1 GenderMaleOccupationCriminalpickpocketNationalityEnglishFagin is a confessed miser who despite the wealth that he has acquired does very little to improve the squalid lives of the children he guards or his own In the second chapter of his appearance it is shown when talking to himself that he cares less for their welfare than that they do not peach inform on him and the other children Still darker sides to the character s nature are shown when he beats the Artful Dodger for not bringing Oliver back in his attempted beating of Oliver for trying to escape and in his own involvement with various plots and schemes throughout the story He indirectly but intentionally causes the death of Nancy by falsely informing Sikes that she had betrayed him when in reality she had shielded Sikes from the law whereupon Sikes kills her Near the end of the book Fagin is captured and sentenced to be hanged in a chapter that portrays him as pitiable in his anguish In popular culture Fagin or at least his name is used in comparison with adults who use children for illegal activities Contents 1 Role in the novel 2 Historical basis 3 Allegations of antisemitism 4 Media portrayals 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksRole in the novel EditFagin is portrayed as a criminal mastermind who kidnaps orphaned children and trains them to be pickpockets in return for sheltering and feeding them he keeps the ill gotten money for himself His wards include the novel s title character the Artful Dodger Charley Bates and Nancy He also trained the novel s main antagonist housebreaker Bill Sikes who later became his main source of stolen goods Oliver at first believes that Fagin is an artisan who makes wallets and handkerchiefs which are in fact stolen at Fagin s order and goes along with his new teacher s orders The only one in the gang to protect Oliver is Nancy who is also Sikes s lover After Oliver is arrested for supposedly picking the pocket of a gentleman named Mr Brownlow an act actually committed by the Artful Dodger and Charley Bates Brownlow takes pity on Oliver and brings him to his house helping him recover from the abuse and malnourishment he has suffered Fagin and Sikes fearing that Oliver will betray him to the police force Nancy to help Sikes kidnap the boy again Oliver tries to run away but Sikes almost beats him into submission stopping only when Nancy begs him to show mercy while Fagin tries to cowardly smooth matters over between the two Fagin forces Oliver to help Sikes burgle a house owned by the wealthy elderly widow Mrs Maylie After breaking into the house Oliver is shot in the arm and Sikes abandons him while he makes his own escape Mrs Maylie and her niece Rose take Oliver in and raise him in a polite society Fagin later meets with a fellow criminal the mysterious Mr Monks and plots with him to destroy Oliver s newfound reputation To make sure Oliver never learns of his true parentage Fagin and Monks conspire to buy a locket and a ring left to the boy by his late mother from Mr Bumble and his wife the former Mrs Corney and Monks throws them in the river Nancy ashamed of her role in Oliver s kidnapping tells Mr Brownlow and Rose that Oliver is in danger and secretly joins them in a plan to rescue him Fagin becomes suspicious of Nancy and has Noah Claypole who has recently joined his gang follow her to one of her meetings with Brownlow and Rose Upon learning what Nancy is up to Fagin lies to Sikes that she intends to turn him over to the police provoking Sikes to kill her Fagin and Monks attempt to flee London but both are arrested Monks after being forced to confess his part is given a second chance thanks to Mr Brownlow and Oliver but Fagin is sentenced to be hanged for his crimes The night before Fagin s execution Oliver visits him in prison and Fagin rages against the entire world for the sorry end he has come to The following day he is hanged 2 nbsp Fagin waits to be hanged Historical basis EditFagin s name comes from one of Dickens s friends he had known in his youth while working in a boot blacking factory 3 Fagin s character might be based on the criminal Ikey Solomon who was a fence at the centre of a highly publicised arrest escape recapture and trial 4 5 Some accounts of Solomon also describe him as a London underworld kidsman a kidsman was an adult who recruited children and trained them as pickpockets exchanging food and shelter for goods