Movie and theatre

English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Simultaneous to moving from Opovo to Belgrade to continue his studies, 14-year-old Bjelogrlić also debuted in movies playing a memorable role of Sava Jovanović Sirogojno in Boško Buha, a 1978 film that achieved sizable popularity. He followed that up in the coming years with other roles in TV series, short, and feature films.

By mid-1980s, Bjelogrlić was an established young actor in SFR Yugoslavia. In 1985 he appeared in Bal na vodi as part of an ensamble cast of his peers such as Srđan Todorović, Nebojša Bakočević, Goran Radaković, and Gala Videnović. In 1987, he became one of the central cast members on the hugely popular drama television series Bolji život. Playing the role of Boba Popadić made Bjelogrlić a bona fide recognizable star all across the country.

He is considered somewhat of a "Serbian Robert Redford", by many. His monotone voice and tired face leads him to be cast as a gangster or criminal figure in movies such as Rane (The Wounds), where he plays a hot-headed Serbian mafioso, with a short temper that only Dragan Bjelogrlić could provide for the movie that's considered one of the cult Serbian gangster movies, especially it being with a focus on the Yugoslav Wars . His brother Goran Bjelogrlić is a film producer. His 2010 film Montevideo, God Bless You! was selected as the Serbian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. The sequel, See You in Montevideo, was released in 2014.

Source: 
Nickname: 
Bjela
Personal information: 
Dragan Bjelogrlić (Serbian: Драган Бјелогрлић; born on 10 October 1963 in Opovo, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian actor, director, and producer.
Date of birth: 
Thursday, October 10, 1963
Place of birth and location: 
Opovo
Serbia
45° 3' 6.9984" N, 20° 25' 49.0008" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1963
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Kiš was influenced by Bruno Schulz, Vladimir Nabokov, Jorge Luis Borges, Ivo Andrić and Miroslav Krleža,[2] among other authors. His most famous works include A Tomb for Boris Davidovich and The Encyclopedia of the Dead.Kiš was born in Subotica, Danube Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (now Serbia). He was the son of Eduard Kiš (Hungarian: Kis Ede), a Hungarian-speaking Jewish railway inspector, and Milica (née Dragićević) from Cetinje (now Montenegro). His father was born in Austria-Hungary with the surname Kon, but changed it to Kis as part of Magyarization, a widely implemented practice at the time. During the Second World War, Danilo's father along with several other family members, were killed in various Nazi camps. His mother took him and his older sister Danica to Hungary for the duration of the war. After the end of the war, the family moved to Cetinje, Yugoslavia, where Kiš graduated from high school in 1954.

Kiš studied literature at the University of Belgrade, and graduated in 1958 as the first student to be awarded a degree in comparative literature. He was a prominent member of the Vidici magazine, where he worked until 1960. In 1962 he published his first two novels, Mansarda and Psalam 44. For his 1973 novel Peščanik (Hourglass), Kiš received the prestigious NIN Award, but returned it a few years later due to a political dispute. During the following years, he received an array of national and international awards for his prose and poetry.

Kiš lived in Belgrade until the last decade of his life, when he lived in Paris as well Belgrade. For a number of years he worked as a lecturer elsewhere in France. He was married to Mirjana Miočinović from 1962 to 1981. After their separation, he lived with Pascale Delpech until his early death from lung cancer in Paris.

A film based on Peščanik (Fövenyóra), directed by the Hungarian Szabolcs Tolnai, was finished in 2008. In May 1989, with his friend, director Aleksandar Mandić, Kiš made the four-episode TV series Goli Život about the lives of two Jewish women. The shooting took place in Israel. The program was broadcast after his death, in the spring of 1990. This was the last work by Kiš.

Kiš's work was translated into English only in piecemeal fashion, and many of his important books weren't available in English translations until the 2010s, when Dalkey Archive began releasing a selection of titles, including A Tomb for Boris Davidovich and Garden, Ashes; in 2012, Dalkey released The Attic, Psalm 44, and the posthumous collection of stories The Lute and the Scars, capably translated by John K. Cox. These publications completed the process of "the Englishing of Kiš's fiction", allowing the possibility of what Pete Mitchell of Booktrust called a resurrection of Kiš.Kiš was influenced especially by Jorge Luis Borges: he had been accused of plagiarizing Borges (and James Joyce) in A Tomb for Boris Davidovich, which prompted a "scathing response" in The Anatomy Lesson (1978),[8] and the influence of Borges is recognized in The Encyclopedia of the Dead. From Bruno Schulz, the Polish writer and prose stylist, Kiš picked up "mythic elements" for The Encyclopedia of the Dead, and he reportedly told John Updike that "Schulz is my God".

