Lóránd Fráter (film)
Appearance
Lóránd Fráter | |
---|---|
Directed by | László Kalmár |
Written by | Miklós Asztalos László Pacsery |
Produced by | Miklós Szalontai Kiss |
Starring | Antal Páger László Szilassy Bea Goll |
Cinematography | Rudolf Icsey |
Edited by | Zoltán Kerényi |
Music by | Lóránd Fráter Jenö Sándor |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Hungary |
Language | Hungarian |
Lóránd Fráter (Hungarian: Fráter Loránd) is a 1942 Hungarian musical comedy film directed by László Kalmár and starring Antal Páger, László Szilassy and Bea Goll.[1] [2] It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director József Simoncsics.
Synopsis
[edit]A young actor is playing the role of the famous composer Lóránd Fráter in a theatre production. This impresses Pannika, but her mother who knew the real composer and was courted by her years before, considers him to be a fraud. The actor tries to pretend that he is really the son of the composer, who is then drawn into his efforts to woo Pannika.
Cast
[edit]- Antal Páger as A nótalelkü Fráter lóránd
- László Szilassy as Sárossy Laci, ál Fráter lóránd
- Bea Goll as Pannika, Bálint lánya
- Anna Tõkés as Zsuzsi, Bálint felesége
- Gerö Mály as Felleghy Tihamér, a ripacs színiigazgató
- Ilona Kökény as Felleghyné
- Zoltán Makláry as Tóni a békebeli 'fõúr'
- Nusi Somogyi as Tercsi
- Gyula Szöreghy as a Fráter Lóránd asztaltársaság tagja
- Ila Nagy as Színésznõ
- Emmi Nagy as Színésznõ
- Andor Ajtay as Bálint, fõszolgabíró
- Sári Károlyi as Színésznõ
- Sándor Tompa as Színész
- Béla Venczel as Színész
- László Misoga as Színész
- Gyula Szabó as Színész
- György Gonda as Inas
- Mária Keresztessy as Színésznõ
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Juhász, István. Kincses magyar filmtár 1931–1944: az eredeti forgatókönyvből 1931 és 1944 között létrejött hazai mozgóképekről. Kráter, 2007.
- Rîpeanu, Bujor. (ed.) International Directory of Cinematographers, Set- and Costume Designers in Film: Hungary (from the beginnings to 1988). Saur, 1981.