Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

János Székely (writer)

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Name
  
Janos Szekely

Role
  
Writer


Children
  
Kati Szekely

Grandchildren
  
Thomas Stecher

Janos Szekely (writer) dgrassetscomauthors1280392779p5974073jpg

Died
  
December 16, 1958, East Berlin

Movies
  
Desire, The Wonderful Lies of Ni, Asphalt, Dramatic School, The Lie of Nina Petrovna

Similar People
  
Kati Szekely, Jurgen Frohriep, Erich Pommer, Hans‑Edgar Stecher, Robert A Stemmle

János Székely (born 7 July 1901 in Budapest, died 16 December 1958 in East Berlin) was a Hungarian writer and screenwriter. His best-known work is the 1949 autobiographical novel Kísértés (Temptation).

Contents

János Székely (writer) impedimentaesmediablogsautoresszekelyjpgmti

He published some of his books under the pen name John Pen. Further alternative names of his were Hans Székely and John S. Toldy. At the age of 18, he fled World War I, from Hungary to Germany. In Berlin, he wrote numerous screenplays for silent movie stars like Brigitte Helm, Willy Fritsch, Marlene Dietrich and Emil Jannings. Ernst Lubitsch in 1934 invited him to work in Hollywood. In 1938 he emigrated to the United States and became a sought-screenwriter for silent and sound films. In 1940 he was awarded the Academy Award for Best Story for Arise, My Love. In the McCarthy era, he left the United States, moved to Mexico, and in 1957 to East Berlin to work with DEFA.

Novels

  • (1940) You can’t do that to Swoboda
  • (1949) Kísértés (Temptation)
  • Screenplays

  • Die namenlosen Helden (1923)
  • The Master of Death (1926)
  • Hungarian Rhapsody (Berlin, 1928)
  • Magyar Rapszódia (Budapest, 1928)
  • Vasárnap délután (Budapest, 1929)
  • Asphalt (Berlin, 1929)
  • The Wonderful Lies of Nina Petrovna (Berlin, 1929)
  • Manolescu (Berlin, 1929)
  • Melody of the Heart (Berlin, 1929)
  • The Singing City (Berlin, 1930)
  • Gloria (Berlin, 1931)
  • I by Day, You by Night (Berlin, 1932)
  • Early to Bed (London, 1933)
  • Happy Days in Aranjuez (Berlin, 1933)
  • Desire (Hollywood. 1936)
  • The Lie of Nina Petrovna (Paris, 1937)
  • Dramatic School (Hollywood, 1939)
  • Arise, My Love (Hollywood, 1940)
  • Paris Calling (Hollywood, 1942)
  • Give Us This Day (London, 1949)
  • Geschwader Fledermaus (East Berlin, 1958)
  • References

    János Székely (writer) Wikipedia