Laszlo Karda (1957-1959) (divorced) Miklós Jancsó (1960-1973) (divorced) (3 children) Jan Nowicki (?-2008) (divorced)
Márta Mészáros (born 19 September 1931) is a Hungarian screenwriter and film director. The daughter of László Mészáros, a sculptor, Mészáros began her career working in documentary film, having made 25 documentary shorts over the span of ten years.[1] Her full-length directorial debut, Eltavozott nap/The Girl (1968), was the first Hungarian film to have been directed by a woman,[2] and won the Special Prize of the Jury at the ValladolidInternational Film Festival.[3]
Mészáros' work often combines autobiographical details with documentary footage. Prominent themes include characters' denials of their pasts, the consequences of dishonesty, and the problematics of gender. Her films often feature heroines from fragmented families, such as young girls seeking their missing parents (The Girl) or middle-aged women looking to adopt children (Adoption).[4]
Born in Budapest, Mészáros spent eleven years of her childhood in the Soviet Union, where her parents had emigrated as communist artists in 1936. While there, Mészáros's father, László Mészáros, was arrested and killed in 1938 under the Stalinist regime and her mother died giving birth.[6] Orphaned, Mészáros was raised by her foster mother in the USSR where she attended school. After returning to Hungary in 1946, Mészáros went back to Moscow to study at VGIK, returning again to Hungary only after her graduation in 1956.
Career
Mészáros began working at the Budapest Newsreel Studio in 1954 where she made four short films, and then for the Alexandru Sahia documentary studio in Bucharest, Romania, from 1957–59. She then returned to Budapest in 1958 to make science popularization shorts, and documentary shorts, where she worked until 1968. Mészáros joined the Mafilm Group 4 in the mid-1960s, and directed her first feature in 1968.[7] At this time, Mészáros was the first woman director in Hungary to make a feature film.[8] In the 1980s Mészáros made her semi-autobiographical “Diary films” that had a major impact on “Hungarian cinema” because of her conscious depiction of the government and individual past experiences.[9] She challenged the censorship in Hungary and ascertained herself as an integral voice in the country's cinema.[10] Since Mészáros first feature in 1968 she has made over fifty films, won numerous awards, and has been a judge on various film panels; she also continues to make films to this day.
Legacy
Mészáros' films are in many ways reflective of her experiences growing up and deal with issues relevant to her life. Having lost both of her parents early in life, and having spent much of her youth living in a post-Stalinist Hungary, Mészáros' life was rife with tragedy and oppression, and her films are often reflective of this. Additionally, because Mészáros spent many of her first years as a filmmaker working in documentary films, many of her feature films also contain much documentary footage. In most of Mészáros' features, the films are open-ended, lack a conventional plot, and dialogue is sparse.
In terms of content, Mészáros' films explore the wide and often tragic gaps between ideals and realities, and between parents and their children. Mészáros' films deal with realities usually ignored in Eastern European cinema: the subordination of women, conflicts of urban and rural cultures, antagonism between the bureaucracy and its employees, alcoholism, the generation gap, dissolution of traditional family structures, and the plight of state-reared children.
Mészáros is one of few female filmmakers who consistently makes films that are both critically and commercially successful for an international audience. Her eight feature films, made from 1968 to 1979, are concerned with the social oppression, economic constraints, and emotional challenges faced by Hungarian women. In her own words, Mészáros explains: "I tell banal, commonplace stories, and then in them the leads are women — I portray things from a woman's angle."[This quote needs a citation]
Personal life
Mészáros was first married to László Karda (a filmmaker), in 1957, but they divorced in 1959, and in 1960 she married Miklós Jancsó, a Hungarian film director and screenwriter whom she met during her time with the Mafilm Group 4.[11] They raised his two sons and her son from previous marriages together. Although they later divorced in 1973, their two sons, Nyika Jancsó and Miklós Jancsó Jr., have each separately worked as director of photography on many of her films.[12] She later married the Polish actor Jan Nowicki, but they divorced in 2008. Nowicki starred in many of her films, including the principal role in The Unburied Dead. His son from an earlier relationship, Łukasz Nowicki, starred in Mészáros' film, Kisvilma. Mészáros also has a daughter, Kasia Jancsó, from her second marriage.
1995 - Won - Elvira Notari Prize/Special Mention for The Seventh Room
1995 - Won - OCIC Award for The Seventh Room
References
^Martineau, Barbara Halpern (1980). "The Films of Marta Meszaros or, the Importance of Being Banal". Film Quarterly. 34 (1): 21–27. doi:10.2307/1211850. JSTOR1211850.
^Quart, Barbara (1994). "Review of Screen Memories The Hungarian Cinema of Márta Mészáros". Film Quarterly. 48 (1): 55–56. doi:10.2307/1212935. JSTOR1212935.
Quart, Barbara (1993). "Three Central European Women Directors Revisited". Cinéaste. 19 (4): 58–61. JSTOR41687247.
Parvulescu, Constantin (2009). "Betrayed Promises: Politics and Sexual Revolution in the Films of Márta Mészáros, Miloš Forman, and Dušan Makavejev". Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies. 24 (2 71): 77–105. doi:10.1215/02705346-2009-003.