Branko Gorjup sees two distinct periods in Kiš's career as a novelist. The first, which includes Psalm 44, Garden, Ashes, and Early Sorrows, is marked by realism: Kiš creates characters whose psychology "reflect the external world of the writer's memories, dreams, and nightmares, or his experiences of the time and space in which he lives". The worlds he constructed in his narratives, while he distanced himself from pure mimesis, were still constructed to be believable. The separation from mimesis he sought to achieve by a kind of deception through language, a process intended to instill "'doubts' and 'trepidations' associated with a child's growing pains and early sorrows. The success of this 'deception' depended upon the effect of 'recognition' on the part of the reader". The point, for Kiš, was to make the reader accept "the illusion of a created reality".

In those early novels, Kiš still employed traditional narrators and his plots unfolded chronologically, but in later novels, beginning with Hourglass (the third volume of the "Family Cycle", after Garden, Ashes and Early Sorrows), his narrative techniques changed considerably and traditional plotlines were no longer followed. The role of the narrator was strongly reduced, and perspective and plot were fragmented: in Hourglass, which in Eduard Scham portrayed a father figure resembling the author's, "at least four different Schams with four separate personalities" were presented, each based on documentary evidence. This focus on the manipulation and selection of supposed documentary evidence is a hallmark of Kiš's later period, and underlies the method of A Tomb for Boris Davidovich, according to Branko Garjup:

First, most of the plots in the work are derived or borrowed from already-existing sources of varied literary significance, some easily recognizable—for example, those extracted from Roy Medvedev and Karl Steiner—while others are more obscure. Second, Kiš employs the technique of textual transposition, whereby entire sections or series of fragments, often in their unaltered state, are taken from other texts and freely integrated into the fabric of his work.

This documentary style places Kiš's later work in what he himself called a post-Borges period, but unlike Borges the documentation comes from "historically and politically relevant material", which in A Tomb for Boris Davidovich is used to denounce Stalinism. Unlike Borges, Kiš is not interested in metaphysics, but in "more ordinary phenomena"; in the title story of The Encyclopedia of the Dead, this means building an encyclopedia "containing the biography of every ordinary life lived since 1789".

Source: 
Personal information: 
Danilo Kiš (Serbian Cyrillic: Данило Киш; 22 February 1935 – 15 October 1989) was a Yugoslav novelist, short story writer and poet who wrote in Serbo-Croatian, member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Date of birth: 
Friday, February 22, 1935
Place of birth and location: 
Subotica
Serbia
46° 6' 1.0008" N, 19° 39' 56.0016" E
Date of death: 
Sunday, October 15, 1989
Place of death and location : 
Pariz
Serbia
48° 51' 16.4844" N, 2° 21' 31.482" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1935
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Stojković's numerous comedic portrayals of the "small man fighting the system" made him popular with Serbian and ex-Yugoslav audiences, most of them coming in collaborations with either director Slobodan Šijan or scriptwriter Dušan Kovačević, or both.Belgrade born and bred Stojković, a well-known theatre actor by the mid-1960s, started his film career with the 1964 feature Izdajnik (lit. "The Traitor"). A string of TV and minor film roles ensued, with the most important ones coming in guise of being a father figure to the main protagonist – Čuvar plaže u zimskom periodu (Beach Guard in Winter, 1976), Pas koji je voleo vozove (The Dog Who Loved Trains, 1977) being the most recognizable ones – as well as the part in critically well-received Majstor i Margarita (Il Maestro e Margherita, 1972). He also fulfilled the fatherly role in an immensely popular TV show Grlom u jagode. The show originally aired in 1975 and kept finding its audience through numerous reruns in the 1980s and the 1990s. Most notably, he almost stole the show as the minor antagonist in Goran Marković's urban classic Nacionalna klasa do 750 cm³ (National Class Category Up to 750 ccm, 1979).Arguably, Stojković delivered some of his finest work while working with the director Slobodan Šijan, who was in turn most successful when working with Dušan Kovačević scripts. Kovačević, a talented playwright with a special gift for biting satire, had a knack for writing characters which Stojković could perfectly translate to screen. The combination of those three creative talents yielded some of Serbia's most memorable cinematic efforts to date.

