Theatre in Croatia

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 30. Chapters: Croatian dramatists and playwrights, Croatian musical theatre actors, Croatian plays, Croatian stage actors, Croatian theatre directors, Theatres in Croatia, Mira Furlan, Marin Drzic, Miroslav Krleza, Goran Tribuson,... Viac o knihe

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 30. Chapters: Croatian dramatists and playwrights, Croatian musical theatre actors, Croatian plays, Croatian stage actors, Croatian theatre directors, Theatres in Croatia, Mira Furlan, Marin Drzic, Miroslav Krleza, Goran Tribuson, Goran ViSnjic, Rade serbedzija, Ivan Supek, Toni Jericevic, Montazstroj, Amadeo Theatre and Music Company, Nera Stipicevic, Branko Gavella, Matija Ban, Ruza na asfaltu, Miro Gavran, Dimitrija Demeter, Eugen Kumicic, Slobodan snajder, Mario Kovac, Fadil Hadzic, Sanya Mateyas, Ilija Crijevic, Zrinka CviteSic, Radovan IvSic, Ranko Marinkovic, Fabijan sovagovic, Janez JanSa, Tajci, Janko Polic Kamov, Amadeo's theatre, Dzore Drzic, Mavro Vetranovic, Hanibal Lucic, Ivor Martinic, Milan Begovic, Tena stivicic, Vanja Drach, Mia Oremovic, Vjenceslav Novak, Filip sovagovic, Ivo BreSan, Jurica Pavicic, Antal Amade de Várkony, Maja Nekic, Croatian National Theatre in Osijek, Sven MedveSek, Viktor Car Emin, Franjo Majetic, King Gordogan. Excerpt: Miroslav Krleza (Croatian pronunciation: ) (July 7, 1893 - December 29, 1981) was a leading Croatian and Yugoslav writer and the dominant figure in cultural life of both Yugoslav states, the Kingdom (1918-1941) and the Republic (1945 until his death in 1981). He has often been proclaimed the greatest Croatian writer of the 20th century. Miroslav Krleza was born in Zagreb, modern-day Croatia. He entered a preparatory military school in Pécs, modern-day Hungary. At that time, Pécs and Zagreb were within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Subsequently, he attended the Ludoviceum military academy at Budapest. He defected for Serbia in 1912 as a volunteer for the Serbian army, but was dismissed as a suspected spy. Upon his return to Croatia, he was demoted in the Austro-Hungarian army and sent as a common soldier to the Eastern front in the World War I. In the post-World War I period Krleza established himself both as a major Modernist writer and politically controversial figure in Yugoslavia, a newly created country which encompassed South Slavic lands of former Habsburg Empire and the kingdoms of Serbia and Montenegro. Krleza was the driving force behind Leftist literary and political reviews Plamen(The Flame) (1919), Knjizevna republika (Literary Republic) (1923-1927), Danas (Today) (1934) and Pecat (Seal) (1939-1940). He was a member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia from 1918, expelled in 1939 because of his unorthodox views on art, his defense of artistic freedom against Socialist realist doctrine, and his unwillingness to give an open support to Stalin's purges, after the long polemic now known as "the Conflict on the Literary Left", lead between Krleza and virtually every important writer in the mid-war Yugoslavia. The Party commissar sent to intermediate between Krleza and other Leftist and Party journals was Josip Broz Tito. After the establishment of the pro-Nazi puppet Independent State of Croatia, Krleza refused to join the Partisans now headed by Tito. It is b

  • Vydavateľstvo: Books LLC, Reference Series
  • Formát: Paperback
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  • ISBN: 9781157961482

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