Aranka Váradi (1885-1966)

Aranka Gizella Mária Váradi (Budapest, March 11, 1886 - Palma de Mallorca, January 5, 1966) was a Hungarian actress. She started playing at the National Theater of Budapest in 1903 and became permanent member of the National Theater in 1923. She left Hungary soon after her last stage appearance in 1947 and settled in Mallorca, Spain.daughter.

Career
Aranka was the daughter of Antal Váradi a Hungarian playwright and poet, playwright and of Gabriella Hickmann. She graduated from Academy of Drama and Film in Budapest (now University of Theatre and Film Arts). actress and Academy of Music, studied énektagozatán. In 1903 he was admitted to the National Theater, and from 1923 he was an heir to the institution. In the beginning, he played only minor roles, and soon became the major artists of the National Theater. He was 23 years old when he made his first success in the role of Ibadan Vadkacsa in Hedvig. His distinctive features include: Margit (Goethe: Faust), Cordelia (Shakespeare: King Lear), Herma (Hercegn: Biróné), and so on. "

In 1908 he won the Farkas-Ratko prize. He often turned around in the countryside and in Pécs. His last appearance took place in 1947 and moved abroad later.

Private life [ edit source text ] Her first husband dr. Sándor Fekete (1885-1972) was a physician who led the Alliance Street Hospital from 1921, later founder of Semmelweis Medical History Museum. [1] Married on July 27, 1916 in Budapest, Józsefváros. [2] They were divorced in 1924. [3] Váradi Aranka met with Miklós Bánffy, the countess of his intendance, who later married him in Budapest, Józsefváros, on January 25, 1939. [4] The Est edition of February 28, 1939, reads a few lines in the "Tarka-barka" section: "It was a surprise in the art world that Vulian Aranka, an eternal member of the National Theater, married. Count Bánffy Miklós married him. ... "

Major roles [ edit source text ]

Aranka Váradi as Dolly and Alajos Mészáros as Philipp George Bernard Shaw : Do not Know It's in his comedy. Director: Sándor Hevesi. Hedvig (Ibsen: The Wildcat); Cleopatra (Shaw: Caesar and Cleopatra); Anna (Shaw: Tanner John's marriage ); Puck (Shakespeare: Dream of the Midsummer Night ); Cordelia (Shakespear: King Lear); Margit (Goethe: Faust); Nora (Ibsen); Roxane (Rostand: Cyrano de Bergerac); Target (Molière: Misanthrope); Wife (Dario Niccodemi: Shadow); Nataliya (Turgenyev: One Month Village). Notes [ edit source text ] Jump to top ↑ Diary (details) Our age, December 2002 Go up ↑ Bp. VIII. dist. State marriage registry 730/1916. River City. Go up ↑ The budapest kir. CTU. 1.P.38761 / 4-1924. s. Judgment. Go up ↑ Bp. VIII. dist. State marriage registry 116/1939. River City. Resources [ source text editing ] Hungarian lexicon of theatrical art Hungarian Acting Lesson 408 p. Hungarian theatrical lexicon p. 409 p. Miklós Bánffy's evening. Letters. The diary of Váradi Aranka 1944-1952. Published by Ildikó Marosi. Polis publisher, Cluj-Napoca, 2002. Hungarian biographical lexicon Learn more [ edit source text ] Blaha Lujza memorial album. Ed. Kálmán Porzsolt. [Bp.], Blaha Lujza Memorial Committee, [1927]. Who is who? Contextual Lexicon. [Bp.], Beta Literature Inc., [1937]. Christian Hungarian Public Almanac I-II. [3rd Vol. Transylvania. 4. binds. Southern Region.]. Up. ed. And is published by Jenő Hortobágyi. Bp., 1940. A playful lexicon. Ed. Antal Németh. Bp., Andor Győző, 1930. Theater is the whole! ... Playful theatrical keleidoscope from the world of the last century. Team up. Péter Füle. [Bp.], Palatinus, 2005.