Yvette Biro
Yvette Biro (April 3, 1930, Budapest)[1][2][3] is a Hungarian-American essayist, screenwriterand Professor Emeritus at New York University Graduate Film School (NYU).
Her early books on the aesthetics of film were first published in her native Hungary, which became handbooks for film-schools in the country. Meanwhile, she worked on a dozen of prizewinning films with noted directors (Miklós Jancsó, Zoltán Fábri, Károly Makk). She was both the founder and the Editor-in-Chief of Filmkultura, the magazine of the Hungarian Film Institute and Film Archive.
In the mid-1970s, she was "offered" the chance to emigrate by the Hungarian authorities. After teaching at the Sorbonne in Paris, she moved to the US to teach at the Universities of Berkeley and Stanford, California. In 1982 she was hired as a professor then became Full Professor on the faculty of the Tisch School of the Arts (Film and TV Graduate Division) at NYU where she worked until her retirement in 2007.
She has written books on film which have been translated into several languages. Her numerous essays have been published in professional magazines internationally – Film Quarterly, Études Cinématographiques , Performing Arts Journal, Bianco & Nero, Dædalus, Millennium, and The Village Voice, as well as in online publications.
Works
Theory and criticism
- 1982 - Profane Mythology: The Savage Mind of the Cinema, Indiana University Press[4]
- 2008 - Turbulence and Flow in Film, Indiana University Press[5]
Scripts
- 1995 - Arrivals and Departures (film, unproduced) - winner of the European Script Fund Award
- 2003 - The Stone Raft (film)
- 2006 - Johanna (film)
- 2008 - Delta (film) - winner of the FIPRESCI Prize in Cannes
- 2010 - Tender Son
- 2009 - Judasevangelium, with Kornél Mundruczó (opened at the Hamburg Thalia Theatre in September 2009)
- 2007/2008 - The Frankenstein Project (European tour including Brussels, Paris, Vienna)
References
- ^ "Pari Sara Shirazi, New York Public Records Instantly". ClustrMaps.com.
- ^ Szabo, Istvan (2004). The Cinema of Central Europe. Wallflower Press. p. 117. ISBN 9781904764205. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
- ^ Butler, Susan (1999). "Revising femininity? (September 1983)". In Brittain, David (ed.). Creative Camera: Thirty Years of Writing. Manchester University Press. p. 120. ISBN 9780719058059. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
- ^ Beckwith, Stacy N. (1998). "6. Seeing beyond the Delicate: Luis García Berlanga's Novio a la vista". In Talens, Jenaro; Díez, Santos Zunzunegui (eds.). Modes of Representation in Spanish Cinema. U of Minnesota Press. p. 114. ISBN 9780816629756. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
- ^ Monaghan, Whitney (2016). Queer Girls, Temporality and Screen Media: Not 'Just a Phase'. Springer. p. 116. ISBN 9781137555984. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
External links
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- BLP articles lacking sources from February 2021
- All BLP articles lacking sources
- Articles with ISNI identifiers
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
- Articles with BIBSYS identifiers
- Articles with BNF identifiers
- Articles with BNFdata identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with J9U identifiers
- Articles with LCCN identifiers
- Articles with Libris identifiers
- Articles with NKC identifiers
- Articles with NLA identifiers
- Articles with NTA identifiers
- Articles with PLWABN identifiers
- Articles with DTBIO identifiers
- Articles with SUDOC identifiers
- American women screenwriters
- Living people
- Hungarian emigrants to the United States
- Tisch School of the Arts faculty
- 1930 births
- Writers from Budapest
- Hungarian women