Šijan, who previously worked with Stojković on a several TV productions, made his big screen debut with Ko to tamo peva (Who's Singing Over There?, 1980), a farcical comedy set at the beginning of World War II in then Yugoslavia. In a strong cast ensemble, Stojković distinguished himself with role of a Germanophile bus passenger on the way to Beograd in the eve of 6 April 1941 – the day that Belgrade was bombed by the Axis Powers marking Yugoslavia's entry into the war. Ko to tamo peva was released to great critical and commercial success, and has won two awards at the Montreal World Film Festival in Canada. To this date, it is considered one of the finest Yugoslavian films ever.

The success of Ko to tamo peva opened new doors for Stojković, who then established his film star status with a string of critically acclaimed roles. He appeared in Goran Paskaljević's dark comedy about rehab from alcoholism, Poseban tretman (Special Treatment, 1980), and then reunited with Šijan for another high-water mark of Serbian film, the black comedy Maratonci trče počasni krug (Marathon Family). The film, a humorous piece about a family whose undertaking business is being threatened by the local mobster was another smash success for Šijan and Stojković, and it retains its cult status to this day. Stojković again delivered a strong performance in a star-studded production, flawlessly portraying the head of the family in waiting: Laki Topalović.

 

Source: 
Nickname: 
Bata
Personal information: 
Danilo Stojković (Serbian Cyrillic: Данило Стојковић; 11 August 1934 – 16 March 2002), commonly nicknamed Bata (Бата), was a Serbian theatre, television and film actor.
Date of birth: 
Saturday, August 11, 1934
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 48' 53.6616" N, 20° 27' 36.9576" E
Date of death: 
Saturday, March 16, 2002
Place of death and location : 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 48' 53.6616" N, 20° 27' 36.9576" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1934
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Born in Belgrade, he was raised by his grandparents in Niš, following the divorce of his parents. 14 years later he returned to Belgrade where he worked with his stepfather at the Yugoslav film archive.

He graduated from the well-known Film Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). He has made 30 documentaries and 16 feature films, shown and acclaimed at the most prestigious international film festivals (Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Toronto and San Sebastian…). The rise of nationalism in Yugoslavia forced him to leave his country in 1992. In 1998 he went back to make "Powder Keg" (aka "Cabaret Balkan", in the USA) which won international critics' prizes (FIPRESCI) at the Venice Film Festival and at the European Film Awards. In 2001, Variety International Film Guide marked him as one of the world's top five directors of the year. The Museum of Modern Art in New York (MoMA) presented a full retrospective of his work in January 2008. It was BFI Southbank's (London) turn to organize in July 2010 a full retrospective of his 16 feature films, along with the publication of a monograph (in English) about his work. Goran Paskaljevic lives between Belgrade and Paris. He has both Serbian and French citizenship.

 

Source: 
Personal information: 
Goran Paskaljević (Serbian Cyrillic: Горан Паскаљевић, pronounced [ɡɔ̌ran paskǎːʎɛvit͡ɕ]) is a Serbian film director. Born in Belgrade, he was raised by his grandparents in Niš, following the divorce of his parents. 14 years later he returned to Belgrade where he worked with his stepfather at the Yugoslav film archive.
Date of birth: 
Tuesday, April 22, 1947
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Place of death and location : 
Serbia
45° 14' 58.794" N, 19° 50' 12.642" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1947
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Marković is the winner of more than 30 Yugoslavian, Serbian, and international film and theatre awards, the most significant of them being two Pula festival "Zlatna arena" awards, an award for the best director at the San Sebastian Film Festival for the film "Tito and Me", Grand Prix of Americas at the Montreal World Film Festival for the movie "Kordon" and Sterija's Award for the best modern drama text for the theatre play "Turneja". The film version of Turneja won both "Best Film" and "Best Scenario" at the 2009 European Film Festival in Kiev as well as Best Director and the Fipresci awards at the Montreal World Film Festival.

A consistent opponent of the Milosević regime, Marković expressed his political stance in three post-1995 documentary films produced or co-produced with Radio B92: Crazy People (1997), Ordinary Heroes (2000) and Serbia, Year Zero (2001).

