British entertainer and presenter (1928?2017)
Sir
Bruce Forsyth
|
---|
Forsyth in 2006
|
Born
| Bruce Joseph Forsyth-Johnson
(
1928-02-22
)
22 February 1928
|
---|
Died
| 18 August 2017
(2017-08-18)
(aged 89)
|
---|
Resting place
| London Palladium
|
---|
Other names
| Boy Bruce, the Mighty Atom
Brucie
|
---|
Occupations
| - Presenter
- actor
- comedian
- singer
- dancer
- screenwriter
|
---|
Years active
| 1939?2015
|
---|
Spouses
|
Penny Calvert
(
m.
1953;
div.
1973)
(
m.
1973;
div.
1979)
|
---|
Children
| 6
|
---|
Relatives
| |
---|
Awards
| Knight Bachelor
(2011)
|
---|
|
|
Allegiance
| United Kingdom
|
---|
Service/
branch
| Royal Air Force
|
---|
Years of service
| 1947?1949
|
---|
Unit
| Film Unit
|
---|
|
Sir Bruce Joseph Forsyth-Johnson
CBE
(22 February 1928 ? 18 August 2017) was an English entertainer and television presenter whose career spanned more than 70 years.
Forsyth came to national attention from the late 1950s through the
ITV
series
Sunday Night at the London Palladium
. He went on to host several game shows, including
The Generation Game
,
Play Your Cards Right
,
The Price Is Right
and
You Bet!
. He co-presented
Strictly Come Dancing
from 2004 to 2013.
[1]
In 2012,
Guinness World Records
recognised Forsyth as having the longest television career for a male entertainer.
[2]
Early life
[
edit
]
Forsyth was born on Victoria Road in
Edmonton
,
Middlesex
, on 22 February 1928,
[3]
the son of Florence Ada (
nee
Pocknell) and John Thomas Forsyth-Johnson.
[4]
His family owned a car repair garage and, as members of the
Salvation Army
, his parents played
brass instruments
; his mother was a singer.
[5]
His great-grandfather
Joseph Forsyth Johnson
was a
landscape architect
who worked in several countries,
[6]
and great-great-great-great-grandfather
William Forsyth
(1737?1804) was a founder of the
Royal Horticultural Society
and the namesake of the plant
genus
Forsythia
.
[7]
Following the outbreak of the
Second World War
, Forsyth was evacuated to
Clacton-on-Sea
. Shortly after he arrived, Forsyth's parents allowed him to return to London because he felt homesick.
[8]
In 1943, Forsyth's older brother John, who served as a pilot in the
Royal Air Force
, was killed during a training exercise at
RAF Turnberry
.
[9]
[10]
Forsyth attended
the Latymer School
. After watching
Fred Astaire
in films at the age of eight, he trained in dance in
Tottenham
and then
Brixton
.
[5]
Career
[
edit
]
Boy Bruce, the Mighty Atom
[
edit
]
Forsyth started his live public performances aged 14, with a song, dance and
accordion
act called Boy Bruce, the Mighty Atom.
[11]
His first appearance was at the Theatre Royal in
Bilston
, with The Great Marzo at the top of the bill.
[5]
He had made his television debut in 1939 as a child, singing and dancing on BBC talent show
Come and Be Televised
, broadcast from
Radiolympia
and introduced by
Jasmine Bligh
.
[11]
[12]
Post-war work
[
edit
]
After the war, with the goal of joining
Moss Empires
theatres, he spent years on stage with little success and travelled the UK working seven days a week, doing summer seasons,
pantomimes
and
circuses
, where he became renowned for his strong-man act.
[13]
His act was interrupted by
national service
when he was conscripted into the Royal Air Force at the age of 19, which he later reflected taught him "respect and discipline".
[14]
In 1958, an appearance with the comedian
Dickie Henderson
led to his being offered the job of compere of
Val Parnell
's weekly TV variety show,
Sunday Night at the London Palladium
.
