Stephan Balint Explained

Stephan Balint
Birth Date:11 July 1943
Birth Place:Budapest, Hungary
Death Place:Budapest, Hungary
Nationality:Hungarian
Other Names:István Bálint; Pisti
Occupation:Actor, writer and theatre director
Years Active:Circa 1972–1991
Known For:Squat Theatre co-founder, actor, playwright, director. Film actor and screenwriter
Notable Works:Dreamland Burns, L-Train to Eldorado
Full Moon Killer

Stephan Balint (born Bálint István 11 July 1943 in Budapest, died 11 October 2007 in Budapest)[1] [2] was a writer, actor, theatre director, and playwright. Balint was co-founder of New York's Squat Theatre where he wrote, acted, and directed L-Train to Eldorado and Full Moon Killer.

Life

Istvan Balint was the son of poet and artist Endre Balint.[2] Balint was the founding member of a theater group called the Squat Theater, who performed in the living room of a house after being denied a public broadcast license by the communist regime of Hungary.[2] The group grew into a collective that became well-known to younger artists throughout Budapest for trying to invent a new type of avant-garde production. In 1976, Balint, along with a number of other artists in the collective, toured theater festivals throughout Europe with the troupe, before relocating to New York City in mid-1977, where he changed his name to Stephan. The troupe finally settled in a theater in Chelsea, Manhattan where they became famous throughout the late 1970s and 1980s.[2]

Among the plays Balint co-wrote, co-directed, and performed in were Pig! Child! Fire!, Andy Warhol's Last Love, and Mr. Dead & Mrs. Free.[3]

He also acted in several films, including Hunter, directed by Robert Frank, written by himself; in 1989; and The Golden Boat in 1990.[2]

Balint returned to Budapest in the early 1990s, continuing his work until the start of his long illness in 2002, dying in 2007 of pneumonia.[1] He was survived by his daughter Eszter Balint, his son Gaspar Balint who lives in Budapest, and his grandson August Balint DuClos, who lives in New York.[2]

Plays

Films

Publication

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Patricia . Cohen . Stephan Balint, 64, a Founder of the Squat Theater, Dies . The New York Times . December 2, 2007.
  2. News: Stephan Balint, Influential Hungarian Playwright, Actor, Director and Poet, Is Dead at 64. The New York Theatre Wire . July 29, 2018.
  3. Web site: Mr. Dead & Mrs. Free . Electronic Arts Intermix . Electronic Arts Intermix . 13 August 2018.
  4. Stirritt . David . Three sisters Play by Anton Chekhov. Produced and performed by Squat Theater . The Christian Science Monitor . December 3, 1980 . July 16, 2018.
  5. Web site: Rich . Frank . SQUAT'S 'THREE SISTERS' . Squat Theatre . The New York Times . July 17, 2018.
  6. Buchmuller, Koós. Squat Theatre. Artist Space, 1996, p.40-41.
  7. News: Stage: Squat Abuses West 23rd Street . November 17, 1977 . The New York Times. July 17, 2018.
  8. Buchmuller, Koós. Squat Theatre. Artist Space, 1996, p.51-99.
  9. News: Squat Theatre and Crisis . 2010 . Conditions of Poetic Production and Reception. July 25, 2018.
  10. News: Theodore. Shank. Squat Theatre . Performing Arts Journal . 3 . 2. 1978. 61–69. 3245202.
  11. Buchmuller, Koós. Squat Theatre. Artist Space, 1996, p.105-153.
  12. News: CRAIG . BROMBERG. Squat Theatre--hungarians Take A Stance On America. May 4, 1986 . Los Angeles Times. August 9, 2018.
  13. News: Mel. Gussow. STAGE: SQUAT THEATER'S 'DREAMLAND BURNS' . New York Times . 1956.
  14. News: Richard. Christiansen. Squat Theatre Bends Limits Of Stagecraft . May 16, 1986 . Chicago Tribune.
  15. Web site: Pig, Child, Fire!. 2018-07-27.
  16. Web site: Andy Warhol's Last Love . 2018-07-27.
  17. Web site: Mr. Dead & Mrs. Free . 2018-07-27.
  18. Web site: Tscherwonez . August 10, 2018.
  19. Web site: Tscherwonez. August 10, 2018.
  20. Web site: Berlinale: 1989 Programme . 11 March 2011 . berlinale.de.
  21. Web site: Schmuck . 2018-08-06.
  22. István Bálint, "Manifesto", Written in the name of "studio-kassak", Budapest, April, 1972_Buchmuller, Koós. Squat Theatre. Artist Space, 1996, p.12.
  23. News: Balint . Buchmuller . Squat Theatre . October 8, 1986. New Observations . July 19, 2018.