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- Józef Korzeniowski was born on 19 March 1797 in Brody, Galicia, Habsburg Monarchy [now Ukraine]. Józef was a writer, known for Karpaccy górale (1915) and Mistrz tanca (1969). Józef died on 17 September 1863 in Dresden, Saxony, Germany.
- Writer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Salvatore Cammarano was born on 19 March 1801 in Naples, Kingdom of Naples [now Campania, Italy]. He was a writer, known for Match Point (2005), The Money Pit (1986) and Lucia di Lammermoor (1946). He died on 17 July 1852 in Naples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies [now Campania, Italy].- David Livingstone was born on 19 March 1813 in Blantyre, South Lanarkshire, Scotland, UK. David was a writer, known for Queen Victoria's Empire (2001) and Secrets of the Dead (2000). David was married to Mary Moffat. David died on 1 May 1873 in Ilala, Barotseland [now Zambia].
- Paolo Giacometti was born on 19 March 1816 in Novi Ligure, Kingdom of Sardinia [now Piedmont, Italy]. He was a writer, known for The Fugitive (1913), La colpa vendica la colpa (1919) and La morte civile (1919). He died on 31 August 1882 in Gazzuolo, Lombardy, Italy.
- Richard Burton was born on 19 March 1821 in Torquay, Devon, England, UK. Richard was a writer, known for Anansi Storytime (2016) and Tales from the Thousand and One Nights (1981). Richard was married to Isabel Arundel. Richard died on 20 October 1890 in Trieste, Austria-Hungary [now Italy].
- Minna Canth was born on 19 March 1844 in Tampere, Finland. She was a writer, known for Anna-Liisa (1911), Sylvi (1913) and Roinilan talossa (1935). She was married to Johan Canth. She died on 12 May 1897 in Kuopio, Finland.
- Actor
Wyatt Earp was a lawman, gambler, businessman, saloon owner and gunfighter of great repute in the American West. He had been a police officer in Wichita, KS, and later in Dodge City, KS, during the mid-1870s, after which he became a shotgun rider with Wells Fargo. In Tombstone, AZ, in the wake of a stagecoach robbery, Earp (who had been running for sheriff) became involved in the notorious gunfight at the OK Corral of October 26, 1881, which resulted in the death of suspects Tom McLaury, Frank McLaury and Billy Clanton and the wounding of Earp's brothers Morgan and Virgil and his friend "Doc" Holliday. The gunfight only caused more trouble, setting into motion a series of events that included the assassination of town marshal Morgan Earp and murder charges being filed against Wyatt and others for the shooting deaths of two suspects in that crime. Wyatt left for Colorado and points west, eventually retiring to San Francisco and later Los Angeles, CA, where he occasionally worked as a consultant on various early silent-era westerns (in the days before accurate credits were maintained, so it's not known exactly what films he worked on). He was close friends with another western icon, William Barclay 'Bat' Masterson, and later with cowboy actors William S. Hart and Tom Mix and, according to some accounts, he met and befriended a young John Wayne on the set of a silent western on which Wayne was an unbilled extra.
Wyatt Earp died in Los Angeles on January 13, 1929, at age 80. Hart and Mix were pallbearers at his funeral.- James Otis Kaler was born on 19 March 1848 in Winterport, Maine, USA. James Otis was a writer, known for Circus Days (1923), Toby Tyler or Ten Weeks with a Circus (1960) and The Magical World of Disney (1954). James Otis was married to Amy L. Scamman. James Otis died on 11 December 1912 in Portland, Maine, USA.
- Alfred von Tirpitz was born on 19 March 1849 in Küstrin, Prussia [now Kostrzyn nad Odra, Lubuskie, Poland]. He died on 6 March 1930 in Ebenhausen, Bavaria, Germany.
- Frans Lundberg was born on 19 March 1851 in Bosarp, Skåne, Sweden. He was a producer, known for Kärleken rår (1913), Dockan eller Glödande kärlek (1912) and Ormen (1912). He died in 1922 in Sweden.
- Paul von Schoenthan was born on 19 March 1853 in Vienna, Austria. He was a writer, known for Der Raub der Sabinerinnen (1919), The Rape of the Sabines (1936) and Theft of the Sabines (1954). He died on 4 August 1905 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary.