[15]
He hosted the show for two years, followed by a year's break, then returned for another year.
[16]
His schedule of stage performances, which continued throughout the 1960s, forced him to give up the job of host.
Forsyth appeared in the London production of
Little Me
, along with
Avril Angers
in 1964.
[17]
In the musical film
Star!
(1968), a biopic of stage actress
Gertrude Lawrence
, he played alongside lead performer
Julie Andrews
as Lawrence's father.
[18]
In January 1968
Pye Records
issued as a single "I'm Backing Britain", supporting the
campaign of the same name
, written by
Tony Hatch
and
Jackie Trent
, and sung by Forsyth.
[19]
The chorus included "The feeling is growing, so let's keep it going, the good times are blowing our way". All involved in making the single took cuts in their fees or royalties so that the single sold for 5
s.
instead of the going rate of 7s.
4
+
1
⁄
2
d. Forsyth happily endorsed the campaign, saying "The country has always done its best when it is up against the wall. If everyone realises what we are up against we can get out of trouble easily."
[20]
The song did not make the charts,
[21]
selling only 7,319 copies.
[22]
On 7 October 1968, he was top of the bill on the opening night of the Golden Garter nightclub, Wythenshawe.
[23]
Two years later, he played Swinburne in the
Disney
fantasy film
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
.
[24]
In 1976, he appeared on
The Muppet Show
, where he took on the duo
Statler and Waldorf
.
[25]
Game show host
[
edit
]
During his spell of hosting
Sunday Night at the London Palladium
as part of the show he hosted the 15-minute game show
Beat the Clock
.
[26]
Forsyth's next success was
The Generation Game
(
BBC1
, 1971?1977, 1990?1994), which proved popular and attracted huge Saturday evening audiences.
[27]
It was on this show that Forsyth introduced his "
The Thinker
" pose, emulating
Rodin
's sculpture, appearing in silhouette each week after the opening titles. This pose is reminiscent of the circus strong-man attitude.
[11]
He also wrote and sang the theme for the show "Life is the Name of the Game."
[28]
Millions of viewers became familiar with the rasp of Forsyth's
north London accented voice
and his "distinctively pointy" chin that he emphasised in poses such as the "human question mark", with chin over raised knee.
[5]
During his time as host of
The Generation Game
he began using what would become his signature 'call and response' greeting with the studio audience, "It's nice to see you, to see
you
...", to which the audience would loudly reply, "Nice!";
[29]
he used this on many shows he later hosted for the rest of his career. He was replaced on
The Generation Game
by
Larry Grayson
.
[30]
In 1977 he announced that he was leaving television to take the star role in a new musical,
The Travelling Music Show
, based on the songs of
Anthony Newley
and
Leslie Bricusse
.
[31]
The show did reasonably well in provincial theatre, but received poor reviews when it moved to London and it closed after four months in July 1978.
London Weekend Television
persuaded him to return to the screen later that year to present
Bruce Forsyth's Big Night
, a two-hour Saturday-night show on ITV encompassing a variety of different entertainment formats (later reduced to 90 minutes). However, the show was not a success and lasted for just one series.
[32]
Forsyth remained with ITV, hosting the game show
Play Your Cards Right
, which was the UK version of the US original
Card Sharks
, from 1980 to 1987, 1994 to 1999,
[33]
and a brief period from 2002 to 2003, before the show was pulled mid-run.
[34]
In 1986, he went to the United States to host a game show on
ABC
,
Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak
, which ran for 65 episodes from January to April that year.
[11]
Forsyth starred in the
Thames Television
sitcom
Slinger's Day
in 1986 and 1987, a sequel to
Tripper's Day
which had starred
Leonard Rossiter
, whom Forsyth replaced in the new show.
[24]
He was the original host of
You Bet!
(1988 to 1990).
[35]
Forsyth fronted the third version of
The Price Is Right
(1995 to 2001).
[33]
His unsuccessful gameshows include
Takeover Bid
(1990 to 1991),
[36]
Hollywood Or Bust
(1984),
[37]
and
Didn't They Do Well!
