Branimir Šćepanović
Branimir Šćepanović | |
---|---|
Born | 19 April 1937[1] Podgorica, Kingdom of Yugoslavia[1] |
Died | 30 November 2020(2020-11-30) (aged 83) Belgrade, Serbia |
Resting place | Belgrade New Cemetery |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Serbian |
Nationality | Serbian |
Alma mater | University of Belgrade |
Genre | novel, short story, screenplay |
Notable works | Usta puna zemlja Stid Smrt gospodina Goluže |
Notable awards | October Award |
Branimir Šćepanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Бранимир Шћепановић; 19 April 1937 – 30 November 2020) was a Serbian and Yugoslav writer.[2][3][4]
Biography
His father was a teacher and a published author. Šćepanović started writing during high school.[5] The novel Usta puna zemlje had 32 editions in Serbia and 23 editions in France.[5] He served as artistic director of Avala Film.[6]
Šćepanović won the October award from the city of Belgrade and two Golden Arenas for Best Screenplay.
Šćepanović's 1977 novel, Smrt gospodina Goluže (The Death of Mr. Goluzha) was adapted in 1997 by Alan Wade for the film he directed, Julian Po.[7] Julian Po starred Christian Slater and Robin Tunney, and was released by Fine Line Features and New Line International.
Works
- Books
- Pre istine, 1961
- Sramno leto, 1965
- Usta puna zemlje, 1974
- Smrt gospodina Goluže, 1977
- Iskupljenje, 1980
- Ono drugo vreme, Srpska književna zadruga, 2015[8]
- Screenplays
- Ono more, 1965
- Kljuc, 1965
- Pre istine, 1968
- Lelejska gora, 1968
- Sramno leto, 1969
- Kako umreti, 1972
- Sutjeska, 1973
- Smrt gospodina Goluže, 1982
- Vreme leoparda, 1985
See also
- Serbian literature
References
- ^ a b Draško Ređep (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. p. 521.
- ^ "Duhovna Situacija Modernih Vremena: O umetničkoj prozi o doživljajima sveta velikog srpskog pisca Branimira Šćepanovića". Novosti (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ Serbia, RTS, Radio televizija Srbije, Radio Television of. "Преминуо писац Бранимир Шћепановић". www.rts.rs. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Usta puna zemlje Branimira Šćepanovića u kontekstu stvarnosne proze tog doba". pulse.rs. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ a b "Na Kraju Sam Bio Umoran: Poslednji intervju Branimira Šćepanovića za "Novosti"". Novosti (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Kraj Herojskog Doba Književnosti: Dirljivi oproštaji od Branimira Brane Šćepanovića". Novosti (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "IMDb".
- ^ "Ono drugo vreme : izabrane proze : Branimir Šćepanović". Knjizara.com (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-12-06.
External links
- The last interview by Šćepanović
- v
- t
- e
(1955–90)
- Slavko Janevski (1955)
- Ratko Đurović (1956)
- Slavko Kolar (1957)
- Zvonimir Berković & Tomislav Butorac (1958)
- Veljko Bulajić, Ivo Braut, Stjepan Perović & Elio Petri (1959)
- Zora Dirnbach (1960)
- Dragoslav Ilić, Radenko Ostojić & Veljko Bulajić (1961)
- Arsen Diklić (1963)
- Ivan Ribič (1964)
- Zvonimir Berković / Simon Drakul (1966)
- Puriša Đorđević (1967)
- Branimir Šćepanović (1968)
- Staša Borisavljević (1969)
- Puriša Đorđević (1970)
- Miroslav Antić (1971)
- Slavko Janevski, Pande Toškovski & Vatroslav Mimica (1972)
- Branimir Šćepanović (1973)
- Branko Šomen (1974)
- Arsen Diklić & Branko Bauer (1975)
- Zdravko Velimirović, Mladen Oljača & Đurica Labović (1976)
- Slavko Goldstein & Dušan Vukotić (1977)
- Dragoslav Mihailović (1978)
- Petrit Imami (1979)
- Puriša Đorđević (1980)
- Abdulah Sidran (1981)
- Mirza Idrizović (1982)
- Živojin Pavlović & Slobodan Golubović (1983)
- Branko Gradišnik (1984)
- Abdulah Sidran (1985)
- Gordan Mihić (1986)
- Dejan Šorak (1987)
- Žarko Dragojević (1988)
- Dušan Kovačević (1989)
- Ferenc Deak (1990)
(1992–present)
- Lada Kaštelan & Zrinko Ogresta (1992)
- Zvonimir Berković (1993)
- Lukas Nola (1995)
- Nino Škrabe (1996)
- Branko Schmidt (1997)
- Snježana Tribuson (1998)
- Zrinko Ogresta & Goran Tribuson (1999)
- Ivo Brešan & Vinko Brešan (2000)
- Josip Cvenić (2001)
- Goran Tribuson (2002)
- Jurica Pavičić & Živko Zalar (2003)
- Antun Vrdoljak (2004)
- Dejan Šorak (2005)
- Antonio Nuić (2006)
- Ognjen Sviličić (2007)
- Goran Rušinović & Miljenko Jergović (2008)
- Antonio Nuić (2009)
- Nevio Marasović (2010)
- Tomislav Radić (2011)
- Vlatka Vorkapić (2012)
- Bobo Jelčić (2013)
- Ivan Pavličić (2014)
- Josip Mlakić (2015)
- Mate Matišić & Zrinko Ogresta (2016)
- Rajko Grlić & Ante Tomić (2017)
- Sara Hribar (2018)
- Mate Matišić (2019)
- Lana Barić (2020)
- Sandra Antolić & Branko Schmidt & Ognjen Sviličić (2021)