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István Szabó

 
Director: István Szabó
  • Born: Feb 18, 1938 in Budapest, Hungary
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Actor
  • Active: '60s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Father, Sunshine, Edes Emma, Draga Böbe - Vazlatok, Aktok
  • First Major Screen Credit: Álmodozások kora (1964)

Biography

One of the most prominent directors to emerge from the Hungarian New Cinema of the '60s, István Szabó has earned acclaim for films whose emotion, tenderness, and rage evoke stirring portraits of contemporary Hungarian history, particularly the effects of World War II on Hungarian society.

Born February 18, 1938, in Budapest, Szabó studied film at the city's prestigious Academy of Film Art. The acclaim he earned for a film he made while a student, Koncert (1961), won Szabó a place at the Béla Bálazs film studio, where he netted further acclaim for two shorts he made in 1963, Variáciòk egy témára and Te. Szabó then moved on to his first feature-length venture, Almodozasok Kora (1964). The warmth and lyricism of the drama, which focused on the hopes and dreams of four recently graduated engineers, was particularly evident in Szabó's next effort, Apa (1967). The story of a young man struggling with the heroic imagery that he has built around his father, who was killed in World War II, it received wide critical acclaim. Along with its predecessor, Apa put Szabó at the forefront of a new generation of Hungarian filmmakers.

Szabó inaugurated the '70s with Szerelmesfilm, a love story that, along with the director's previous two films, comprised the last installment of a semi-autobiographical trilogy. He subsequently returned to an exploration of immediate post-war society with Budapesti Masek (1976), which focused on a group of displaced persons who take up residence in an abandoned streetcar while journeying to Budapest. It was Bizalom (1979), an improbable love story also set in the wartime milieu, that put Szabó on the international map, netting him a Silver Berlin Bear for direction and a Special Jury Prize for Best Film at the Berlin Film Festival.

The acclaim Szabó earned for Bizalom was amplified with his next feature, Mephisto (1981). The story of an ambitious actor who becomes caught up in a moral dilemma when he is befriended by a high-ranking Nazi official, it won a number of honors at Cannes and a Best Foreign Film Oscar. A complex exploration of the relationship between art and politics, it established Szabó as one of the most important directors of his era. He followed the film up with another celebrated work, Oberst Redl (1984). The story of the rise and fall of a colonel who faces blackmail because of his homosexuality, Redl received a Best Foreign Film BAFTA and an Oscar nomination in the same category.

Another Oscar nomination followed for Szabó's Hanussen (1988), a political drama set against the backdrop of the two world wars. Starring Klaus Maria Brandauer as an Austrian soldier who becomes clairvoyant after being shot in the head during World War I, the film marked Szabó's third collaboration with the actor, who had also starred in Mephisto and Oberst Redl.

Szabó's fairly sporadic work throughout the '90s was marked by two English language features, the first being Meeting Venus (1991). A romance set against a turbulent production of the opera Tannhaeuser, it starred Glenn Close as a celebrated Swedish opera singer. In 1999, Szabó helmed another English language film, Sunshine. An epic historical drama tracing the shifting fortunes of a family of Hungarian Jews over the course of almost 150 years, it featured Ralph Fiennes in three different roles and a strong supporting cast that included Rosemary Harris, James Frain, Miriam Margolyes, and William Hurt. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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István Szabó

István Szabó, 2004
Born February 18, 1938 (age 71)
Budapest, Hungary
Years active 1959 — present

István Szabó (born February 18, 1938, Budapest) is a Hungarian film director.

Contents

Life

Szabó was the son of Maria (née Vita) and Istvan Szabó, who was a doctor.[1] His family was Jewish and were hidden by family friends during the Holocaust.[2] In the 1960s and '70s, he directed films which explore his own generation's experiences and recent Hungarian history (Father (Hungarian: Apa 1966); Lovefilm (Szerelmesfilm 1970) and 25 Fireman's street (Tűzoltó utca 25 1973)). His signature film trilogy consists of Mephisto (1981, winner of an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and a Cannes Award for the Best Screenplay), Colonel Redl (1984, winner of a Jury Prize at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival) and Hanussen (1988).

Szabó began to make English-language films with Meeting Venus (1991), and followed it with Sunshine (1999), Taking Sides (2001) and most recently Being Julia (2004), which garnered an Oscar nomination for actress Annette Bening. His most acclaimed films came from his work with famed Austrian actor Klaus Maria Brandauer, and his ongoing collaboration and friendship with cinematographer Lajos Koltai.

Politics

On January 26, 2006 a Hungarian weekly newspaper, Élet és Irodalom (Life and Literature), revealed that István Szabó was an 'agent' of the Internal Reactionary Prevention Unit of the Communist regime of Hungary during the Kádár-era. (Though the word 'agent' was used by the Hungarian media to describe his involvement, his activities resembled more of those of a "civilian asset" or "informant".) His task was to make reports about his classmates in the University of Arts of Theatre and Cinema (he made about 48 of them). He was blackmailed by the authorities with compromising evidence against him and as such he was forced to work for them as an 'agent' only one year after the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Szabó agreed "to save himself and revolutionist classmate Pál Gábor from being gibbeted" (in Szabó's own words).

Career

On February 1, 2006, Szabó's latest movie Rokonok (Relatives) was a huge success, receiving a round of applause when Szabó was asked to come on stage after its premiere at the 37th Annual Hungarian Movie Review. At this event Lajos Koltai, the film's cinematographer (and acclaimed Director of Fateless) declared that "Some people are still trying to crush even this community" and "Let the love keep us together." On February 3 he and his four former classmates (whereof Szabó had written reports) held a press conference to speak about their memories about their lives in the post-revolution Hungary of the 1950s and that they didn't feel anger towards Szabó.

Filmography

Further reading

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "István Szabó" Read more

 

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