Anton Marti | |
Birth Name: | Anton Martinčić |
Birth Date: | 10 April 1923 |
Birth Place: | Labin, Kingdom of Italy |
Death Place: | Zagreb, Croatia |
Nationality: | Croatian |
Years Active: | 1949–2004 |
Television: | |
Awards: |
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Spouse: | Alis Kraševac |
Children: | 2 |
Mother: | Antonija Martinčić-Viskovic |
Anton Martinčić better known by his stage name Anton Marti (10 April 1923 – 21 January 2004) was a Croatian television and theater director and one of the founders of Television Zagreb (today HRT) and Slovenian TV. He directed a large number of entertainment, music, competition and magazine television shows.[1] He is a multiple winner of international and domestic awards, and in 1994 he was awarded the Porin for Lifetime Achievement.[2]
Anton Martinčić was born on 10 April 1923 in Labin.[3] He was educated in Trieste and finished the academy in Rome.[2] Until 1949, he acted in Italian theater companies, and after that he came to Koper, where he acted, directed and collaborated in the theater, radio drama and other shows of Radio Koper.[3] [4] In 1956, he came to Zagreb and joined the founders of the then Zagreb Television, and directed some of its first shows. He directed, designed and launched many revues, entertainment-musical, feature and magazine shows for TV Zagreb and TV Ljubljana.[5]
He acted in several films as well as in theater plays. In addition to his work on the TV stations of the former Yugoslavia (mostly in Zagreb and Ljubljana), he also directed more than 50 theater plays, mostly in Croatian and Slovenian theaters. In 1968, he broadcast the first color show in Ljubljana. Some of his most famous TV programs are Videofon, Licem u lice, Na licu mjesta, Svjetla pozornice, and numerous entertainment and New Year's shows. He directed the broadcasts of the biggest events and festivals, and in the late sixties and early seventies worked on the then popular show TV magazin. He is the winner of numerous television awards, and in 1994 he received the Porin Award for Lifetime Achievement.[6] [5]
Anton Marti died on 21 January 2004 in Zagreb[7] at the age of 80.