(2004).
[38]
During the 1970s Forsyth featured in the
Stork margarine
adverts on television,
[39]
and then during the 1980s and 1990s he appeared in an advertising campaign for the furniture retailer
Courts
, in which he dressed as a judge.
[40]
Forsyth celebrated his 70th birthday in 1998 and appeared in a week-long run of his one-man show at the
London Palladium
.
[24]
In 2000, Forsyth hosted a revived series called
Tonight at the London Palladium
.
[41]
Career revival
[
edit
]
In 2003, and again in 2010, Forsyth was a guest presenter on the news and satire quiz show
Have I Got News for You
. Forsyth had called
Paul Merton
, one of the team captains on the show, to suggest himself as a guest presenter.
[42]
[43]
He co-presented
Strictly Come Dancing
from 2004 to 2013, formally stepping down from hosting the regular live show in April 2014. This decision was made to reduce his workload and for the preparation of pre-recorded specials.
[44]
On 7 April 2010, Forsyth became one of the first three celebrities to be subjected to the British version of the American institution of a
comedy roast
, on Channel 4's
A Comedy Roast
.
[45]
Forsyth was the subject of the
BBC
genealogy
series
Who Do You Think You Are?
, broadcast on 19 July 2010.
[46]
On 20 March 2010, Forsyth appeared on the autobiography-interview programme
Piers Morgan's Life Stories
, which was broadcast on
ITV
.
[47]
In 2011, Forsyth released a collection of songs on CD called
These Are My Favourites
. He chose the songs for their personal and musical importance, including a duet with his granddaughter, Sophie Purdie.
These Are My Favourites
also includes a recording of "Paper Moon" with
Nat King Cole
.
[48]
Tributes and honours
[
edit
]
Forsyth's showbiz awards include
Variety Club
Show Business Personality of the Year in 1975;
TV Times
Male TV Personality of the Year, in 1975, 1976, 1977 and 1978; and BBC TV Personality of the Year in 1991.
[49]
[50]
On 7 June 1959 Forsyth was inducted into the elite entertainers' fraternity, the
Grand Order of Water Rats
, Water Rat number 566.
[51]
In 1987, a fan club was created ? the Great Bruce Forsyth Social Club.
[52]
They would later go on to assist Forsyth in singing his opening number, "It's Never Too Late", at his
Audience With
show.
[52]
He repaid this favour by adding the society to his busy schedule in June 1997 and appeared at their 10th annual general meeting in
Plymouth
.
[53]
Forsyth was appointed
Officer of the Order of the British Empire
(OBE) in the 1998 Birthday Honours,
[54]
and
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
(CBE) in the 2006 New Year Honours.
[55]
On 27 February 2005, the BBC screened
A
BAFTA
Tribute to Bruce Forsyth
to mark the entertainer's 60 years in show business.
[56]
He had a bronze bust of himself unveiled at the
London Palladium
in May 2005. The sculpture was created by his son-in-law and is on display in the theatre's Cinderella Bar.
[56]
In 2008, Forsyth received the
BAFTA Fellowship
.
[57]
In 2009, he was awarded the Theatre Performer's Award at the annual
Carl Alan Awards
. Hosted by the
International Dance Teachers' Association
, the awards are voted for by the leading dance organisations in the United Kingdom and recognise those who have made an exceptional contribution to the world of dance and theatre.
[58]
Forsyth received a
Royal Television Society
Lifetime Achievement Award on 17 March 2009.
[59]
On 26 January 2011 he received the
National Television Awards
special recognition award.
[60]
Forsyth was made a
Knight Bachelor
in the
2011 Birthday Honours
for services to entertainment and charity.
[61]
This followed a years-long public campaign to award him a knighthood. His investiture, by the
Queen
, took place on 12 October 2011 and he became Sir Bruce Forsyth CBE.
