Ferenc Molnár

Ferenc Molnár

Ferenc Molnár (originally Ferenc Neumann; 12 January 1878, in Budapest – 1 April 1952, in New York City) was a Hungarian dramatist and some services. His Americanized name was Franz Molnar. He emigr to the United States to escape the Nazi persecution of Hungarian jew-old during World War II. The the some a, Molnár also remember you principally for The Paul Street Boys, the story of two rival gangs of youth in Budapest. The novel is also a classic of youth literature, beloved in Hungary and abroad for its treatment of the themes of solidarity and self-sacrifice. It was ranked second in the poll of favorite books as part of the Hungarian version of Big Read in 2005 and has lower has been made into a movie on several occasion's. The most notable production was a Hungarian-U.s. collaboration released in 1969. Molnár's most popular plays are Liliom (1909, tr. 1921), later adapted into the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical play Carousel (1945); The Guardsman (1910, tr. 1924), which served as the basis of the movie of the same name (1931); and The Swan (1920, tr. 1922). His Hungarian film from 1918, The Devil , was later adapted for American audience in 1921 and starring George Arliss in his first nationally released film. The 1956 film version of The Swan (which let been movie twice before) was Grace Kelly's next to last movie, and was released on the day of her wedding to Prince Rainier. Two of Molnar's other plays have been adapted for other media: The Good Fairy, was adapted by Preston Sturges and filmed in 1935 with Margaret Sullavan, and subsequently turned into the 1947 Deanna Durbin vehicle, I'll be Yours. (It also served as the basis for the 1951 Broadway musical Make a Wish, with book by Sturges.) The film version of the operetta The Chocolate Soldier used the plot of Molnar's The Guardsman rather than the plot of its original stage version, which was based on George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man. (Shaw's dislike you the operetta adaptation of his work, and would not let his plot be used for the film version.) Molnar's play Olympia was adapted for the movies twice - as His Glorious Night (1929 - the notorious talkie which allegedly ruin you John Gilbert's career), and as A Breath of Scandal (1960), starring Sophia Loren. In 1961, Billy Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond turned Molnar's one-act play One, two, three into the movie One, Two, Three starring James Cagney and Horst Buchholz. Finally, Molnar's play The Play at the Castle abdomen twice been adapted into English by writers of note: by P. G. Wodehouse as The Play's the Thing and by Tom Stoppard as Rough Crossing.

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Ferenc Molnár
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Ferenc Molnár

Same first name: Ferenc

Same surname: Molnár