- Nick Shaid was born on 19 March 1860 in Syria. He was an actor, known for The Last Outpost (1935) and Private Worlds (1935). He died on 7 January 1950 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Luigi Bertelli was an Italian writer, journalist and poet, author of the adventures of a popular character of the early twentieth century: Gian Burrasca. He is best known under the pseudonym of Vamba, the name of Cedric the Saxon's fool in Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe. He founded the Sunday newspaper in 1906. In the children's magazine appeared the signatures of the most famous writers of the time (Giovanni Pascoli, Gabriele d'Annunzio, Grazia Deledda, Edmondo De Amicis) and of the most refined illustrators (Umberto Brunelleschi and Filiberto Scarpelli). On those pages he published in 55 episodes, between 7 February 1907 and 17 May 1908, Gian Burrasca's newspaper.
- Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp was born on 19 March 1861 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. Josephine Sarah was a writer, known for I Married Wyatt Earp (1983). Josephine Sarah died on 19 December 1944 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Józefa Modzelewska was born on 19 March 1865. She was an actress, known for Zew morza (1927). She died in 1939 in Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland.
- Emilio De Bono was born in Cassano d'Adda, a son of Giovanni de Bono and descendant of the Counts of Barlassina, and Elisa Bazzi. He entered the Royal Italian Army in 1884 as a second lieutenant and had worked his way up to General Staff by the start of the Italo-Turkish War in 1911. De Bono then fought in the First World War in which he distinguished himself against Austria-Hungary in Gorizia in 1916 and Monte Grappa in October 1918. In 1920, he was discharged with the rank of Major General. In the early 1920s, De Bono helped organize the National Fascist Party. In 1922, as one of the four Quadrumvirs, he organized and staged the March on Rome. The event signaled the start of the fascist regime in Italy. After the march, De Bono served as Chief of Police and Commander of the Fascist Militia. In 1925, De Bono was tried for his role in the 1924 death of the leftist politician Giacomo Matteotti. De Bono refused to implicate his superiors and was unexpectedly acquitted in 1925. Later that year, De Bono was appointed governor of Tripolitania, in Libya. In 1929, De Bono was appointed Minister of Colonial Affairs. In 1935, De Bono became Supreme Commander of the Italian operation against Ethiopia during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War. De Bono was appointed because Mussolini wanted the victory in Ethiopia to be not just an Italian victory but also a fascist, hence the appointment of a well-known fascist general. On 3 October, forces under De Bono's command crossed into Ethiopia from Eritrea. On 6 October his forces took Adowa. Soon afterward, De Bono entered Axum. On 8 November, the I Corps and the Eritrean Corps captured Mek'ele. In December, De Bono was relieved of his command. His place was taken by Marshal Pietro Badoglio, and De Bono was appointed Inspector of Overseas Troops. In 1940, De Bono commanded a southern defense corps headquartered in Sicily and was opposed to the Italian entry into the Second World War. However, he kept a low profile and in 1942 was appointed Minister of State. On 24 and 25 July 1943, De Bono was one of the members of the Fascist Grand Council who voted to oust Benito Mussolini. That led to the dictator's downfall, arrest and imprisonment. Later in 1943, Mussolini was rescued during the Gran Sasso raid and returned to power by Nazi Germany. He was set up in Northern Italy by the Germans as the leader of a new Italian Social Republic. Upon his return to power, Mussolini had De Bono and others who voted against him arrested. He then had Alessandro Pavolini try them for treason at Verona in what became known as the "Verona trial". De Bono was convicted in a show trial. On 11 January 1944, the 77-year-old De Bono was executed by firing squad at Verona. He was shot along with Galeazzo Ciano, Luciano Gottardi, Giovanni Marinelli and Carlo Pareschi.
- Jean Sapene was born on 19 March 1867 in Bagnères-de-Luchon, Haute-Garonne, France. Jean was a producer, known for Les misérables (1925), Gossette (1923) and L'Argent (1928). Jean was married to Claudia Victrix and Jane Pierly. Jean died on 27 August 1940 in Vichy, Allier, France.