[62]
In July 2012, Forsyth was given the honour of carrying the Olympic flame through London, as it finally reached the city on the penultimate day of the
London 2012
Torch Relay.
[63]
Forsyth earned a place in the 2013
Guinness Book of World Records
as the male TV entertainer having had the longest career, calling it a "wonderful surprise".
[64]
[65]
He also appeared at the 2013
Glastonbury Festival
on the Avalon stage, becoming the oldest performer to ever play at the festival.
[66]
In 2018 the NTAs honoured the memory of Sir Bruce by naming an NTA award after him.
Personal life
[
edit
]
Forsyth was married to Penny Calvert from 1953 until their divorce in 1973, with whom he had three daughters named Debbie, Julie, and Laura.
[67]
Julie is a songwriter, who composed
the UK's entry in the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest
.
In 1973, he married
Anthea Redfern
, the hostess on
The Generation Game
. They had two daughters named Charlotte and Louisa, before divorcing in 1979. Asked to judge the
1980 Miss World competition
, Forsyth met Puerto Rican beauty queen
Wilnelia Merced
, who was
the 1975 winner
and a fellow judge.
[68]
They were married from 1983
[67]
until his death in 2017. They had one son together named Jonathan Joseph (who is better known as "JJ").
[69]
By his six children, Forsyth had nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
[70]
Forsyth was a supporter and ambassador for the children's charity
Caudwell Children
,
[71]
regularly appearing at many of their fundraising events.
[72]
Forsyth lived on the
Wentworth Estate
in Surrey.
[73]
[74]
Until 2000, he also occupied a flat in
Nell Gwynn House
,
Sloane Avenue
,
Chelsea
.
[75]
Politics
[
edit
]
In August 2014, Forsyth was one of 200 public figures who signed a letter to
The Guardian
expressing their hope that Scotland would vote to remain part of the United Kingdom in September's
referendum on that issue
.
[76]
Illness and death
[
edit
]
Towards the end of his life, Forsyth suffered from ill health, which reduced his appearances in public. On 8 October 2015, he was admitted to hospital for cuts and minor concussion after tripping over a rug at his home and hitting his head.
[77]
A month later, he made his last full TV appearance on
Strictly Children in Need Special
,
[35]
with filming for this taking place prior to him undergoing surgery for an abdominal
aortic aneurysm
on 12 November.
[78]
As a result of his surgery, Forsyth was unable to host that year's
Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special
as planned, but a spokesman representing him later stated he would play a part in the production, recording a special video message for it.
[79]
After 2015, Forsyth made no further public appearances, as his health began to decline, with his wife commenting that he struggled to move easily following his surgery.
[80]
On 26 February 2017, he was again admitted to hospital with a severe chest infection and spent five days in
intensive care
, before returning home on 3 March 2017.
[81]
On 18 August 2017, Forsyth died of
bronchial pneumonia
at his
Wentworth Estate
home in
Virginia Water
, aged 89.
[82]
[83]
Several celebrities paid tribute to Forsyth following his death, including his former
Strictly Come Dancing
co-host
Tess Daly
; his friends
Michael Parkinson
,
Jimmy Tarbuck
, and
Des O'Connor
, the
BBC director general
Tony Hall
and the then Prime Minister,
Theresa May
.
[84]
BBC One
aired
Sir Bruce Forsyth ? Mr Entertainment
, in place of the scheduled
The One Show
, in tribute.
[85]
Forsyth was cremated on 5 September 2017 in a private ceremony attended only by close family and friends.
A few days later, on 9 September 2017, when that year's series of
Strictly Come Dancing
began, it paid tribute to Forsyth with a special ballroom dance routine from their professional dancers.
[86]
On 14 December 2017, the BBC announced that it would produce a tribute show to Forsyth at the
London Palladium
on 21 February 2018.
[87]
Hosted by his
Strictly Come Dancing
co-host
Tess Daly
,
Sir Bruce: A Celebration
was broadcast on BBC One on 11 March 2018.
