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Faludy Jorgeor George Faludy in English, who wanted to be Villona of the Pest group and did not wear socks even in the biggest winter, his whole life revolved around the rebellion. One had only to look at his long hair, the head of a torso, to immediately remember the unbridled freedom of the ballad, mixed with shield.
In fact, he was a vagabond all his life, he left Hungary for the first time in 1938 because he never wanted to fight on the side of the Germans. He went to Paris, where he met Arthur Koestler, also of Hungarian descent, and Hungarian emigrant artists.
I’m French from Paris
that sinks under my feet in the deep dirt,
And now I hang a meter from a poplar branch
and on my neck I feel how hard my ass is
He sings, hidden in the skin of Faludy Villon, and when the Germans occupy Paris, the vagabond flees to Morocco, then gets on a ship and does not stop until the United States. He returned home in 1946 and became an employee of Népszava.
The communist power has been hostile to him from the beginning, his works are not published. The Kistarcsa and Recsk internment camp with the quarry is approaching. His poems written in ÁVH prison can also be published much later, in 1983, in Munich.
With such a past, it makes perfect sense to take the coat for the first time in 56. This time he chooses London, where since 57 he has been editor of the Literary Newspaper. It’s for him. He also writes here his main work in the 1960s, My hilarious days from hell from an autobiographical memory, which were published in Hungary only in samizdat in 1987.
Faludy could have had good information about the Hungarian opposition movement, since he returned home in 1988 without waiting for the change of regime, from here he publishes, he is interested in both his person and his works, he even receives the Kossuth Prize. But rates and interest here or there continue to appear in their own way citizens. At the end of his life, he and his wife, Fanni, 65 years his junior, took photos of each other along with their topless photos.
Andy vajna He is only 12 years old, so he is not a dissident in his own right but with his parents, in any case, if he stays, he will surely not run with the same race.
After his beginnings as a hairdresser, ski coach and photographer, he is the Hungarian model of the American successful man par excellence, to whom the cult of money and private events that do not escape the tabloids contribute in the same way.
In 2018, Vajna, who died last year and had an extremely divisive personality but was recognized professionally, was voted the fifth most influential man in Hungary. As a Hollywood movie producer, he highlights massive hits like Rambo, Terminator 2, Evita, or Minister A. In the 2010s, his media interests grew, with televisions, radio, and tabloids (later casinos) in his portfolio. In the outstanding Hungarian film hits of recent years, his role as government commissioner for cinema is obviously not negligible either.
Kristóf exhausts all his work is permeated with the tragedy of emigration, hospitality, abandonment of something and homelessness. An outstanding talented writer in national and international contemporary literature is a peculiar and beautiful proof that
with a non-native level, vocabulary forcibly reduced, a new language learned, one can also find the linguistic mode and form of expression that returns the greatest psychological depths.
At the age of 56, she emigrated with her husband and their little daughter of a few months to Neuchâtel, Switzerland, where she initially settled in a watch factory due to the compulsion to earn a living, doing an extremely monotonous job. The first part of the trilogy of the real revelation novel, Le grand cahier (The great brochure), is published in French in 1987, and talks about the vulnerability of a pair of twins with harsh linguistic and literary means, on the deep traces of war and cruel upbringing in childhood. on the psyche. His works have been translated into more than forty languages. From the great book, János Szász made a sensitive and highly successful film worthy of the work.
Zsigmond Vilmos, who photographed and filmed the 56 events with his fellow student, László Kovács, also had a world-renowned career in America.
When the revolution was defeated, he fled to Austria with the filmed material, his films toured the western press.
Vilmos Zsigmond photographed Robert De Niro, who attended the cult film Marked the Deer Hunter and The Witches of Eastwick with Jack Nickolson, and his partner László Kovács, the cinema of the hippie movement and the cult of freedom, Born to be wild and the Ghostbusters.
It was not just Andy Vajna and Zsigmond Vilmosék who arrived at the citadel of American cinema, fortunately Márton Szipál as a photographer, but where else could a person whose father is a court photographer, himself a WWII pilot, then a prisoner of war, as in Hollywood? Although Sipál’s photographic work has been acclaimed here at home, he has run well outside, in addition to many Hollywood movie stars, he has photographed John Wayne or Charlene Tilton, aka Lucy, a legendary mediocre series about the unhappiness of oil tycoons. from Dallas.
Migrant 56 Ferrari Violetta Furthermore, to whom Francis Zenthe sang in vain in his 1950s musical cult film, “Twice two times five, I put each item aside for a promising loving look,” brought the figure of a teacher of grim arithmetic that had a hard time getting off the ground. (As far as she knew). The most sought-after Hungarian film and stage actress of the 1950s fled first to Vienna and then to the Federal Republic of Germany, where she formed a new existence with dozens of film roles.
And after so many prima donnas, bums and artists about the Nobel Prize winning scientist in chemistry, György OláhLet’s not forget it, because without chemistry anyone can sing anything, there will be no success. Oláh received the most prestigious scientific award for the investigation of positive ions of carbon compounds, that is, carbocations, in 1994, and with many of his scientific colleagues he also strengthens the field of world classes that have won the highest scientific award not only in Hungary but in the United States. The developer of a direct interest methanol fuel cell, which also offers a solution to the problem of global warming, went first to London and then to the United States with a Canadian detour. György Oláh lived for ninety years and knew well that while art burns, science enters eternal youth.
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