- Bruno Wünschmann was born on 19 March 1868 in Niederrabenstein, Sachsen, Germany. He was an actor, known for Frühlingsmanöver (1917), Les sept péchés capitaux - La colère (1917) and Wir und die Strasse (1917). He died on 5 July 1927 in Würzburg, Bavaria, Germany.
- Henri de Gorsse was born on 19 March 1868 in Toulouse, Haute Garonne, France. He was a writer, known for The Studio Girl (1918), Le mystère Imberger (1935) and Madame et son filleul (1919). He died on 7 March 1936 in Paris, France.
- Dora De Winton born Dora Wilson in London in 1874. Highly well-known drama and comedy theatre performer from the 1880s. Beautiful brunette star and supporting actress in many melodrama and crime films, first working with the British & Colonial Film Company in 1912, most often with the Barker Film Company from 1913, she is perhaps best remember for playing the role of Miss Western in Edwin J. Collins 'Tom Jones' starring Langhorn Burton at the Ideal Film Co in 1917, her last screen appearance as Lady Barmouth in 'The Presumption of Stanley Hay, MP' at the Stoll Film Company in 1925. Sister of actress Alice De Winton
- Wilkie Bard was born on 19 March 1870 in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, Lancashire, England, UK. He was an actor, known for The Nightwatchman (1928) and The Cleaner (1928). He was married to Nellie Stratton (performer). He died on 5 May 1944 in Buckinghamshire, England, UK.
- Charles Ross Taggart was born in Washington, D.C. His mother, Emily Divoll Taggart, was a missionary working in the Freedman's Bureau in Washington. His father, John Nelson Taggart, was from Pennsylvania, a Union soldier during the Civil War, and a postal clerk. He died 5 months before Taggart was born. At the age of 2, he and his mother relocated to Topsham, Vermont, where she had grown up and her parents still lived. Charles Ross Taggart was educated at a local district school, going on to the Mt. Hermon School for Boys in Northfield, Massachusetts, and later the Emerson School of Oratory and the New England Conservatory of Music, both in Boston, MA.
From the time he was eight years old, he took music lessons, first on his mother's melodian, then on piano, with formal piano lessons in Montpelier, VT.
In Topsham, Taggart taught the district school, the local singing school, as well as doing some clock tinkering, store clerking, and worked in the railroad express office in Bradford. He also traveled all over his locale with horse and buggy as a music teacher.
In 1895, he had been inspired by a traveling performer to start performing himself, which he did for the first time on October 8th, 1895, at the Topsham Town Hall. Taggart would, for the next 43 years, travel all over the United States and parts of Canada as a one-man musical humorist and entertainer, playing the fiddle, piano, doing monologues, violin mimicry, ventriloquism, and various stunts.
He would be in over 400 Chautauqua and Lyceum circuits, including the famous Redpath Chautauqua Bureau of Chicago, IL, where he was associated for over 25 years. In one of his publicity brochures from the 1920's, it was claimed that Taggart had given over 4,000 presentations, covering 44 of the 48 states in the Union at that time. One of Taggart's best known and best loved characters was "The Old Country Fiddler."
As his early traveling was done primarily by train, Taggart moved from Topsham to Newbury in 1907, purchasing a home he named Elmbank, which just overlooked the local railroad depot.
His credits include over 40 records for the Victor, Edison, Brunswick and Columbia companies. In 1923, Taggart appeared in a Lee DeForest Phono-Film, one of the earliest "talkies," entitled, "The Old Country Fiddler at the Singing School," one of Taggart's Old Country Fiddler routines. This was 4 years before Al Jolson appeared in "The Jazz Singer," which is often incorrectly called the first talking movie.
Though he was primarily a one-man act, for a short while in the mid 1920's, Taggart was teamed up with 2 other fiddlers, and became "The Old Country Fiddler and his Fiddlers' Three." He also did one Chautauqua circuit in western New York state with his youngest daughter, Elizabeth, after her graduation from Grinnell College in Iowa, c. 1928.
In 1937, during a performance, Taggart suffered a stroke, which, at the time, the audience simply assumed was part of the act. Unfortunately, the affliction was real. Taggart, in his resourceful Yankee way, simply reworked his program and continued for a short while afterward, playing one-handed piano pieces and strapping his fiddle bow to his right hand with a loose rubber band .
