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IMDbPro
Laslo Benedek in L'équipée sauvage (1953)

Biography

Laslo Benedek

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Overview

  • Born
    March 5, 1905 · Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary]
  • Died
    March 11, 1992 · The Bronx, New York City, New York, USA (short illness)
  • Birth name
    László Benedek

Biography

    • Laslo Benedek was brought to Hollywood from Hungary--where he had been a writer, editor and photographer--by MGM, and his first few films were undistinguished programmers. His third, however, was quite a bit better: La mort d'un commis voyageur (1951), the screen version of Arthur Miller's classic play. Although trashed by critics at the time for, among other things, its "staginess" (Benedek said that he wanted to keep the work's theatricality intact), overlooked is the fact that Benedek drew out convincing, evocative performances from Kevin McCarthy, Cameron Mitchell, Fredric March and Mildred Dunnock.

      Benedek's next film, however, is the one he'll be remembered for: L'équipée sauvage (1953). This granddaddy of all biker flicks is amusingly tame--some might even say lame--by today's standards, but it caused quite a commotion in its day (it was banned in England and was railed against by conservative religious and social pressure groups in the US as yet one more example of how Hollywood was "corrupting the youth of America"). The film is actually not all that much, being rather slow-going and the "bikers" coming across more like bratty teenagers than dangerous rampaging hoods, but it struck a chord with young people and parents alike--for different reasons, of course--and was far and away the most successful film of Benedek's career.
      - IMDb mini biography by: frankfob2@yahoo.com
    • 'From 1976 to 1980, Mr. Benedek was chairman of the graduate film program at New York University's School of the Arts. In 1983, he became a visiting professor of film at the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. Later, he taught at the Film Academy in Munich, Germany; at Rice University in Houston, and at Columbia University in New York City. ' By William H. Honan, NY Times, March 14, 1992
      - IMDb mini biography by: William H. Honan

Family

  • Spouses
      Lacerta Weiss(February 25, 1950 - ?) (divorced, 2 children)
      Maria Reyto(June 23, 1939 - July 14, 1948) (divorced)
  • Children
      Barbara Susan Benedek
      Melinda Margaret Benedek

Trivia

  • In 1983, he became a visiting professor of film at the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.
  • In Germany, Benedek was cinematographer on The Mistress (1927). He was assistant director on The Great Longing (1929), directed by Steve Sekely, and edited and assisted directed The Man Who Murdered (1931) for director Curtis Bernhardt.
  • From 1976 to 1980, he was chairman of the graduate film program at New York University's School of the Arts.
  • In 1946 he was linked with communist front organisations.
  • For Stanley Kramer he made with Fredric March "Death of a Salesman" (1951) which was a financial disappointment.

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