Alexander Esway Explained

Alexander Esway
Birth Name:Sándor Ezry
Birth Date:20 January 1895
Birth Place:Budapest, Hungary
Death Place:St. Tropez, France
Other Names:Alexandre Esway
Occupation:Film director, screenwriter, producer

Alexander Esway (20 January 1895 – 23 August 1947[1]) was a Hungarian-born film director, screenwriter, and producer.

Life and career

Esway was born Sándor Ezry in Budapest. In the late 1920s and early 1930s he worked as a director and screenwriter, first in Germany and then in the UK. He began working primarily in France from 1933, although he also continued to work in the UK where he set up a short-lived production company, Atlantic Film Productions, in 1935. The company's only production was Thunder in the City, starring Edward G. Robinson. During World War II, he worked in Hollywood on Allied propaganda films, most notably, The Cross of Lorraine. After the war, he returned to France where he made his last two films: the two-part war film Le Bataillon du ciel, based on the book of the same name by Joseph Kessel, and L'Idole, starring Yves Montand. Esway died in St. Tropez at the age of 52.[2] [3] [4]

Filmography

Director

Screenwriter

Producer

External links

Notes and References

  1. Note that his birth year is given as 1898 in the IMDb and sources based on it. His first name is sometimes given as Alexandre.
  2. [Cinémathèque Française]
  3. Molnár, Péter Gál (June 2002). "Főúr, kérek egy táncost! Billy Wilder". Filmvilág. Online version retrieved 30 April 2013
  4. Low, Rachael (2005). The History of the British Film 1929-1939: Film Making in 1930s Britain, p. 205. Routledge.