Abdul Sidran ( Bosnian Abdulah Sidran ; September 9, 1944 , Sarajevo , Yugoslavia ) - Bosnian writer , poet and playwright . The representative of the generation of the Yugoslav " sixties ."
| Abdula Sidran | |
|---|---|
| Abdulah sidran | |
| Aliases | Avdo |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | |
| Citizenship (citizenship) | |
| Occupation | playwright , novelist , poet , screenwriter |
| Language of Works | |
| Awards | [d] |
He was educated at Sarajevo University , studied Yugoslav literature and Serbo-Croatian at the Faculty of Philosophy. Listed in the state of Sarajevo television as a playwright.
The most important and most famous works of Sidran are Šahbaza ( 1970 ), Kost i meso ( 1976 ), Sarajevski tabut ( 1993 ). He is also the author of several poetry collections. Sidran's poems were translated into other European languages.
In addition, Abdula Sidran is known as a movie writer . The films of several famous Bosnian directors were shot based on his scripts, such as Emir Kusturica ( Do You Remember Dolly Bell? ( 1981 ) and Papa on a Business Trip ( 1985 )) and Ademir Kenovich ( Kuduz ( 1989 ) and Savršeni krug ( 1997) )). Sidran was a member of the jury of the Venice Film Festival in 2003 .
See also
- Milenko Ergovich
Notes
- ↑ Internet Movie Database - 1990.
- ↑ filmportal.de - 2005.
- ↑ BNF ID : 2011 Open Data Platform .
Links
- Abdula Sidran on the Internet Movie Database
- Interview with Dani Magazine (Bosnian)