Miklós Vig | |
Background: | solo_singer |
Birth Name: | Miklós Voglhut |
Alias: | Miklós Vig |
Birth Date: | 11 July 1898 |
Birth Place: | Budapest, Hungary |
Death Place: | Budapest, Hungary |
Origin: | Hungary |
Miklós Vig (11 July 1898 – 19 December 1944) was a Hungarian cabaret[1] and jazz[2] [3] singer, actor, comedian[4] and theater secretary[1] in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. Born in Budapest on 11 July 1898, he was murdered there on 19 December 1944 by members of the Arrow Cross.[5]
Vig was born Miklós Voglhut[6] in 1898 to Vilmos Vogelhut (1867-1942) and Roza Vogelhut (1870-1942) in a Hungarian Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary.[7] [1] Although he went to acting school, he had better success as a cabaret singer. In 1924 as his career was picking up he changed his surname to Vig,[6] because Voglhut was a Jewish-sounding name and antisemitism was growing at the time. Vig means cheerful or merry in Hungarian.[6]
Other musicians from the Vig family include Vig's brother, saxophone and clarinet player György Vig,[3] and his nephew, jazz musician Tommy Vig.[8] Another nephew, John Vig, is a physicist and was president of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers in 2009.
The fact that Vig was married to a Catholic woman, Kató Szőke, and the fact that he changed his name, did not save him from the Holocaust. On 19 December 1944 he was among a group of Jews who were bound, lined up along the banks of the Danube and machine-gunned into the river by Hungarian Nazis, members of the Arrow Cross Party. The Shoes on the Danube Promenade commemorates those who were murdered in this fashion.
Vig had his first major successes as a soloist, and later performed frequently in other cabarets including the Budapest Operetta Theatre and Budapest Orfeum. Although he made many recordings, he became most famous as a singer of popular music on the radio.[1] A 1935 article in Színházi Élet described Vig as a singer of popular sentimental songs.[9]
According to Gramofon (the Hungarian Jazz and Classical music magazine), Vig was considered part of the first generation of recorded Hungarian musicians.[10] When Deutsche Gramophone found themselves falling behind the competition, they signed Vig, who became their first dance-music star.[10]
As a comedian, he performed in the early 1920s at various cabarets including the Rakéta Kabaré, occasionally with female partner Annus Nagy.[4]
Date of Release | Title | Label | |
---|---|---|---|
1929 | Akácvirág akácvirág | Polydor | |
Délután mosogatás után | Polydor | ||
1929 | Egyszer voltam a bálban... | Polydor | |
1938 | Én nem tudom már, hogy minek becézzelek... | Radiola | |
1929 | Éppen csak a szivem fáj | Polydor | |
1929 | Éva keringö | Polydor | |
1929 | Feketeszemű kis párom | ||
1929 | Gyöngyvirág | Polydor | |
1938 | Hallod te ló... | Radiola | |
1929 | Hej, Kikelt ucca 3! | ||
Hogy is tudtam eddig élni nélküled | |||
Illúzió a szerelem | |||
1929 | Jönnél te még... | Polydor | |
1929 | Kadarka nóta | Polydor | |
1929 | Konstantinápoly | Polydor | |
1929 | Lesz-e párom már a nyáron? | Polydor | |
1929 | Madridban | Polydor | |
1929 | Majd ha újra sírni tudsz... | Ervé | |
1927 | Malvin, ne húzza el a derekát[11] | ||
1929 | Messze van a Mester ucca | Polydor | |
1931 | Minden ugy lesz, ahogy te kivánod | Polydor | |
Minden veréb tudja[12] | Polydor | ||
Mondd, nem kívánsz te túl sokat | |||
1929 | Mostanában mind a bárban... | Ervé | |
1929 | Nekem nem kell szerelem | Polydor | |
Őszi Fekete fellegek | |||
1929 | Pici piros, kicsi csókos szája | ||
1931 | Sose jön egy szebb | Polydor | |
1929 | Szép volt... | Polydor | |
1929 | Szeresd a régi muzsikát | Polydor | |
1929 | Szervusz | Polydor | |
Szibill levele | |||
1938 | Szombat vasárnap | Radiola | |
1930 | Szomorú nyárfalevél | Polydor | |
1929 | Tarka Lepkém | Polydor | |
Tubicám | Polydor | ||
Valamit a kis fülébe[13] | Polydor | ||
1929 | Valami van magában... | Polydor | |
1930 | A vén Tabánban | Polydor | |
1929 | Vig Miklósnak jó kedve van | Polydor | |
1929 | A Volga rabja (Ey uchnjem)... | Polydor |