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- Lajos_Zilahy abstract "Lajos Zilahy (March 27, 1891 − December 1, 1974) was a Hungarian novelist and playwright. Born in Nagyszalonta (called Salonta in Romania) in Transylvania, then part of the Kingdom of Hungary, an entity of Austria-Hungary, he studied law at the University of Budapest before serving in the Austro-Hungarian army during the First World War, in which he was wounded on the Eastern Front - an experience which later informed his bestselling novel Two Prisoners (Két fogoly).He was also active in film. His 1928 novel Something Is Drifting on the Water (Valamit visz a víz) was filmed twice. His play The General was filmed as The Virtuous Sin in 1930 and The Rebel in 1931.Edited Híd (The Bridge) 1940-1944, an art periodical. Opposed both fascism and communism. In 1939 he established a film studio named Pegazus, which operated until the end of 1943. Pegazus produced motion pictures and Zilahy directed some of them. In 1944, his play Fatornyok (Wooden Towers) was banned. Gave all assets to government treasury in early 1940s for use in educating youth in world peace, which led to the establishment of Kitűnőek Iskolája.He wrote the 1943 screenplay himself and co-directed it with Gusztáv Oláh in Hungary under the international English title Something Is in the Water. The Czechoslovakian screenplay was written by Imre Gyöngyössy, Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos, and directed by the latter two with a Serbian, Slovak, Hungarian, Czech and American cast on location at the Danube in Slovakia under the title Desire Called Anada in Czech (Touha zvaná Anada, 1969) and Slovak (Túžba zvaná Anada), with Adrift as its English title.Lajos Zilahy became the Secretary General of Hungarian PEN but his liberal views placed him at odds, first with the right-wing Horthy regime and later with the post-war Communist government. Zilahy left Hungary in 1947, spending the rest of his life in exile in the USA, where he completed A Dukay család, a trilogy of novels (Century in Scarlet, The Dukays, The Angry Angel) chronicling the history of a fictitious Hungarian aristocratic family from the Napoleonic era to the middle of the twentieth century. He died in Novi Sad, Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia.Several of his novels have been translated into Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Rumanian, Serbian, Slovakian, Spanish (mainly), Swedish, and Turkish, and some of his plays into German, Italian, and Spanish.An edition of his short stories is available in Spanish and some of his short stories have been translated into Bulgarian, Croatian, English, Estonian, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Slovakian, Spanish, and Swedish, and some of his poems into German.".
- Lajos_Zilahy birthDate "1891-03-27".
- Lajos_Zilahy birthYear "1891".
- Lajos_Zilahy deathDate "1974".
- Lajos_Zilahy deathYear "1974".
- Lajos_Zilahy thumbnail Lajos_Zilahy.jpg?width=300.
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- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Austria-Hungary.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Category:1891_births.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Category:1974_deaths.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hungarian_writers.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Salonta.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Czechoslovakia.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Czechs.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Danube.
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- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Hungarian_PEN.
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- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Hungarian_people.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Hungarians.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Ján_Kadár.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Hungary.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Miklós_Horthy.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Novi_Sad.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Romania.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Salonta.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Serbia.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Serbs.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Slovak_people.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Slovakia.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Slovaks.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink The_General_(play).
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink The_Rebel_(1931_film).
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink The_Virtuous_Sin.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Transylvania.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink Yugoslavia.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLink File:Lajos_Zilahy.jpg.
- Lajos_Zilahy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Lajos Zilahy".
- Lajos_Zilahy dateOfBirth "1891-03-27".
- Lajos_Zilahy dateOfDeath "1974".
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- Lajos_Zilahy name "Zilahy, Lajos".
- Lajos_Zilahy shortDescription "Hungarian writer".
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- Lajos_Zilahy description "Hungarian writer".
- Lajos_Zilahy description "Hungarian writer".
- Lajos_Zilahy subject Category:1891_births.
- Lajos_Zilahy subject Category:1974_deaths.
- Lajos_Zilahy subject Category:Hungarian_writers.
- Lajos_Zilahy subject Category:People_from_Salonta.
- Lajos_Zilahy hypernym Novelist.
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- Lajos_Zilahy comment "Lajos Zilahy (March 27, 1891 − December 1, 1974) was a Hungarian novelist and playwright. Born in Nagyszalonta (called Salonta in Romania) in Transylvania, then part of the Kingdom of Hungary, an entity of Austria-Hungary, he studied law at the University of Budapest before serving in the Austro-Hungarian army during the First World War, in which he was wounded on the Eastern Front - an experience which later informed his bestselling novel Two Prisoners (Két fogoly).He was also active in film.".
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- Lajos_Zilahy name "Lajos Zilahy".
- Lajos_Zilahy name "Zilahy, Lajos".
- Lajos_Zilahy surname "Zilahy".