In 1938, Taggart would officially retire, later selling his beloved home, Elmbank, and he and his wife, Edna, relocated to North Carolina to live with their eldest daughter and her family. He still continued to do some performing once in a while, mostly for free, or for an occasional meal.
The family moved around the country, as the Taggart's son-in-law was a fisheries biologist who stocked trout ponds all over the U.S. Mrs.Taggart died in College Station, TX in 1950.
Mr. Taggart wanted to relocate back to New England, and so in the spring of 1952, the family headed from College Station, TX towards Kents Hill (Town of Readfield), ME, where his youngest grandson and namesake, Charles Ross Chamberlain, was to be enrolled in the Kents Hill School. For a short time, the family stayed with friends in the Lebanon, NH area, and Taggart did some touring around up in his old haunts of Topsham and Newbury. It would be the last time Mr. Taggart would ever see Vermont.
Arriving in Kents Hill, ME by September of 1952, Taggart would experience the last 10 months of his life. His mind and body began to diminish. In early 1953, his left leg was amputated above the knee, but he managed to write about the experience to his former school at MT Hermon, an institution he kept in constant contact with for all of his life, occasionally giving them benefit performances. Charles Ross Taggart died on the 4th of July, 1953. A simple grass marker in the Readfield Corner Cemetery has been the only testament to him, with only his name and years of existence, with no mention of his contribution to our cultural past.
In 2011, a Vermont State Historic Roadside marker is to be erected in Newbury, VT, next to his former home, Elmbank, as well as a bronze plaque on the Topsham Town Hall, where he gave his first performance on October 8th, 1895. - Adora Andrews was born on 19 March 1872 in Denver, Colorado, USA. She was an actress, known for The Middleton Family at the New York World's Fair (1939). She died on 18 September 1956 in Rye, New York, USA.
- Pete Griffin was born on 19 March 1872 in Texas, USA. He died on 10 June 1975 in San Francisco, California, USA.
- Actor
- Director
- Casting Director
Extremely prolific actor/director of the silent screen, on Broadway from 1905. Hoyt joined the acting fraternity through the recommendations of an uncle, who worked as dramatic editor for a Cleveland tabloid. Signed by theatrical producer George C. Tyler (1868-1946), he began on stage (earning $10 per week), playing up to ten different parts. He made his Hollywood debut in 1916 with Universal. Short, balding and usually bespectacled, he managed to forge a 30-year career by playing a succession of 'little men', be they mild-mannered professors, henpecked husbands or easily intimidated minor officials. Looking perpetually befuddled was Hoyt's stock-in-trade. He was particularly effective as Professor Summerlee in The Lost World (1925) (directed by his younger brother Harry O. Hoyt), as the confused motel owner of It Happened One Night (1934) and as Mayor Tillinghast in The Great McGinty (1940). The better part of Hoyt's screen career, however, consisted of uncredited bits. For his last seven years in the business (1940-47), he was regularly employed as a member of Preston Sturges personal entourage of stock players at Paramount.- Producer
- Cinematographer
- Director
Born in London, England, in 1874, Cecil Hepworth was one of the founders of the British film industry, directing and producing many films from 1898 into the late 1920s. Developing an early interest in films from following his father on lecture tours about the magic-lantern, he patented several photographic inventions and wrote possibly the earliest handbook on the film medium. Directing, producing, and occasionally, acting in his films, Hepworth was instrumental in developing the British film industry through his use of cutting to produce a coherent film narrative. After a lull in film-making while attending more to his film studio business, he began making films again in 1914 and continued into the 1920s where he began falling behind the times in his techniques, thereby contributing to his bankruptcy in 1924, ending his career as a director of trailers and advertisements. He died in 1953.- Betty Nansen was born on March 19, 1873. Primarily a stage actress, Betty entered films when she was 36 years old. Her first was in 1909, but she was destined to make only six films total during her career with five of those coming in 1915. After ANNA KARENINA, Betty left films. She died four days before her 70th birthday on March 15, 1943.
