16 April 2021

Mari Törőcsik (1935-2021)

At the age of 85, Hungarian actress Mari Törőcsik (1935) passed away on 16 April 2021. Ever since her first film appearance, she was the leading star of Hungarian cinema. The sensitive and intelligent actress played a great diversity of roles both on stage and for the camera. During her long career, she appeared in more than 120 films and TV films.

Mari Töröcsik
East-German starcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 805. Retail price: 0,20 DM. Photo: Progress / Tibor Inkey.

A superbly refined screen presence


Mari Törőcsik (or Törőczik) was born Marian Törőcsik in Pely, Hungary, in 1935. From 1954 till 1957, she studied at the University of Theatre and Film Arts (SZFE) in Budapest. She graduated in 1957 after which she went to work for the National Theatre. Her first role was Solveig in 'Peer Gynt'. She would stay with the National Theatre for 25 years.

Mari still studied at the SZFE when her teacher and leading Hungarian director Zoltán Fábri cast her in his famous film, Körhinta/Merry-Go-Round (1955). This film brought Mari Törőcsik immediate international recognition at the Cannes Film Festival that year. The story concerns a young village couple (Mari and Bela Barsi) who date at a traditional country fair.

Hal Erickson at AllMovie: “As they dance the night away, the boy expresses his love for the girl, resulting in a startling reaction. The film is unabashedly sentimental, but the performances of the two leads transcend the storyline's goofier passages.”

Dina Iordanova writes at Senses of Cinema: “A breakthrough indictment of patriarchy, Körhinta was among the first films that explored the tensions between patriarchy and the socialist rush for collectivisation of agriculture” and she describes Töröcsik as “Seemingly plain by appearance, she has a superbly refined screen presence“.

Mari Töröczik
East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 1482, 1961. Retail price: 0,20 DM.

Mari Töröcsik
East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 2036, 1965. Retail price: 0,20 MDN.

Hungarian New Cinema


Mari Törőcsik's first screen role in Körhinta/Merry-Go-Round (1955) would have a determining effect on her whole career.

She starred in more films of the Hungarian New Cinema, like Édes Anna (Zoltan Fabri, 1959), Ket Vallomas/Two Wishes (Márton Keleti, 1957), and the romantic drama Vasvirag/Iron Flower (János Herskó, 198) which were also presented at the Cannes Film Festival.

Other successes were Szent Péter esernyöje/St. Peter’s Umbrella (Frigyes Bán, Vladislav Pavlovic, 1958) and Álmatlan évek/Sleepless Years (Félix Máriássy, 1959) with Éva Ruttkay.

In 1960 Mari won the Prize for Best Actress at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic for Kölyök (Mihály Szemes, Miklós Markos, 1959).

Mari Töröczik
East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 2427, 1965. Retail price: 0,20 MDN. Photo: Hungariafilm.

Mari Töröcsik
East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 2945, 1967. Retail price: 0,20 MDN. Photo: Progress.

Cannes film festival


In the 1960s, Mari Törőcsik was ‘discovered’ by a new generation of directors. Miklos Jancsó gave her a leading role in his political drama Csend és kiáltás/Silence and Cry (1967), and later in Szerelmem, Elektra/Electra, My Love (1974), a drama based on the Greek myth.

In 1968, she also worked with Márta Mészáros on Holdudvar/Binding Sentiments (1968), and with Jerzy Skolimowski on the melodrama Párbeszéd/Dialogue (Jerzy Skolimowski, János Herskó, 1963).

Töröcsik won twice an award at the Cannes Film Festival. In 1971 she shared the Special Mention to the film's lead actresses for Szerelem/Love (Károly Makk, 1971) with Lili Darvas who played the old woman in the film. This tender drama deals with two women in the 1950s, the wife and old mother of a soldier who are forced to spend a lot of time together. While they love each other, they also act out their personal neuroses on the other.

Her next cooperation with Károly Makk, Macskajatek/Catsplay (1972) was nominated for the 1974 Oscar for Best Foreign Film. Earlier, A pál-utcai fiúk/The Boys of Paul Street (Zoltán Fábri, 1969) also had been nominated for an Oscar.