Marković is also a professor at Belgrade Faculty of Dramatic Arts and is a member of the European Film Academy in Brussels.

 

Source: 
Personal information: 
Goran Marković (Serbian: Горан Марковић) (born August 24, 1946, Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia) is a Serbian movie and theatre director, screenwriter, and playwright. He has directed approximately 50 documentaries, 11 movies and 3 theatre plays and has written three books.
Date of birth: 
Saturday, August 24, 1946
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1946
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

He graduated from the Belgrade Faculty of Drama Arts in 1971. He has been member of the Yugoslav Drama Theatre since 1969. He has played in over 30 movies and a number of TV series and dramas. He won almost all relevant domestic theatre awards, including three Sterija awards for acting, an annual award of the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad, an annual award of CNP from Podgorica, eight annual awards of the Yugoslav Drama Theatre in Belgrade, etc.

Of all of his roles arguably the best known is Tihi, wisecracking World War II resistance fighter whom he portrayed in cult 1970s TV series Otpisani and Povratak otpisanih.
He served as the Minister of Culture in the Government of Serbia in front of Democratic Party between 2007 and 2008. In July 2008, he was appointed to be an advisor on culture to the President Boris Tadić.

Filmography

Balkan ekspres 3 (2007), Zona mrtvih (2007), Žena bez tijela (2007), Crni Gruja i kamen mudrosti (2007), "Ljubav, navika, panika" (2006), Lele, bato (2005), Ivkova slava (2005), "Idealne veze" (2005), "Smešne i druge price" (2004), Jesen stiže, dunjo moja (2004), Skela (2004), Izmedju izgubljenog i neodržanog (2004), "M(j)ešoviti brak" (2003), "Kazneni prostor" (2002), Siroti Mali hrčki 2010 (2003), Gajba od 500 Weiferta (2002), "Metla bez drške 5" (2001), Bure baruta (1998), Povratak lopova (1998), Tango je tužna misao koja se plese (1997), Kir Janja (1997), Urnebesna tragedija (1994), "Metla bez drške 4" (1993), Tito i ja (1992), Pohvala svetom knezu Lazaru (1992), Tesna koža 4 (1991)..
 

 

Source: 
Nickname: 
Voja
Personal information: 
Vojislav "Voja" Brajović (Serbian: Војислав "Воја" Брајовић) (born May 11, 1949 in Belgrade) is a prominent Serbian actor.
Date of birth: 
Wednesday, May 11, 1949
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1949
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Vesna Trivalić (Serbian Cyrillic: Весна Тривалић, born on 13 March 1965 in Belgrade) is a famous Serbian actress.

She studied at Dramatic Arts Academy in Belgrade. Trivalić mainly plays supporting roles, but her performances are always quite effective. Known for her ability to change voice, she has done numerous TV commercials, including commercials for JAT Airways.

She rarely gives interviews, practically never and also is never a guest in any TV shows. She got married in 2006, and hyphenated her surname with Pandurović. She has a son.

 