the children stole The popularity of Dickens s novel caused fagin to replace kidsman in some crime circles denoting an adult who teaches minors to steal and keeps a major portion of the loot citation needed Other sources such as Howard Mancing in The Cervantes Encyclopedia claim that Fagin is assumed to be modelled on Monipodio one of the main characters in Miguel de Cervantes Rinconete y Cortadillo 1613 Monipodio is the leader of a criminal gang in 17th century Seville that includes cutpurses and cape stealers 6 Allegations of antisemitism EditSee also Racism in the work of Charles Dickens nbsp Fence Ikey Solomon on whom Fagin has often been said to be basedFagin has been the subject of much debate over antisemitism during Dickens lifetime and in modern times In an introduction to a 1981 Bantam Books reissue of Oliver Twist for example Irving Howe wrote that Fagin was considered an archetypical Jewish villain 7 The first 38 chapters of the book refer to Fagin by his racial and religious origin 257 times calling him the Jew against 42 uses of Fagin or the old man Dickens who had extensive knowledge of London street life wrote that he had made Fagin Jewish because it unfortunately was true of the time to which the story refers that the class of criminal almost invariably was a Jew 8 It is often argued that Fagin was based on a specific Jewish criminal of the era Ikey Solomon 9 Dickens also claimed that by calling Fagin the Jew he had meant no imputation against the Jewish people I have no feeling towards the Jews but a friendly one I always speak well of them whether in public or private and bear my testimony as I ought to do to their perfect good faith in such transactions as I have ever had with them 10 In later editions of the book printed during his lifetime Dickens excised over 180 instances of Jew from the text 11 This occurred after Dickens sold his London home in 1860 to a Jewish banker James Davis who objected to the emphasis on Fagin s Jewishness in the novel When he sold the house Dickens allegedly told a friend The purchaser of Tavistock House will be a Jew Money Lender 12 Dickens became friends with Davis s wife Eliza who told him in a letter in 1863 that Jews regarded his portrayal of Fagin a great wrong to their people Dickens then started to revise Oliver Twist removing all mention of the Jew from the last 15 chapters he later wrote in reply There is nothing but good will left between me and a People for whom I have a real regard and to whom I would not willfully have given an offence In one of his final public readings in 1869 a year before his death Dickens cleansed Fagin of all stereotypical caricature A contemporary report observed There is no nasal intonation a bent back but no shoulder shrug the conventional attributes are omitted 13 10 In 1865 in Our Mutual Friend Dickens created a number of Jewish characters the most important being Mr Riah an elderly Jew who finds jobs for downcast young women in Jewish owned factories One of the two heroines Lizzie Hexam defends her Jewish employers The gentleman certainly is a Jew and the lady his wife is a Jewess and I was brought to their notice by a Jew But I think there cannot be kinder people in the world 10 The comic book creator Will Eisner disturbed by the antisemitism in the typical depiction of the character created a graphic novel in 2003 titled Fagin the Jew In this book the back story of the character and events of Oliver Twist are depicted from his point of view 14 Media portrayals Edit nbsp Oliver Twist Jackie Coogan held captive by Fagin Lon Chaney and his criminal gang in Oliver Twist 1922 film Numerous prominent actors have played the character of Fagin Lon Chaney portrayed Fagin in a silent film version Oliver Twist Alec Guinness portrayed Fagin in David Lean s 1948 film adaptation of Oliver Twist with controversial make up by Stuart Freeborn which exaggerated stereotypical Jewish facial features 15 The release of the film in the USA was delayed for three years on charges of being antisemitic by the Anti Defamation League of B nai B rith and the New York Board of Rabbis It was finally released in the United States in 1951 with seven minutes of profile shots and other parts of Guinness performance cut 16 For the BBC s at the time controversial 1962 serial Fagin was portrayed in a fashion very faithful to the novel by Irish actor Max Adrian Ron Moody s portrayal in the original London