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Elena Farago (born Elena Paximade; 29 March 1878 – 3 January 1954) was a Romanian poet and children's author. She also translated works by Ibsen , Nietzsche , Maeterlinck and numerous others into Romanian .
Patton is a 1970 American epic biographical war film about U.S. General George S. Patton during World War II.It stars George C. Scott as Patton and Karl Malden as General Omar Bradley, and was directed by Franklin J. Schaffner from a script by Francis Ford Coppola and Edmund H. North, who based their screenplay on Patton: Ordeal and Triumph by Ladislas Farago and Bradley's memoir, A Soldier's ...
After world War II Farago worked for the UN-related diplomatic newsletter United Nations World, for Corps Diplomatique, and as a freelance journalist, eventually coming to join the staff of Radio Free Europe focused on supporting the brewing insurrection in Hungary in 1955-56 by developing a series of radio broadcasts featuring an apocryphal ...
The Lost Daughter (film) N. Nasty Love This page was last edited on 4 February 2024, at 18:10 (UTC). Text ... Category: Films based on works by Elena Ferrante.
Profira Sadoveanu (pen name Valer Donea; 21 May 1906 – 3 October 2003), [1] also credited as ProfiriČ›a [2] and known after her marriage as Sadoveanu Popa, [3] [4] was a Romanian prose writer and poet, noted as the daughter, literary secretary, and editor of the celebrated novelist Mihail Sadoveanu.
Elena is a film about the persistence of memories, the irreversibility of loss, the effects of her sister’s absence on a 7-year-old girl, emotions which Petra refers to as “inconsolable memories”. [7] “Gradually, the pain and grievance turn to water, they dissolved into memory”, says the director, both actress and biographical ...
The film has received five nominations for several awards: David di Donatello 2006 (Best music and best original composer); Sindacato Nazionale Giornalisti Cinematografici Italiani 2006 (Best Actor in a Main role and Best Actress in a main role)
Elena and Her Men (French: Elena et les Hommes; originally released in English-speaking countries as Paris Does Strange Things) is a 1956 film directed by Jean Renoir and starring Ingrid Bergman, Jean Marais, and Mel Ferrer. It was Bergman's first film after leaving her husband, director Roberto Rossellini. [2]