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Hungarian screenwriter
Károly Nóti
Born (1892-02-01 ) 1 February 1892Died 28 May 1954(1954-05-28) (aged 62) Resting place Kozma Street Jewish Cemetery, Budapest, Hungary Occupation
Screenwriter Years active 1930-1954 Spouse(s) Irena Rosenberger (1919-1920) Margit Schiller (1925-?)
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Károly Nóti (1 February 1892 – 28 May 1954) was a
Hungarian
screenwriter . For his work in Germany and Britain he was credited as Karl Noti . During the 1930s Nóti was one of the leading and most prolific screenwriters in the Hungarian industry.
Selected filmography
Twice Married (German-language, 1930)
Three Days Confined to Barracks (German-language, 1930)
My Cousin from Warsaw (French-language, 1931)
Duty is Duty (German-language, 1931)
Terror of the Garrison (German-language, 1931)
Peace of Mind (German-language, 1931)
Annemarie, the Bride of the Company (German-language, 1931)
Hyppolit, the Butler (Hungarian-language, 1931)
Er und sein Diener (German-language, 1931)
No Money Needed (German-language, 1932)
Scandal on Park Street (German-language, 1932)
Stolen Wednesday (Hungarian-language, 1933)
Romance in Budapest (Hungarian-language, 1933)
Happy (English-language, 1933)
A Precocious Girl (German-language, 1934)
The New Relative (Hungarian-language, 1934)
Viereinhalb Musketiere (German-language, 1935)
Thanks for Knocking Me Down (German-language, 1935)
No Monkey Business (English-language, 1935)
Catherine the Last (German-language, 1936)
Danube Rendezvous (Hungarian-language, 1936)
Compliments of Mister Flow (French-language, 1936)
I May See Her Once a Week (Hungarian-language, 1937)
Pay Up, Madam! (Hungarian-language, 1937)
My Daughter Is Different (Hungarian-language, 1937)
Where Do We Sleep on Sunday? (Hungarian-language, 1937)
Viki (Hungarian-language, 1937)
Magda Expelled (Hungarian-language, 1938)
Billeting (Hungarian-language, 1938)
The Tamer (French-language, 1938)
The Girl Downstairs (English-language, 1938)
Hello, Peter! (Hungarian-language, 1939)
Queen Elizabeth (Hungarian-language, 1940)
András (Hungarian-language, 1941)
Entry Forbidden (Hungarian-language, 1941)
The Talking Robe (Hungarian-language, 1942)
The White Train (Hungarian-language, 1943)
It Happened in Budapest (Hungarian-language, 1944)
African Bride (Hungarian-language, 1944)
Without Lies (Hungarian-language, 1946)
Czardas of Hearts (German-language, 1951)
Try and Win (Hungarian-language, 1952)
Not Afraid of Big Animals (German-language, 1953)
Keep Your Chin Up (Hungarian-language, 1954)
Three Days Confined to Barracks (German-language, 1955)
Bibliography
Cunningham, John. Hungarian Cinema: From Coffee House to Multiplex . Wallflower Press, 2004.
References
External links
International National People