György Fehér

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Feb 12, 1939 (86 years old)
Death date
Jul 15, 2002

György Fehér

Known For

György Fehér's Films According to Béla Tarr
0h 44m
Movie 2001

György Fehér's Films According to Béla Tarr

A portrait film in which the actors often employed by Fehér (Ferenc Kállai, Péter Haumann and Ildikó Bánsági, respectively) testify with love and respect about the artist's creative method and his pursuit of perfection.

The Lord's Lantern in Budapest
1h 43m
Movie 1999

The Lord's Lantern in Budapest

In the Kerepesi Street cemetery, three grave diggers contemplate the fate of the world, then they step out of this role and in a sequence of episodes they play the typical figures of contemporary Hungarian reality, the fat cat, the swashbuckler, the victim, underworld chieftains, and present little absurd dramas of love, marriage, friendship, public order and legal safety. The author and the film director walk among them all the time, contemplating, laughing at their plays. The stories starting from the graveyard and returning there warn of the inevitability of death. The author and the director (Gyula Hernádi and Miklós Jancsó) wisely make friends with death.

The Szelid Brothers
1h 31m
Movie 1997

The Szelid Brothers

The three Szelid brothers go on a road trip after the disappearance of their father and death of their mother.

Biography

He graduated from the Academy of Theatre and Film Arts in 1972, majoring in directing and opera. Between 1980-1982 he was artistic director of the Móricz Zsigmond Theatre in Nyíregyháza. He has appeared in several films (Miklós Jancsó: The Season of Monsters, Blue Danube Waltz, The Lord Gave Me a Lantern in Peste, Gyula Maár: Cloud Play, Károly Makk: You Have to Play, Géza Bereményi: The Apprentices, Károly Makk: Love, etc.). He is an outstanding figure in Hungarian film history. His five films won prizes at the Veszprém TV festival: Shakespeare: Richard III in 1975, Volpone in 1976, Barrabás in 1979, The School of Women in 1985, while his film Revenge won the Best Director prize in 1978. He is also credited with the television adaptation of Attila József's poems and his life: the József Attila Poems in 1981, the nineteen-part documentary film about Attila József in 1981-1983, Be Foolish - An Evening with Attila József with Hobo, and József Attila: A List of Free Ideas in Two Sittings with Tamás Jordán in 1992. His feature film Passion (1998) won the main prize of the feature, experimental and short film jury at the XXIX Hungarian Film Festival, the best director award, the best male and female actor award, the cinematography award and the Gene Moskowitz Award of foreign critics, as well as several international festival awards.

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