Source: 
Personal information: 
Vesna Trivalić (Serbian Cyrillic: Весна Тривалић, born on 13 March 1965 in Belgrade) is a famous Serbian actress.
Date of birth: 
Tuesday, March 16, 1965
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Place of death and location : 
Serbia
45° 14' 58.794" N, 19° 50' 12.642" E
Gender: 
Женски
Important locations: 
Serbia
45° 14' 58.794" N, 19° 50' 12.642" E
Year of birth: 
1965
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Živojinović was born in the village of Koraćica under the Kosmaj mountain, near Mladenovac, Serbia (then Kingdom of Yugoslavia). After graduating from acting schools in Niš and Novi Sad, he enrolled at the Drama Academy in Belgrade. Velimir Živojinović preferred acting in theatre to acting on screen, and made his screen debut in 1955 film Pesma sa Kumbare was the beginning of an incredibly prolific silver screen career. Bata Živojinović's played both heroes and villains and switched between leading and supporting roles. The zenith of his popularity came with WW2-themed action films in the 1970s. One of his best known films from that period was Valter brani Sarajevo (English translation: Walter Defends Sarajevo), which gained major success in China. He was also known for his close friendship with the Croatian actor Boris Dvornik. In 1991 Živojinović and Dvornik renounced each other in a series of open letters, which was a gesture often seen as symbolic of the breakup of Yugoslavia. In 2004 it was reported that the two men tried to reconcile. In 2006, the two men publicly reconciled on TV via a video link between Split and Belgrade. The actor said that "In the last few years there hasn't been hatred between us", and Dvornik completed the sentence "only a misunderstanding". In 1990 he was elected for the Serbian Parliament, as a member of Slobodan Milošević's Socialist Party of Serbia.Živojinović was awarded Golden Arena for Best Actor at the Pula Film Festival three times: in 1965, 1967 and 1972. He won the award for Best Actor at the 11th Moscow International Film Festival in 1979 for his role in Moment. In 1981 he was a member of the jury at the 12th Moscow International Film Festival. In August 1993, he was awarded Life Achievement Award "Slavica"
Živojinović had a heart attack in October 2006 and suffered from gangrene in his right foot for about three years afterwards. Doctors initially wanted to amputate the limb, but he traveled to Cuba, where his daughter lives, and within the 25 days that he spent being treated there, was cured of the gangrene by Doctor Montekin, who has also treated Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. The heart attack greatly damaged his heart, and his blood vessels are in poor condition, adding to his many health problems such as diabetes. His heart was operated on twice: first to expand his arteries, then for a double bypass. On 3 July 2012 he suffered a severe stroke and was transported to a hospital specializing in cerebrovascular diseases called Sveti Sava in Belgrade. He was treated in the intensive care unit and was reported to be in critical condition. Reports also stated that after the stroke he was in a coma for two days. After waking up, although not fully lucid, was talking a little.He remained in critical condition in the hospital for about three weeks and had experienced bleeding and weight loss. After treatment for the stroke, he was reported to not be able to walk without assistance and that it was difficult for him to speak. Bata and his doctors remained optimistic that he would make a full recovery with a little more treatment, both in the hospital and after he is discharged.

 

Source: 
Nickname: 
Bata
Personal information: 
Velimir "Bata" Živojinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Велимир "Бата" Живојиновић) (born 5 June 1933) is a Serbian actor and politician.
Date of birth: 
Monday, June 5, 1933
Place of birth and location: 
Koraćica
Serbia
44° 27' 0" N, 20° 37' 0.0012" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1933
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Todorović had an extensive acting career, and has had roles in critically acclaimed Yugoslavian films such as Who's That Singing Over There (1980), The Marathon Family (1982), Balkan Express (1983), Balkanski Špijun (Balkan Spy, 1984), Time of the Gypsies (1988), and Underground (1995).

His father died when he was a child. Following secondary school, Bora completed army service, at which point he had no plans to pursue an acting career. However, his older sister Mira's passion for acting exposed him to the business and soon he became passionate about it as well. He enrolled in the Belgrade Drama Arts Academy, and eventually acted on stage at the Belgrade Drama Theatre. In 1957, Bora lived and acted in Zagreb, eventually returning to Belgrade in 1961. Between 1961 and 1983, Bora was a member of the "Atelje 212" theater in Belgrade, where he performed various roles. In October 2002, he appeared on the Zvezdara Theatre stage in Belgrade, in the play Larry Thompson.

In his last days, Bora Todorović alternated residence between Prague and Belgrade. He was married to Carolyn Kilkka, with whom he had two children, Dana and Tara. Bora also had a child from his previous marriage to Snežana Matić.

In November 2002, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award "Pavle Vujisić" for his roles in Yugoslav cinematography, and in December 2006, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award "Dobričin prsten" for his roles in Yugoslav theater.

 

Source: 
Subject entry: 

 

 

Personal information: 
Bora Todorović (Serbian Cyrillic: Боривоје "Бора" Тодоровић; November 5, 1930 – July 7, 2014) was a Serbian actor. He was the younger brother of the actress, Mira Stupica, and father of Srđan Todorović, also an actor.
Date of birth: 
Wednesday, November 5, 1930
Place of birth and location: 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Date of death: 
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Place of death and location : 
Beograd
Serbia
44° 49' 0.0012" N, 20° 28' 0.0012" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1930
Country of Birth: 
Serbia
English
Images: 
AddThis: 
Biography: 

Bogdan Diklić is a Serbian actor and star of over one hundred Yugoslavian movies and television series. He and Goran Marković made 10 movies. In August 2009, he received Life Achievement Award "Pavle Vuisic" for his roles in Yugoslav cinematography. He is a fan of KK Partizan and makes a brief and reluctant on-court appearance during their 1992 Euroleague victory celebration.

