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Written and fact-checked by The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaFagin, fictional character, one of the villains in Charles Dickens’s novel Oliver Twist (1837–39) and one of the most notorious anti-Semitic portraits in English literature.
Fagin is an old man in London who teaches young homeless boys how to be pickpockets and then fences their stolen goods. Although a miser and exploiter, he shows a certain loyalty and solicitude toward the boys. The Artful Dodger is one of Fagin’s thieves and, for a time, so is the young Oliver Twist. At the novel’s end, Fagin is executed for complicity in a murder.
Vitagraph filmed the first (silent) adaptation of the book in 1909, and the novel remains a perennial favourite in theatres and on television. In the 1948 film adaptation of the novel, Fagin was portrayed by Alec Guinness. Ron Moody played Fagin in the stage and film musical Oliver! (1968), and George C. Scott portrayed the character in a televised version of the novel released in 1982. In 2005 Ben Kingsley played Fagin in director Roman Polanski’s adaptation of the novel.
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