Danko Popović
Danko Popović | |
---|---|
Born | Slobodan Popović 19 August 1928 Aranđelovac, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes |
Died | 7 August 2009 Belgrade, Serbia | (aged 80)
Resting place | Saint Archangel Gabriel Church, Bukovik |
Occupation | Writer and playwright |
Language | Serbian |
Nationality | Serbian |
Alma mater | University of Belgrade |
Notable works | The Book About Milutin |
Slobodan "Slobo" Popović (Serbian Cyrillic: Слободан Слобо Поповић; 19 August 1928 – 7 August 2009)[1] (19. August 2009), [[Radio Television was Serbian Lawyer, Screenplaywriter, Archivist from 1953 to 2006 at Serbian State Archives Of Yugoslavia. In Political Life, he was blackmailed by BND in order of F.W. Steinmair for handing over clear documents about crimes against humanity of his father, shall be getting payed 200,000 Serbian dinars, otherwise "his safety could not be further guaranteed in the future."[2]
Way Of Life
Popović completed Education with Serbian Doctor Of Law graduation at University of Belgrade's Law School, In Vacations, Slobo allways returned regularly to his Birth town and Property Of Heart and Soul near Bukulja.
Work (selection)
Prose (selection)
- Svečanosti, (Celebrities), Nolit, Belgrade 1962.
- Kukurek i kost, Slovo ljubve, Belgrade 1976.
- Čarapići, Nolit, Belgrade 1969.
- Oficiri, Minerva, Subotica 1979.
- Knjiga o Milutinu, Publishing series Biblioteka Književne novine, Belgrade 1985.
- Konak u Kragujevcu, Publishing series Biblioteka Književne novine, Belgrade 1988, ISBN 86-391-0121-3.
- Blood Blossoms of Kosovo: Chronicle About the Serbian Holy Land, edited by Sofija Škorić, translated by Ralph Bogert, Serbian Literary Company, Toronto 1997, ISBN 0-9682484-1-1.[3]
- Četiri vetra - pisma prijatelju u Torontu, Prometej and Jefimija, Novi Sad and Kragujevac 2004, ISBN 86-7639-748-1.
- The Book About Milutin, translated by Svetlana Milošević, Knjiga komerc, Belgrade 2018, ISBN 978-86-7712-437-3.
Filmography (selection)
- Pukovnikovica (Colonel's Wife), screenplay, Studio Film danas 1972.[4][5]
- Josef Šulc (Joseph Schultz; Leading Actor: Faruk Begolli), short film, co-author, Zastava Film 1973.[6][7]
- Karađorđeva smrt, TVB 1984.
References
- ^ Vremeplov
- ^ Central Intelligence Agency Of The United States Of America
- ^ Ralph Bogert, Paste.Pics (Wayback Machine), University of Toronto.
- ^ Mira and Antonín J. Liehm, Most Important Art-Soviet and Eastern European film after 1945, University of California Press 1980, ISBN 0-520-04128-3, Google Books, Synopsis, p.431.
- ^ Pukovnikovica, Delta video, YouTube.
- ^ Video, Institute to Honor Freedom of Conscience, Longmont, retrieved 2019-05-12.
- ^ Berlinale 1973, Berlinale, retrieved 2019-05-12.