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Encyclopedia > Melchior Lengyel

Melchior(Menyhért) Lengyel (January 12, 1880 - October 23, 1974 Budapest) was Hungarian playwright and film scriptwriter. He went by Melchior Lengyel in non-Magyar lands.


He was born in Lebovics Menyhért, in Balmazújváros city near Hortobágy, Hajdú-Bihar megye, Kingdom of Hungary.


Works

See also

About him

  • Mini biography IMDb (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0501872/bio)
  • [1] (http://www.sfsymphony.org/templates/pgmnote.asp?nodeid=3144&callid=3025)
  • http://www.thehungarypage.com/filmartsandmedia.htm (53th, english)
  • [2] (http://www.mek.iif.hu/porta/szint/egyeb/lexikon/eletrajz/html/ABC09006/09405.htm) (hungarian)
  • Magyar Rádió (http://kincsestar.radio.hu/panoptikum/film/lengyelmenyhert.php) (hungarian)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Swans Commentary: Huxley In Tinsel Town, by Charles Marowitz - cmarow15 (729 words)
Negligible efforts perhaps, but there were also about half a dozen truly tantalizing projects that gestated before they were aborted.
For instance, a version of D.H. Lawrence's "Lady Chatterley's Lover" which, before it slipped into oblivion, had recruited the services of Isherwood, W. Auden, Samuel Beckett and Melchior Lengyel, the author of the original story on which Ernst Lubitsch's "Ninotchka" was based.
Significantly, Beckett's participation with this project, initiated by Lawrence's widow Frieda, drew a strong rebuke from Huxley who heatedly discouraged Beckett's involvement.
Guide to the Papers of Herman Bernstein (1876-1935)1899-1935RG 713 (4277 words)
It is not known how Bernstein obtained the articles or if they were published in any of the publications he edited or elsewhere.
Among the authors represented are Boris Almasoff, Leonid Andreyev, Vladimir Bourtzeff, Victor Chernoff, Ossip Dymow, Nicholas Evreinoff, Maxim Gorky, Rebecca Kohut, Melchior Lengyel, Rudolph Lothar, and Arthur Schnitzler.
The collection also includes writings that are not identified by author and/or title.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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