production of the musical Oliver by Lionel Bart which he repeated in the Oscar winning 1968 film is recognisably influenced by Guinness s portrayal However the antisemitic quality of Guinness portrayal was considerably toned down in the musical partly because of Moody being Jewish himself he was in fact the first Jewish actor to portray Fagin on film since Irving Pichel citation needed While Fagin remains an unrepentant thief he is a much more sympathetic and comic character than he is in the novel His plot with Monks is deleted and his role in Nancy s death is similarly excised and he is portrayed as being cowardly and deeply afraid of Bill Sikes Fagin is completely innocent of Nancy s murder and is horrified when he finds out He even admonishes Sikes saying that He should not have done that Bart s musical also deletes Fagin s arrest and the musical ends with Fagin faced with beginning again pondering the possibility of going straight The film version reverses this ending with Fagin briefly considering reformation but then gleefully teaming up again with Dodger to start their racket again Moody s performance as the character is often considered the most critically acclaimed He won a Golden Globe for his performance and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor When Oliver was brought to Broadway in 1964 Fagin was portrayed by Clive Revill but in a 1984 revival Moody reprised his performance opposite Tony Award winner Patti LuPone who played Nancy Moody later stated Fate destined me to play Fagin It was the part of a lifetime 17 Ben Kingsley s portrayal of Fagin in Roman Polanski s 2005 screen adaptation was also inspired by the 1948 version 18 In the 1980 ATV series The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist Fagin was played by David Swift In this 13 episode series Fagin has escaped his hanging by pretending to have had a stroke which has left him paralyzed and therefore unfit to be executed and is in hiding at The Three Cripples tended to by Barney 19 In the 1982 made for TV movie version Fagin is portrayed by George C Scott Although the character is generally portrayed as elderly diminutive and homely Scott s version of the character was markedly younger stronger and better looking Also this version of the character had him more caring of his orphan charges feeding them well and treating them with obvious concern 20 Ron Moody reprised the role of Fagin in the 1983 Channel 4 television program The Other Side of London 21 In the 1985 miniseries Fagin is portrayed by Eric Porter 22 In Disney s animated version Oliver amp Company 1988 Fagin is a kind hearted but poor man living in New York City He lives in poverty with his five dogs and is desperately searching for money to repay his debts to a ruthless loan shark This version does away with the moral quandary of child exploitation as all the characters are dogs who have no real need for money and genuinely want to help their owner Informed by earlier portrayals he retains a large nose red hair and a green coat but his racial characteristics religion or Jewishness play no role in his character He is voiced by the Italian American Dom DeLuise 23 In 1994 Oliver was revived in London Fagin was played by many noted British actors and comedians including Jonathan Pryce George Layton Jim Dale Russ Abbot Barry Humphries who had played Mr Sowerberry in the original 1960 London production of Oliver and Robert Lindsay who won an Olivier Award for his performance The different actors playing Fagin were distinguished by their different costumes especially their coats Pryce used a patched red and brown coat while Lindsay used the traditional dark green overcoat seen in the 1968 film version 24 In the 1996 1997 Saban s Adventures of Oliver Twist series Fagin is voiced by Brian George In this version he appears as a wise old and kind red fox 25 In Disney s live action television production Oliver Twist 1997 Fagin is played by Richard Dreyfuss 26 In the film Twisted 1996 a film loosely based on Dickens s Oliver Twist the Fagin character is played by actor William Hickey 27 In the miniseries Escape of the Artful Dodger 2001 Fagin is played by actor Christopher Baz 28 In the film Twist 2003 a film also loosely based on Dickens Oliver Twist Fagin is played by actor Gary Farmer 29 In a 2007 BBC television adaptation Fagin is played by Timothy Spall Contrary to his appearance in the novel he is