In 1976 Mari won the Best Actress award in Cannes for Déryne, hol van?/Mrs. Déry, Where Are You? (Gyula Maá, 1976). That year, she tied the prize with Dominique Sanda for L'eredità Ferramonti/The Inheritance (1976). In 1983, she received a special award at Cannes for her whole career.

Mari Töröcsik, Elemér Tarsoiy
Hungarian postcard by Képzömövészeti Alap (SZ), Budapest, 11/583, 1965. Retail price: Ára 0,60 fillé. Mari Töröcsik and Elemér Tarsoiy in Két vallomás/Two Confessions (Márton Keleti, 1962).

Mari Töröczik, Miklos Gabor
East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 2.303, 1965. Retail price: 0,20 MDN. Photo: Progress. Mari Töröcsik and Miklos Gabor.

International productions


In the 1980s, another generation of filmmakers started to work with Mari Törőcsik. Every second year, she played a role in the film of the best graduating student at the Film School. She had memorable leads in Pál Sándor's Szerencsés Dániel/Daniel Takes a Train (1983) and in Attila Janisch's Hosszú alkony/Long Twilight (1997).

She was the choice for crucial secondary parts in Napló apámnak, anyámnak/Diary for My Father and Mother (Márta Mészáros, 1990), and Szamárköhögés/Whooping Cough (Péter Gárdos, 1986), a sensitive exploration of the failed Hungarian 1956 anti-communist revolution.

She also incidentally appeared in international productions, such as The Music Box (Costa-Gavras, 1990) with Jessica Lange, Mio caro dottor Grasler/The Bachelor (Roberto Faenza, 1991) starring Keith Carradine, Le Violon De Rothschild/Rothschild's Violin (Edgardo Cozarinsky, 1997) and Sunshine (István Szabó, 2000) starring Ralph Fiennes.

More recent films in which she played were Telitalálat/Winning Ticket (Sandor Kardos, 2003), Egy Het Pesten Es Budan/A Long Weekend in Pest and Buda (Károly Makk, 2003) for which she was reunited with Lili Darvas, and Eszter Hagyateka/Eszter's Inheritance (Jozsef Sipos, 2008) with Eszter Nagy-Kálózy.

In her home country, Mari Törőcsik was awarded the Kossuth Prize twice, in 1973 and 1999. Mari Töröcsik has been married twice. From 1956 till their divorce in 1964, she was married to actor Gyula Bodrogi. From 1973 till his death in 2013, she was married to film director Gyula Maár, with whom she had a child.

She was cast by Maár in a number of female roles focusing on mid-life crisis, like Végül/At the End of the Road (1973), Déryné hol van?/Mrs. Déry, Where Are You? (1975) and Teketória/Flare and Flicker (1976), as well as in Hoppá/Whoops (1993).

Mari Törőcsik’s Cannes experiences are recounted in Gyula Maár's documentary Töröcsik Mari Cannes-ban (1997). She continued to work and appeared in such films as the romantic drama Kaland/Adventure (József Sipos, 2011) and Aurora Borealis: Északi fény/Aurora Borealis - Northern Light (Márta Mészáros, 2017) with Ildiko Toth.

On 16 April 2021, Mari Törőcsik passed away in Szombathely, Hungary. She was 85. Her final screen appearance was in Psycho 60 (Vozo Zoltán Végh, 2020). This short film is a frame-for-frame remake of the famous shower scene of Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). With 60 actresses for its 60th anniversary, a different actress in each shot.


Scene from Körhinta/Merry-Go-Round (1955). Source: Nemzeti Filmintézet – Filmarchívum (YouTube). Sorry, no subtitles.


Hommage for Mari Törőcsik. Source: Nemzeti Filmintézet – Filmarchívum (YouTube). Sorry, no subtitles.

Sources: Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Dina Iordanova (Senses of Cinema), Graham Petrie (Kinoeye), Kornel Osvart (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

1 comment:

Bunched Undies said...

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