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    Home » Hungarian film director Miklos Jancso dies at 92

    Hungarian film director Miklos Jancso dies at 92

    By SHOOTFriday, January 31, 2014Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1161 Views
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    By Pablo Gorondi

    BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) --

    Hungarian filmmaker Miklos Jancso, winner of the best director award at the 1972 Cannes Film Festival, died Friday. He was 92.

    Jancso's death after a long illness was announced by the Association of Hungarian Film Artists.

    Known for his long takes and for depicting the passage of time in his historical epics merely by changes of costume, Jancso won his Cannes award for "Red Psalm," about a 19th-century peasant revolt.

    In the 1960s, critics ranked Jancso alongside great directors such as Michelangelo Antonioni and Ingmar Bergman. However, it was his use of scantily clad women, symbolizing defenselessness, which drew big audiences in prudish communist Hungary.

    Jancso was born Sept. 27, 1921, in Vac, a small town north of Budapest. His parents were refugees from Transylvania, once a part of Hungary.

    "My mother was Romanian. In civilian life, the family members were friends, but politically on opposite sides … For me this was a great lesson, that conflict, much less violence, will never solve the nationality problems," Jancso said.

    Between April and November 1945, he was a Soviet prisoner of war. He joined the communist party in 1946.

    "I was always concerned with the problem of the individual can navigate through history," Jancso said, summing up the central focus of his films.

    After directing a series of short films in the 1950s, his 1963 "Cantata" drew the attention of the wider public to his exceptional talent and innovative style.

    In the early 1970s, Jancso lived in Italy during which he made "Vices and Pleasures," about the double suicide of Rudolf, Archduke of Austria, and his mistress in 1889.

    Because of scenes depicting orgies, the movie was banned in Italy and Jancso was sentenced to four months in prison. He was later acquitted on appeal.

    Among his most successful films were "The Round-up" (1965), "The Red and the White" (1967) and "Silence and Cry" (1968).

    He also directed the French-Israeli coproduction, "Dawn," made in 1986 from Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel's book about Jews seeking their identity in Israel.

    "The most noble aesthetic pleasure is the discovery of truth," Jancso told Filmvilag magazine.

    Between 1999 and 2006, he made a series of six films dealing with the often absurd adventures of Kapa and Pepe, two comical anti-heroes played by actors Zoltan Mucsi and Peter Scherer. The use in the films of songs from Hungarian pop band Kispal es a Borz helped the films gain cult status.

    Jancso was a professor of the Budapest Film Academy, and between 1990 and 1992 he was a visiting professor at Harvard's Institute of Communications.

    He received lifetime achievement awards in Cannes in 1979, Venice in 1990 and Budapest in 1994.

    Jancso is survived by this third wife, Zsuzsa Csákány, and four children. His second wife was Marta Meszaros, also a film director. Funeral arrangements were not immediately announced.

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    Actor Anthony Head, known for “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Ted Lasso,” dies at 72

    Friday, June 5, 2026
    Anthony Head arrives for the European premiere of 'The Iron Lady' on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/Jonathan Short, File)

    Anthony Head, the suave, smooth-voiced British actor known for roles in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Ted Lasso," has died, his family said Friday. He was 72.

    Head's daughters, actors Emily and Daisy Head, told the Press Association news agency that the actor passed away due to complications from pneumonia.

    The stage and TV performer became well known to British audiences in the 1980s as one half of a will-they, won't-they romantic couple in a series of ads for Nescafe Gold Blend instant coffee. The ads were later re-shot for a U.S. audience for Taster's Choice.

    Head achieved wider fame as librarian Rupert Giles, mentor to the title character in the cult-favorite supernatural series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," which ran from 1997 to 2003.

    He most recently played Rupert Mannion, the villainous ex-husband of Hannah Waddingham's character Rebecca, in "Ted Lasso."

    "Our grief is far greater than the hole he has left behind, but we know his legacy will live on, in the shows he was a part of, and in the audiences that love them," his daughters said. "How lucky we are to know we are able to watch him doing what he loved, even when he is no longer with us."

    Head was born in London on Feb. 20, 1954 to Seafield Head, a documentary filmmaker, and Helen Shingler, an actor. His older brother, Murray, is also an actor.

    Other notable roles included playing Geoffrey Howe, the deputy to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, played by Meryl Streep, in the Oscar-winning "The Iron Lady."

    Head portrayed a prime minister himself in the sketch comedy show "Little Britain," as well as King Uther Pendragon, the father of Prince Arthur, in the "Merlin" TV series. He also appeared in "Motherland," Manchild," and "Silent Witness," along... Read More

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