Budapest Pastry Shop
| Budapest Pastry Shop | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Béla Gaál |
| Written by | Béla Gaál István Zágon |
| Produced by | Adolf Fodor Berci Fodor |
| Starring | Zita Perczel Gyula Kabos Artúr Somlay |
| Cinematography | István Eiben |
| Edited by | György Feld |
| Music by | Imre Hajdú |
Production company | Phõbus Film |
| Distributed by | Danubia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
| Country | Hungary |
| Language | Hungarian |
Budapest Pastry Shop (Hungarian: Budai cukrászda) is a 1935 Hungarian romantic comedy film directed by Béla Gaál and starring Zita Perczel, Gyula Kabos and Artúr Somlay.[1][2] It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze.
Cast
- Zita Perczel as Ilonka
- Anni Dobos as Judit
- Artúr Somlay as Sziráky János
- Gyula Kabos as Schulmayer, caretaker
- Gyula Gózon as Kassay, pastry shop owner
- László Perényi as Dr. Demeczky László
- Zita Gordon as Daisy
- Lajos Gárdonyi as chess player
- Zoltán Makláry as chess player
- József Kürthy as fater of Demeczky
- Sándor Pethes as Szobotka, teacher
- László Földényi as junger brother of Sziráky
- Karola Zala as mother of Demeczky
- Gusztáv Pártos as butler
- Gyula Justh as exhibition organizer
- Kálmán Zátony as speaker
- János Doktor as judge
- József Mátray as headborough of Rácmedgyes
- Ferenc Pázmán as Szemerédy, under-Secretary
- Géza Berczy as guest
- Tibor Rubinyi as background actor
- Margit Aknay as maid of Daisy
References
Bibliography
- Juhász, István. Kincses magyar filmtár 1931–1944: az eredeti forgatókönyvből 1931 és 1944 között létrejött hazai mozgóképekről. Kráter, 2007.
- Kelecsényi, László. Vászonszerelem: a magyar hangosfilm krónikája 1931-től napjainkig. Noran, 2007.
- Ostrowska, Dorota, Pitassio, Francesco & Varga, Zsuzsanna. Popular Cinemas in East Central Europe: Film Cultures and Histories. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017.
- Rîpeanu, Bujor. (ed.) International Directory of Cinematographers, Set- and Costume Designers in Film: Hungary (from the beginnings to 1988). Saur, 1981.
External links