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Max Reger was born on 19 March 1873 in Brand [now Brand im Fichtelgebirge], Bavaria, Germany. He is known for Fury (2014), Legend of the Galactic Heroes (1988) and Christmas in Vienna (1992). He was married to Elsa von Bercken. He died on 11 May 1916 in Leipzig, Germany.- Harry Edmondson was born on 19 March 1873 in Iowa, USA. He was an actor, known for The Secret of the Submarine (1916), The Man from Manhattan (1916) and The Twins' Double (1914). He died on 9 October 1924 in Oakland, California, USA.
- Edward Fielding was born on 19 March 1875 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for Rebecca (1940), The Pride of the Yankees (1942) and Sherlock Holmes (1916). He was married to Elizabeth Sherman Clark. He died on 10 January 1945 in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
A former schoolmaster at Culham College, Oxfordshire, Pearson abandoned his teaching career when he began to speculate on the educational propensities of the emerging medium of film. In 1913, he embarked on making instructive short films for London Pathé and subsequently founded his own production company. For Gaumont, he produced a series of popular thrillers, having created the character of 'Ultus the Avenger'. Ultus, one of the first-ever super heroes of the screen, was a master of disguise who fought against injustice and was always a step ahead of the police. Around the same time, Pearson also made the first filmed version of Arthur Conan Doyle's A Study in Scarlet (1914). Unable to locate any known actors with the necessary facial characteristics, Pearson cast an unknown accountant named James Bragington (who had never acted a day in his life) in the central role of Sherlock Holmes.
In 1918, Pearson combined forces with Thomas Welsh to form Welsh/Pearson Productions. He directed the cockney actress Betty Balfour in the popular Squibs (1921) series of comedies. He also made a number of idiosyncratic 'comedy-dramas' which examined the human condition. Of these, the patriotic Réveille (1924) was his own personal favorite. With the advent of talking pictures, Pearson continued to work as producer-director on 'quota quickies' until 1937, latterly based at Twickenham. During World War II, he was put in charge of Britain's Colonial Film Unit. A recipient of an OBE in 1951, Pearson was a former President of the Association of British Film Directors and Honorary Fellow of both the Royal Photographic Society and the British Film Academy.- Tadeusz Konczynski was born on 19 March 1875 in Krakau, Galicia, Austria-Hungary [now Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland]. Tadeusz was a writer, known for Karczma na rozdrozu (1923). Tadeusz died on 13 August 1944 in Miedzeszyn, Wawer, Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland.
- Director
- Additional Crew
Penrhyn Stanlaws was born on 19 March 1877 in Dundee, Scotland, UK. He was a director, known for At the End of the World (1921), Singed Wings (1922) and Over the Border (1922). He was married to Jean Pughsley. He died on 20 May 1957 in Los Angeles, California, USA.- Mikhail Rozen-Sanin was born on 19 March 1877 in the Russian Empire. He was an actor, known for The Adventures of the Three Reporters (1926). He died on 27 December 1956 in Moscow, RSFSR, USSR [now Russia].
- Ivar Nilsson was born on 19 March 1877 in Lösen, Blekinge län, Sweden. He was an actor, known for Högre ändamål (1921). He died on 7 August 1929 in Karlskrona, Blekinge län, Sweden.
- Clyde Westover was born on 19 March 1877 in Paola, Kansas, USA. He was a writer, known for The Man from Downing Street (1922), The Tong Man (1919) and According to Hoyle (1922). He was married to Blanche Beatrice Goggin and Sophie H. Servin. He died on 6 August 1951 in Hollywood, California, USA.
- Production Designer
- Art Director
- Director
Vladimir Yegorov is a renowned production designer who worked for over four decades for the Russian turned Soviet cinema. Born of a peasant family and trained at a school of commercial art, he started by painting murals and frescoes. He later became a designer at the famous Moscow Art Theater led by Stanislawsky. With him, he explored the new ideas which would revolutionize the theatre, the settings becoming an integral part of a production. In 1915, Yegorov turned to cinema, a new medium to which he applied the results of his own research work. That marked the beginning of a long and fruitful career, during which he designed about fifty movies, some having acquired the status of classic, in a variety of styles. They could be stories of the Revolution (We Are from Kronstadt (1936)), war films (Admiral Nakhimov (1947)), literary adaptations (Dubrovsky (1936)), etc. but they all have a common denominator, Yegorov's intimate knowledge of Russian people and their way of life. In 1944 Vladimir Yegorov was given the title of People's Artist. (Abridged from "Scenic Design in the Soviet Cinema", an article by Catherine de la Roche published in The Penguin Film Review # 3, London, August 1947)- John Jakob Raskob was born on 19 March 1879 in Lockport, New York, USA. He died on 15 October 1950 in Centreville, Maryland, USA.