Filmography

Vojnikova ljubav (1976), Maiden Bridge (1976), Fragrance of Wild Flowers (1977), National Class Category Up to 785 ccm (1979), All That Jack's (1980, Erogena zona (1981) .... Strahinja, Sok od sljiva (1981) .... Vuk, The Marathon Family (1982).... Mirko Topalovic, Variola vera (1982) .... Dusko, Balkan Express(1983) .... Zuti, Kamiondzije opet voze (1984) .... Poreznik, O pokojniku sve najlepse (1984) .... Budjoni, Unseen Wonder (1984).... Inzinje, In the Jaws of Life (1984).... Pipo, Balkan Spy (1984) .... Man at the opera, The End of the War.... Alojzije, Taiwan Canasta (1985) .... Drazenko, I to ce proci (1985), Jagode u grlu (1985) .... Boca
Three for Happiness (1985) .... Jozo, Dobrovoljci (1986) .... Svestenik, Od zlata jabuka (1986) .... Aljosa, Reflections (1987) .... Profesor Esperanta, Kraljeva zavrsnica (1987),Uvek spremne zene (1987) .... Pera, Lager Nis (1987) .... SS Sergeant
In the Name of the People (1987) .... Todor, Blanka Kolak's Love (1987) .... Loko, Oktoberfest (1987) .... Vanja, Azra (1988) .... Zvonko, Cavka (1988) .... Direktor skole, Cognac (1988) .... Branko, Maternal Halfbrothers (1988) .... Veselinov razredni, Balkan ekspres 2 (1988) .... Ernest, Boj na Kosovu (1989) .... Tamnavac, The Meeting Point (1989) .... Petar, The Fall of Rock and Roll (1989) .... Slobodan (segment "Ne salji mi pismo"), Hajde da se volimo 3 (1990), We Are Not Angels (1992) .... Pavle, The Black Bomber (1992) .... Glavonja, Prokleta je Amerika (1992) .... (segment "Sangarepo, ti ne rastes lepo"), Tito and Me (1992) .... Teca, Tri karte za Holivud (1993) .... Zivadin, A Diary of Insults (1994), Ni na nebu ni na zemlji (1994) .... Svetislav, Bice bolje (1994), Paket aranzman (1995) .... Dusan Markovic (segment "Noc bez sna"), The Tragic Burlesque (1995) .... Joja, Barking at the Stars (1998) .... Djuro Dragicevic, Cabaret Balkan (1998) .... John, the VW Driver, The White Suit (1999) .... Masinovodja, Wheels (1999) .... Coric, Normalni ljudi (2001) .... Assistant 1, No Man's Land (2001) .... Serbian officer, Absolute Hundred (2001) .... Rasa Knezevic
Headnoise (2002) (as Bogdan Dikliæ) .... Psiholog Ter^Úiè, God Forbid a Worse Thing Should Happen (2002) .... Hanin otac, The State of the Dead (2002) .... Kelner Milan, The Cordon (2002) .... Borko, Fuse (2003) .... Zaim
A Small World (2003) .... Mladji vodnik Kos, The Robbery of the Third Reich (2004) .... Glavonjin komsija, Falling in the Paradise (2004) ....

 

Source: 
Subject entry: 

 U Zvezdara teatru glumio je u predstavama “Profesionalac” (Teodor Kraj), ”Poljubac žene pauka” (Molina), “Smešna strana muzike” (Bubnjolog). Dobitnik je mnogobrojnih nagrada i priznanja za pozorišne i filmske uloge. 2009. godine udruženje filmskih umetnika Srbije dodelilo mu je Nagradu „Pavle Vuisić“ za njegov ukupan doprinos filmskoj umetnost. Objavio je 2011. knjigu „O glumi bez glume“.

Personal information: 
Bogdan Diklić (born August 1, 1953 in Bjelovar, Croatia, then Yugoslavia) is a Serbian actor and star of over one hundred Yugoslavian movies and television series.
Date of birth: 
Saturday, August 1, 1953
Place of birth and location: 
Bjelovar
Serbia
45° 53' 55.6692" N, 16° 50' 32.3124" E
Gender: 
Мушки
Year of birth: 
1953
Country of Birth: 
Srbija

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Movie and theatre