Siniša Kovačević

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Siniša Kovačević
Синиша Ковачевић
Siniša Kovačević.png
Kovačević in 2019
Born
Синиша Ковачевић

(1954-05-30) 30 May 1954 (age 67)
Šuljam near Sremska Mitrovica, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia
NationalitySerbian
CitizenshipSerb
EducationFaculty of Dramatic Arts
Alma materUniversity of Arts in Belgrade
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter
Political partyPeople's Party
Spouse(s)Ljiljana Blagojević
ChildrenKalina Kovačević

Siniša Kovačević (Serbian Cyrillic: Синиша Ковачевић, pronounced [sǐniʃa koʋǎːtʃeʋitɕ]; born 30 May 1954) is a Serbian author, playwright, politician and professor of the Belgrade Academy of Arts.

Biography[]

Kovačević was born on 30 May 1954 in the northern Serbian village of Šuljam. He graduated dramaturgy at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade. He is a professor on Academy of Arts in the case dramaturgy. He writes for theater, film, and TV. His works have been translated into Russian, Macedonian, English, and German language. He is married to actress Ljiljana Blagojević, with whom he has a daughter, , also an actress. He lives and works in Belgrade.[1]

Works[]

Stage dramas[]

  • Đeneral Milan Nedić
  • Novo je doba
  • Sveti Sava
  • Poslednja ruka pred fajront
  • Srpska drama
  • Virus
  • Velika drama
  • Kraljević Marko
  • Janez
  • Ravi
  • Zečiji nasip
  • Čudesni

TV dramas[]

  • Portret Ilije Pevca
  • Mala šala
  • Svečana obaveza

Film scripts[]

  • Država Mrtvih
  • Bolje od bekstva
  • Najbolji
  • Najviše na svetu celom

Directed Premieres of his dramas[]

  • Virus
  • Kraljević Marko
  • Janez
  • Velika drama
  • Zečiji nasip

Plus the movie Sinovci in 2006, and the TV series Gorki Plodovi in 2008/09.

Awards[]

  • Triple winner for theatrical plays: Novo je doba, Đeneral Milan Nedić, Janez.
  • Triple "Branislav Nušić" Award winner for theatrical plays: Sveti Sava, Kraljević Marko,Ravi.
  • TV drama Novo je doba included in the top ten TV dramas, as the third.
  • TV drama Svečana obaveza classified in the five best TV dramas ever recorded.
  • TV drama Mala šala joke is included in četrvrtu book anthology of contemporary TV dramas.

References[]

External links[]

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