beardless and overweight in this version He is also a more sympathetic character 30 In December 2008 Oliver was revived at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane London with Rowan Atkinson playing the character This role was taken over by Omid Djalili in July 2009 He was succeeded by Russ Abbot in June 2010 31 32 33 34 In 2015 16 BBC2 s Dickensian Fagin was played by the actor Anton Lesser 35 In 2023 in the New York City Center Encores revival of Oliver Fagin was played by Raul Esparza and Gavin Lee 36 37 References Edit Fagin Character Analysis in Oliver Twist Sparknotes Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Oliver Twist Ackroyd Peter 3 September 1990 Dickens Sinclair Stevenson Ltd pp 77 78 ISBN 978 1 85619 000 8 Sackville O Donnell Judith 2002 The First Fagin the True Story of Ikey Solomon Acland ISBN 978 0 9585576 2 7 Montagu Euan Tobias John J 28 March 1974 The Prince of Fences Life and Crimes of Ikey Solomons Vallentine Mitchell ISBN 978 0 85303 174 1 Who Was The Real Fagin Londonist 24 October 2017 Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Dickens Charles 22 January 1982 Oliver Twist Bantam USA ISBN 978 0 553 21050 7 Howe Irving 31 May 2005 Oliver Twist introduction ISBN 9780553901566 Retrieved 21 October 2009 Donald Hawes Who s Who in Dickens Routledge London 2002 p 75 a b c Johnson Edgar 1 January 1952 Intimations of Mortality Charles Dickens His Tragedy and Triumph Simon amp Schuster Retrieved 8 February 2009 Nunberg Geoffrey 15 October 2001 The Way We Talk Now Commentaries on Language and Culture Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 126 ISBN 978 0 618 11603 4 Lebrecht Norman 2019 Genius amp Anxiety How Jews Changed the World 1847 1947 Simon amp Schuster p 49 ISBN 9781982134228 Lebrecht Norman 29 September 2005 How racist is Oliver Twist La Scena Musicale Retrieved 8 February 2009 Fagin the Jew reviewed by John Stuart Clark in New Internationalist March 2006 issue p 18 Junior Angel as Film Oliver Twist e g The Sunday Herald e g National Library of Australia 30 January 1949 p 5 Supplement Magazine Section Retrieved 7 July 2012 Sragow Michael 11 January 1999 Oliver Twist Criterion Collection Retrieved 22 April 2021 Oliver actor Ron Moody dies aged 91 BBC News 11 June 2015 Kingsley remained Fagin off camera in Oliver Twist filming The Denver Post 22 September 2005 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Saul Marc 22 March 2020 The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist Television Heaven Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 O Connor John J 23 March 1982 TV George C Scott in Oliver Twist The New York Times Ron Moody The Other Side of London Bright Thoughts Oliver Twist TV Mini Series 1985 IMDb unreliable source Oliver amp Company IMDb Retrieved 31 January 2020 unreliable source Oliver 1994 West End Backstage amp Production Info Broadway World Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Saban s Adventures of Oliver Twist retrieved 24 September 2023 Oliver Twist Rotten Tomatoes Twisted 1996 IMDb unreliable source Escape of the Artful Dodger TV Series 2001 IMDb unreliable source Twist Rotten Tomatoes Wollaston Sam 19 December 2007 Last night s TV Oliver Twist The Guardian Petillo Faetra 30 October 2008 Full Casting Announced for Theatre Royal Drury Lane s OLIVER Broadway World Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Iqbal Nosheen 11 February 2009 Omid Djalili pockets Fagin role in Oliver The Guardian Griff Rhys Jones Takes Over Oliver s Fagin 14 Dec Whats on Stage 15 September 2009 Archived from the original on 19 July 2018 Cole Caroline 25 May 2010 Russ Abott Returns to the West End as Fagin in OLIVER Broadway World Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Burrel Ian 1 December 2015 Dickensian is the BBC s biggest Christmas offering When Fagin met Scrooge The Independent Gans Andrew 23 February 2023 Lilli Cooper Raul Esparza Tam Mutu More Will Star in Oliver at New York City Center Encores Playbill Gavin Lee To Go On as Fagin Tonight in OLIVER at New York City CenterFurther reading EditHowe Irving 28 October 1997 Selected Writings 1950 1990 Thomson Learning ISBN 978 0 15 680636 7 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Fagin at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fagin amp oldid 1176835057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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