"Oliver & Company"@en . . . . . . "Skinny half bald man with orange-red hair and a pink nose"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Lon Chaney, Sr. , Alec Guinness , Ron Moody , Dom DeLuise , Gary Farmer , Ben Kingsley , Timothy Spall"@en . . . . . . . "House of Mouse"@en . "Fagin (real name known) is supervillain based out of an old German World War II bunker near Bordeaux, France. He kidnaps young mutants and forces them to help him to commit crimes. He found Charge while she was running from the French MCO."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "--02-17"^^ . . "Julius Antoine \"Fagin\" Dale, sometimes known as \"Jules\", was the chief crime lord of \"the Gutter\", the desperately poor southern section of Tarsonis City, Tarsonis."@en . . . . "Born in London, Fagin is described as \"disgusting\" to look at. 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 a roof over their heads. A distinguishing trait is his constant\u2014and thoroughly insincere\u2014use 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 who grow up to live\u2014or die\u2014committing the same crimes as adults. Bill Sikes, one of the major villains of the novel, is hinted to be one of Fagin's old pupils, and Nancy, Sikes's girlfriend and sex worker clearly was."@en . "Old man"@en . "Pickpocket thief"@en . "To save himself from Sykes"@en . . "Fagin is the tetartagonist from Disney's 1988 feature film Oliver & Company. He is vocied by the late Dom DeLuise. Fagin is the owner of Dodger, Tito, Einstein, Rita, and Francis. It is never explained how a poor man such as Fagin came to be in possession of valuable purebreds, although it is possible that he either stole them, or found them as strays and took them under his wing at some point."@en . . . . . . . . . "Old sport"@en . . . "1839"^^ . . . . . . . "Fagin is the tetartagonist from Disney's 1988 feature film Oliver & Company. He is vocied by the late Dom DeLuise. Fagin is the owner of Dodger, Tito, Einstein, Rita, and Francis. It is never explained how a poor man such as Fagin came to be in possession of valuable purebreds, although it is possible that he either stole them, or found them as strays and took them under his wing at some point."@en . "Fagin is the tetartagonist of Disney's 1988 movie, Oliver & Company. He is the owner of Dodger, Tito, Einstein, Rita, Francis, and Oliver (formerly)."@en . . . . "Oliver Twist"@en . "Fagin (real name known) is supervillain based out of an old German World War II bunker near Bordeaux, France. He kidnaps young mutants and forces them to help him to commit crimes. He found Charge while she was running from the French MCO."@en . "probably over 60"@en . . "execution by hanging"@en . . . . "criminal, pickpocket"@en . . . . . . "Mr. Fagin"@en . . . . . . "Born in London, Fagin is described as \"disgusting\" to look at. 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 a roof over their heads. A distinguishing trait is his constant\u2014and thoroughly insincere\u2014use 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 who grow up to live\u2014or die\u2014committing the same crimes as adults. Bill Sikes, one of the major villains of the novel, is hinted to be one of Fagin's old pupils, and Nancy, Sikes's girlfriend and sex worker clearly was. Whilst portrayed as relatively humorous, he is nonetheless a self-confessed miser who, despite the amount he has acquired over the years from the work of others, does very little to improve the squalid lives of the children he takes in, allowing them to smoke pipes and drink gin \"with the air of middle-aged men.\" In the second chapter of his appearance, it is shown, albeit when talking to himself, that he cares less about those children who are eventually hanged for their crimes and more about the fact that they do not \"peach\" 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, making Charley cry for mercy, in his attempted beating of Oliver for trying to escape after the thieves have kidnapped him, and in his own involvement with various plots and schemes throughout the story. He also indirectly and intently causes the death of Nancy by falsely informing the ill-tempered Sikes that she had betrayed him and Fagin, when in reality she had shielded him, loving him despite his violent personality. This results in Sikes beating her to death. Near the end of the book, Fagin is hanged following capture, in a chapter that portrays him as being pitiful in his anguish, waiting for the moment he will be led to the scaffold which is being prepared outside and becoming so mad not one guard wants to wait with him, meaning there are two there."@en . . . "Julius Antoine \"Fagin\" Dale"@en . . "Good"@en . . . . . . . "black"@en . "Returns home with his dogs"@en . . . "Fagin is the tetartagonist of Disney's 1988 movie, Oliver & Company. He is the owner of Dodger, Tito, Einstein, Rita, Francis, and Oliver (formerly)."@en . "Brown"@en . "1779"^^ . "\"So, big smiles, get out there...and fetch!\""@en . . "Mark Kausler"@en . . "Male"@en . "Fagin"@en . "Fagin (pronounced: /\u02C8fe\u026A\u0261\u026An/) is a fictional character who appears in the Charles Dickens novel Oliver Twist, referred to in the preface of the novel as a \"receiver of stolen goods\", but referred to more frequently within the actual story as the \"merry old gentleman\" or simply the \"Jew\"."@en . . "Charles Dickens"@en . . . . "Fagin waits to be hanged, 19th century illustration by George Cruikshank."@en . "Fagin"@en . . . "#C0C0C0"@en . "Julius Antoine \"Fagin\" Dale, sometimes known as \"Jules\", was the chief crime lord of \"the Gutter\", the desperately poor southern section of Tarsonis City, Tarsonis."@en . "Terran"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Fagin from Oliver Twist"@en . . "Oliver, Dodger, Tito, Einstein, Rita, Francis, Jenny, Winston, and Georgette"@en . . . "Shaved"@en . "Leader of Fagin's Crime Syndicate"@en . . . . . . . . . "Kind, cowardly, friendly, gentle, nice, generous, good-hearted, clumsy, and shrewd"@en . . "Delightful scoundrel"@en . . . "His dogs and Oliver"@en . . . . "Sykes, owing money, harm to him or his dogs"@en . "Fagin (pronounced: /\u02C8fe\u026A\u0261\u026An/) is a fictional character who appears in the Charles Dickens novel Oliver Twist, referred to in the preface of the novel as a \"receiver of stolen goods\", but referred to more frequently within the actual story as the \"merry old gentleman\" or simply the \"Jew\"."@en . . . . .