[88]
On 18 August 2018, exactly a year after he died, Forsyth's ashes were laid to rest beneath the stage at the
London Palladium
in a private ceremony.
[89]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Film and television
[
edit
]
Stage
[
edit
]
Discography
[
edit
]
Albums
[
edit
]
Singles
[
edit
]
- 1959, "Excerpts from
The Desert Song
(No. 2)", with
June Bronhill
,
Edmund Hockridge
,
Inia Te Wiata
, The Williams Singers, Michael Collins and His Orchestra (7-inch EP),
His Master's Voice
: 7EG 8676
[100]
- 1960, "I'm a Good Boy",
Parlophone
[100]
- 1960, "I'm in Charge" (7-inch), Parlophone: 45-R 4535
[100]
- 1962, "The Oh-Be-Joyfuls (7-inch),
Piccadilly
: 7N.35086
[100]
- 1964, "Real Live Girl" (7-inch),
Pye
: 7N.15744
[100]
- 1964, "Saturday Sunshine" (7-inch), Piccadilly: 7N.35169
[100]
- 1964, "The Mysterious People" (7-inch), Piccadilly: 1189
[100]
- 1965, "Real Live Girl" (7-inch), Blue Cat: BC 105
[100]
- 1968, "
I'm Backing Britain
" / "There's Not Enough Love in the World", Pye
[100]
- 1973, "Didn't He Do Well?" (7-inch),
Philips
: 6006 285
[100]
- 1978, "Love Medley", with Valerie Walsh (7), CBS: S CBS 6469
[100]
In popular culture
[
edit
]
Neopets
, a
virtual pet website
, had a collectible character which was originally a direct representation of Forsyth himself. The pet was later renamed to just "Bruce" and his appearance changed to that of a penguin to better fit with the other pets on the platform. Despite the change, the pet retained Forsyth's iconic bow tie.
[101]
[102]
- ^
He was co host for three specials after 2013 ? the Children in Need specials in 2014 and 2015, and the 2014 Christmas Special. He made a guest appearance for the 2015 Christmas Special via Video Message, which was his final television appearance.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Sir Bruce Forsyth steps down from Strictly Come Dancing"
.
BBC News
. 4 April 2014.
- ^
"Sir Bruce Forsyth breaks TV career world record"
. Guinness World Records. 7 September 2012
. Retrieved
26 August
2014
.
- ^
"Why I have done so well, by Bruce Forsyth, great-grandfather, at 80"
,
The Times
, 23 February 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2008.
- ^
"Bruce Forsyth Biography (1928?)"
.
www.filmreference.com
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Cooke, Rachel (16 December 2007).
"Didn't he do well ..."
The Guardian
. London
. Retrieved
4 January
2008
.
- ^
"Bruce Forsyth discovers 'bigamist' in his family tree"
.
BBC News
. London: BBC. 19 July 2010
. Retrieved
19 July
2010
.
- ^
Barratt, Nick (6 December 2006).
"Family detective: Bruce Forsyth"
.
The Telegraph
. London
. Retrieved
27 April
2010
.
- ^
Buckton, Henry (2009).
The children's front : the impact of the Second World War on British children
. Chichester, West Sussex, England: Phillimore. pp. 101?102.
ISBN
9781860775710
.
OCLC
317931464
.
- ^
Wintle, Angela (14 April 2012).
"Bruce Forsyth: My family values"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Commonwealth War Graves Commission"
. Retrieved
19 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Loxley, Tom (5 April 2014).
"9 facts you might not know about Sir Bruce Forsyth"
.
Radio Times
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"BFI Screenonline: Forsyth, Bruce (1928?) Biography"
.
www.screenonline.org.uk
.
- ^
Eames, Tom (18 August 2017).
"Sir Bruce Forsyth dies: Remembering the iconic TV host, entertainer and Strictly Come Dancing star"
.
Digital Spy
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"10 facts you did not know about Bruce Forsyth"
.
The Irish News
. 18 August 2017
. Retrieved
25 February
2023
.