- Ralph G. Kirk was born on 19 March 1881 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA. He was a writer, known for The Scrapper (1922) and Men of Steel (1926). He died on 14 November 1960 in San Diego, California, USA.
- Vladimir Dyck was born on 19 March 1882 in Odessa, Ukraine. He was a composer, known for Promesses (1939). He was married to Suzanne Bloch. He died in August 1943 in Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp, Oswiecim, Malopolskie, Poland.
- Art Department
- Art Director
Sergei Soudeikin was born on 19 March 1882 in Smolensk, Russian Empire [now Russia]. He was an art director, known for We Live Again (1934). He was married to Vera Stravinsky. He died on 12 August 1946 in Nyack, New York, USA.- Louis Hector was born on 19 March 1883 in Islington, London, England, UK. He was an actor, known for The Three Garridebs (1937), Tales of Tomorrow (1951) and Northwest Passage (1940). He died in October 1968 in New York City, New York, USA.
- Joseph W. Stilwell was a four-star general in n the US Army during World War II. He headed the US campaign against Japanese forces in both Burma and China, the Chinese Nationalist government having such confidence in him that they gave him command of its forces in that theater.
Born in Palatka, FL, in 1883, Stilwell attended the US Army's Military Academy at West Point, NY, graduating in 1904. He served in the Philippines, then with the American Expeditionary Force in Europe during WW I. After that he became an instructor at West Point. He studied and became fluent in the Chinese language, and was posted to the Chinese city of Tienjin from 1925-28 and was US military attache in Beijing from 1935-39.
With the advent of World War II, Gen. Kai-Shek Chiang, the head of the Chinese Nationalist government, placed Stilwell in command of the Chinese Fifth and Sixth Armies in Burma. The Japanese had more and better equipped and trained troops, however, and in 1942 Stilwell's forces were driven out of Burma into India after a brutal 140-mile retreat through the jungles. Stilwell was eventually given command of all US forces in the China-Burma-India theatre. In 1945 Stilwell accepted the surrender of 100,000 Japanese troops in the Ryukyu Islands, ending the war in the Pacific. - Producer
- Additional Crew
- Production Manager
William Sistrom was born on 19 March 1884 in Lincolnshire, England, UK. He was a producer and production manager, known for There Goes My Girl (1937), Escape to Danger (1943) and The Spider (1931). He died on 13 March 1972 in Phoenix, Arizona, USA.- David P. Howells was born on 19 March 1884 in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. He was a producer, known for The Son of Tarzan (1920). He died on 29 March 1939 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Wojciech Rolicz was born on 19 March 1884 in Warsaw, Poland, Russian Empire [now Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland]. He was an actor, known for Odrodzona Polska (1924). He died in 1944 in Poland.
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Tod Slaughter took to the stage in 1905 and made a name for himself as the star villain of numerous Victorian melodramas which he toured around England. Many of these were filmed cheaply in the 30s and 40s by quota-quickie tzar George King. His ham performances are perfectly suited to the material and the best of his films give the impression that if the Victorians could have made features they would have looked like this.- Jozka Vanerová was born on 19 March 1885 in Prague, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary [now Czech Republic]. She was an actress, known for Babicka (1922), Muzi v offsidu (1931) and Devcátko, neríkej ne! (1932). She died on 27 September 1979 in Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic].
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Gyula Kabos was born on 19 March 1887 in Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary]. He was an actor, known for Hyppolit a lakáj (1931), Halló Budapest! (1935) and A papucshös (1938). He was married to Mária Puhalag. He died on 6 October 1941 in New York City, New York, USA.- Art Department
J.B. Zokovich was born on 19 March 1887 in Spalato, Dalmatia, Austria-Hungary [now Split, Croatia]. J.B. died on 21 November 1953 in Los Angeles, California, USA.