Gyula Gózon

Gyula Gózon

Acting 1885-04-19 Érsekújvár, Austria-Hungary (now Slovakia)

Gyula Gózon (19 April 1885, Nové Zámky – 8 October 1972, Budapest) was a Hungarian actor and comedian. Gyula Gózon was born on 19 April 1885, in Nové Zámky, but grew up in Esztergom. With the mentoring of his brother, he could fulfill his dream of learning to be a singer actor at the actor school of Szidi Rákosi in Budapest. After graduating, he joins a group touring the southern part of the country, often working under harsh conditions, changing location and repertory often. During this period he has the chance to polish his prosaic capabilities, one that was omitted in Rákosi's school. After playing in Târgu Mureş and Miercurea Ciuc, he gains the attention of Miklós Erdélyi, the director of Oradea's theater, who offers him contract in 1904. He plays here for six years, and befriends Gyula Kabos, forming a lifelong comradeship, and comedic duo. In 1912 Endre Nagy offers him to join his newly forming Cabaret (Apolló theatre) in Budapest, followed by years working in the Népopera and Király Theatre. Gózon accepted his first movie role in 1914 (the silent film A becsapott újságíró), appearing nearly a hundred during his lifetime. In 1917 he marries Lili Berky, with whom he starts the Muskátli Cabaret, often appearing on stage together. After the venture failed in 1920, he joins the Belvárosi Theatre in 1927, followed by the Új Theatre two years later. With Gyula Kabos he gets a role in Kék Bálvány, Hungary's first major motion picture, and like his mate, Gózon quickly becomes a much used actor of the emerging movie industry, appearing in the first hits of Budapest's theatres, like Hyppolit a lakáj or Meseautó. In 1935, along with his wife, he is contracted to the National Theatre). On the account of Jew-laws, he is banned from work in 1941, followed by years of hiding in his Rákosliget home during World War II. In 1945 Gózon re-joins the National Theatre, enjoying a second flowering of his career for a decade. After his wife's death in 1958, the health of the now 73-year-old actor began to fail, and seven years after his last appearance in the National Theatre, he died on 8 October 1972. Gyula Gózon is one of the few entertainers who could be successful and active all along the years of the Monarchy, the Horthy regime, and the Communist rule. Throughout his long career, he appeared in over 90 movies (including silent ones), and was both a pioneer and master of the Hungarian Cabaret. He received the Kossuth Prize in 1954. His former home in Rákosliget is now home to the Gózon Gyula Repertory Theater, opened in 2005. Description above from the Wikipedia article Gyula Gózon, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

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1965 Pincér
1963 Uncle Szoboszlai
1962 Zsüle
1960 Actor
1959
1959 Eberlein
1957 Miniszterelnök
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1957 Federik, bartender
1954 Uncle Lajos
1954 Nagyapa
1954
1954 Lustyák bácsi
1953 Bezzegh bácsi
1953 Dani nagypapa
1953 Gombkötõmester
1952 Lajos bácsi
1952 Jakab Viszket
1951 Neunherz
1951 Bernáth
1951 Birman
1950 Énekkari tag
1949 Edus bácsi
1947 Bernáth bácsi
1946
1940 Hajógyári igazgató
1940 Meller
1940
1938 Tormássy, vezér
1938 Illés bácsi
1938 Gerleszegi lakája
1938 Kiss Márton fuvarozó, Piri apja
1937 Kalauz
1937 Doctor
1937 Müller úr
1937 Uncle Béla
1936 Vörösvári
1935 Rizling
1935 Panni apja
1935 Frici,az artista
1935 Lajos bácsi
1935 Kassay cukrász
1934 Weber
1934 Esztáry Sándor
1934 Bogár úr
1934 Kovács papa
1933 Mihály, Tarján tisztiszolgája
1933 Éva apja
1932 Jegyző
1932 Café Guest
1931 Makáts