- ^
"I'm in Charge"
.
Archive on 4
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"60 years of Sunday Night at the Palladium: A look back at some classic archive shots"
.
British Telecom
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Barker, Dennis (14 November 2005).
"Obituary: Avril Angers"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Adler, Renata (23 October 1968).
"Screen: 'Star!' Arrives:Julie Andrews Featured in Movie at Rivoli"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Back Britain drive hits chord in music field"
.
Billboard
. 20 January 1968. p. 40.
- ^
"Song for the typists" (Business Diary),
The Times
, 8 January 1968, p. 19.
- ^
Craig Brown, "Way of the world: A mutual case of wow",
Daily Telegraph
, 4 June 2005, p. 23.
- ^
McClatchey, Caroline (8 November 2011).
"Buy British: Why isn't there a new campaign?"
.
BBC News
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Forsyth, Bruce (2015).
Strictly Bruce: Stories Of My Life
.
Penguin Random House
.
ISBN
9780593075982
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
c
Sellers, Robert (18 August 2017).
"Bruce Forsyth: The face of Saturday night television who has died at the age of 89"
.
The Independent
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
"The stars share their Muppet memories"
.
Radio Times
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Hawkes, Rebecca (30 September 2015).
"BFI to show entire night of television recorded in 1964"
.
The Daily Telegraph
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Sir Bruce Forsyth's old-fashioned appeal"
.
BBC News
. 4 April 2014
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Sir Bruce Forsyth dies aged 89"
.
Classic FM
. 18 August 2017
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Sir Bruce Forsyth's 10 most iconic catchphrases"
.
www.nme.com
. NME Networks. 18 August 2017
. Retrieved
5 February
2024
.
- ^
"Forsyth's old-fashioned appeal"
.
BBC News
. 31 December 2005
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Forsyth, Bruce (6 September 2012).
Bruce: The Autobiography
. Pan Macmillan.
ISBN
9780330475945
.
- ^
Dean, Will (18 December 2014).
"The Fight for Saturday Night, TV review: Top marks for Michael Grade's illuminating look at television's golden age"
.
The Independent
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
Viner, Brian (26 October 2000).
"Bruce Forsyth 'humiliated' by ITV director's lack of 'respect'
"
.
The Independent
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Play Your Cards Right, 1980"
. British Classic Comedy. 24 April 2015
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
"Bruce Forsyth: a timeline"
.
The Daily Telegraph
. 18 August 2017
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Bettridge, Daniel (9 February 2012).
"Six to watch: Gameshow hosts"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Belcher, David (10 April 1984).
"TV"
.
The Glasgow Herald
. p. 26
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Billings, Claire (30 October 2003).
"Bruce Forsyth returns to TV with new quiz show on BBC"
. Campaign
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Stork"
.
Unilever
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Treanor, Jill (30 November 2004).
"Courts furniture chain collapses"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Trueman, Matt (24 November 2011).
"Bruce Forsyth to celebrate 70 years in showbiz with stage show"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Youngs, Ian (19 August 2017).
"Sir Bruce Forsyth: 8 little-known facts about his career"
.
BBC News
? Entertainment & Arts
. Retrieved
20 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
Heritage, Stuart (13 April 2012).
"What makes the perfect Have I Got News For You host?"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
"Bruce Forsyth steps down as presenter of Strictly Come Dancing live shows"
.
The Guardian
. 4 April 2014
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
Sutcliffe, Tom (7 April 2010).
"Last Night's Television: Bruce Forsyth: A Comedy Roast, Channel 4 Embarrassing Bodies: Charlotte's Story, Channel 4"
.
The Independent
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
a
b
"Who Do You Think You Are?"
.
BBC Online
. Retrieved
23 July
2010
.
- ^
"Series 3 ? Episode 3 Piers Morgan's Life Stories: Bruce Forsyth"
.
Radio Times
. Archived from
the original
on 18 August 2017
. Retrieved
18 August
2017
.
- ^
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External links
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