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Entertainment

Charlie's Angels composer dies

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WESTLAKE VILLAGE, California (AP) — Allyn Ferguson, an Emmy-winning composer who co-wrote the themes for the 1970s TV shows Charlie’s Angels and Barney Miller, has died at 85.

Ferguson died at his home in Westlake Village near Los Angeles on June 23, his daughter, Jill Ferguson, told the Los Angeles Times.

Ferguson wrote scores for dozens of TV episodes in the ‘70s and ‘80s but he may be best-known for the Charlie’s Angels and Barney Miller themes he co-wrote with Jack Elliott.

He received eight Emmy nominations, winning the award for music composition in 1985 for scoring a television adaptation of the classic novel Camille.

It was one of several literary adaptations that Ferguson scored for producer Norman Rosemont.

“Allyn will always be remembered as the co-writer of two iconic television themes,” said Jon Burlingame, author of TV’s Biggest Hits. “But I think his real strength was in writing large-scale orchestral scores for Rosemont.”

”He’d often write lavish orchestral scores, some very swashbuckling in nature, that helped to set the mood and place the viewer in the proper period,” Burlingame said. “It was great stuff; he was really good at this.”

Ferguson also conducted and was musical co-director for Academy Award, Emmy and Grammy shows.

During his career, Ferguson also was an arranger or musical director for artists such as Sarah Vaughan, Andy Williams, Johnny Mathis and Julie Andrews.

He wrote the arrangements for the Count Basie Orchestra’s 1998 Grammy-winning album, Count Plays Duke.

In addition to his daughter, Ferguson is survived by his wife, Joline; sons, Dan and Todd; his sister, Marilyn Dallman; and six grandchildren.

ACADEMY AWARD

ALLYN FERGUSON

ANDY WILLIAMS

ANGELS AND BARNEY MILLER

BIGGEST HITS

BUT I

COUNT BASIE ORCHESTRA

COUNT PLAYS DUKE

DAN AND TODD

EMMY AND GRAMMY

FERGUSON

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