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  1. Emeric Pressburger

    Emeric Pressburger

    Hungarian-British screenwriter, director and producer

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      • Emeric Pressburger (born December 5, 1902, Miskolc, Hungary—died February 5, 1988, Saxstead, Suffolk, England) was a Hungarian-born screenwriter who wrote and produced innovative and visually striking motion pictures in collaboration with British director Michael Powell, most notably The Red Shoes (1948).
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  2. Emeric Pressburger (born Imre József Pressburger; 5 December 1902 – 5 February 1988) was a Hungarian-British screenwriter, film director, and producer.

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    • Screenwriter, producer, director and production house co-founder with Michael Powell
    • 5 February 1988 (aged 85), Saxtead, England
  3. Emeric Pressburger was a Hungarian-born screenwriter who wrote and produced innovative and visually striking motion pictures in collaboration with British director Michael Powell, most notably The Red Shoes (1948). Pressburger studied engineering in Prague and Stuttgart, but in 1925 he went to.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Writer: The Red Shoes. Educated at the Universities of Prague and Stuttgart, Emeric Pressburger worked as a journalist in Hungary and Germany and an author and scriptwriter in Berlin and Paris.

    • January 1, 1
    • Miskolc, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary]
    • January 1, 1
    • Saxstead, Suffolk, England, UK
  5. Oct 1, 2021 · Pressburger was one of only two exile script-writers who shaped significant careers in Britain (the other was his friend Wolfgang Wilhelm). He is unique in that the sense of emptiness and dejection that he experienced as an exile was incorporated into his films.

  6. Feb 7, 1988 · LONDON — Writer and movie producer Emeric Pressburger, who with Michael Powell created “The Red Shoes” and other critically acclaimed British films of the 1940s and 1950s, has died at age 85, his...

  7. A biography of Emeric Pressburger is both necessary and impossible. Necessary, because he is otherwise destined to remain the second term in his film-making team with Michael Powell; impossible, because he was a deeply elusive individual.

  8. Emeric (Imre) Pressburger was born in Miskolc, Hungary, on December 5 1902. He worked as a journalist, translator and short story writer in Weimar Republic Berlin, before turning screenwriter for directors Robert Siodmak ( Abschied (Germany, 1930)) and Max Ophuls ( Dann schon lieber Lebertran (Germany, 1930)).

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