István Mihály | |
Birth Date: | 29 June 1892 |
Birth Place: | Budapest, Austro-Hungarian Empire |
Death Date: | 23 February 1945 (aged 62) |
Death Place: | Bruck an der Leitha, Austria |
Occupation: | Screenwriter |
Yearsactive: | 1922–1944 (film) |
István Mihály (1892–1945) was a Hungarian screenwriter and lyricist.[1] He combined employment in the Hungarian film industry alongside work writing for cabarets.[2] Mihály was born to a Jewish family in Budapest. He began working in the silent era, and directed a single film The Seventh Veil (1927). His career flourished in the 1930s following the introduction of sound film, but the Anti-Jewish laws enacted by the Horthy regime forced him to work using an alias during the 1940s. In 1944 following the German invasion that brought the Nazi-backed Arrow Cross to power he was arrested due to his Jewish background and subject to forced labour. In a weakened condition he died in Bruck an der Leitha.