Türkan Şoray
Türkan Şoray | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Turkish |
Occupation(s) | Film actress and director |
Years active | 1960–present |
Spouse | |
Children | 1 |
Relatives | Nazan Şoray (sister) |
Awards | Golden Orange for Best Actress (1964, 1968, 1987, 1994) Golden Boll for Best Actress (1972) Golden Orange for Life Achievement (1996) |
Signature | |
Türkan Şoray (Adyghe: Щорае Туркан; born 28 June 1945) is a Turkish actress, writer and film director.[1][2] She is known as "Sultan" of the Cinema of Turkey.[3] She started her career in 1960, and won her first award as the most successful actress at the 1st Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival for the movie Acı Hayat.[3] Having appeared in more than 222 films, Şoray has starred in the most feature films for a female actress worldwide.[4][5] On 12 March 2010, Şoray was chosen as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador in Turkey, about which she said: "I think there is nothing that cannot be done with love. If we combine power with love, we can overcome many problems".[6]
Together with Hülya Koçyiğit, Filiz Akın and Fatma Girik, she is an icon for a golden age in Turkish cinematography[7] and is regarded as one of the four most important actresses in Turkish cinema. Out of these actresses, Şoray is the only one who also pursued a career in film directing, and directed the movies Dönüş (1972),[8] Azap (1973), Bodrum Hâkimi (1976), Yılanı Öldürseler (1981), and Uzaklarda Arama (2015).
With Kadir İnanır, she played in Kara Gözlüm, Unutulan Kadın, Dönüş, Gazi Kadın: Nene Hatun, Devlerin Aşkı, Bodrum Hakimi, Deprem, Dila Hanım, Cevriyem, Selvi Boylum Al Yazmalım, Aşk ve Nefret, Gönderilmemiş Mektuplar.[9]
Early life
[edit]Şoray was born in Eyüp, Istanbul, as the first child of a family of government officials. Her father was of Circassian descent, while her maternal grandfather was a Turkish immigrant from Thessaloniki.[1][2]
Her sister is singer and actress Nazan Şoray.[10]
While she was studying at Fatih Girls High School[11] as a daughter of one of the landowners in Karagümrük, she visits a set with actor Emel Yıldız who had starred in Panter Emel, and there with the encouragement of Türker İnanoğlu she decides to pursue a career in cinema. Türkân Şoray recounts her memory of starting her cinema career:
"A movie set came to our neighborhood before I entered the cinema industry. They were gonna shoot a set of the movie in our neighborhood. When I saw the actress starring in the movie, I said, 'What a beautiful woman.' That woman was Muhterem Nur. I was looking so confused and a man came up to me and asked 'You want to play in the movie?' I was scared and I just ran home. I learned later that this man was Memduh Ün. At that time I had escaped from the film set, but then the film sets became part of my life.”[12]
Career
[edit]While studying at Fatih Kız Lisesi middle school, the homeowner’s daughter of their house in Karagümrük later known as “Panter Emel” and Türkân Şoray went to the same film set. With incentive from Türker İnanoğlu, she made her first steps into Yeşilçam. Instead of Emel Yıldız marking the beginning of Türkan Şoray’s career the 1960s “Köyde Bir Kız Sevdim” co-starred with Baki Tamer. Türkân Şoray recounts the memories of her introduction to cinema as such:
”Before entering cinema a film set arrived to our neighborhood. They were going to film a set of the movie in our neighborhood. When I saw the leading role actress I thought to myself ‘what a beautiful woman’. That woman was Muhterem Nur. As I was looking dumbfounded a man approached me and asked ‘Do you want to act in the movies too?’. I was scared and ran home immediately. I learned later on that, that man was Memduh Ün. Back then I ran from a movie set but later on movie sets became my life” recounts Türkân Şoray.
Şoray earned her first Golden Orange award in 1964 for her role as Nermin opposite Ekrem Bora in the movie Acı Hayat which was directed by Metin Erksan.[13] In 1968, Şoray received her second Golden Orange award for her work in the movie Vesikalı Yarim, written by Safa Önal and based on Sait Faik Abasıyanık's "Menekşeli Vadi".[14] At the Istanbul Film Festival, where the renewed copy of the film was republished many years later, Şoray said:
"It is a very miraculous thing for me to have worked with Lütfi Akad, a director whose placed won't be filled easily in Turkish cinema. 'Turkan, you play with your eyes,' he used to say. Lütfi Akad taught me to play with my eyes."[14]
— Türkan Şoray, 2013 (Istanbul Film Festival)
Later career
[edit]She went on working with respectable directors in later years. One of them was Atıf Yılmaz, with whom she would work in both dramas and comedies. In the 1970s she also acted in films with a more realistic theme. She also directed four films in those years. Her most applauded films in the 1970s included Selvi Boylum Al Yazmalım, Hazal, Sultan, Dönüş and Baraj. In those films she was mostly accompanied by the famous Turkish actor Kadir İnanır.
Awards
[edit]She won her first of many awards when she received the best actress prize at the 'Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival' for the film Acı Hayat (Bitter Life).
At the end of the 1960s, she was named one of the four greatest actresses of the Turkish cinema. She was highly applauded for her choices in film and her ability to act in a wide variety of roles. She starred in Vesikalı Yarim (My Licensed Love) for which she was awarded the Best Actress Award for the second time in the Antalya Film Festival.[15]
In the 1980s she began portraying women with problems of female identity; Mine, Rumuz Goncagül (Nickname: Goncagül), On Kadın (Ten Women) etc. She won her third Best Actress Award from the Antalya Film Festival in 1987 with the film Hayallerim, Aşkım ve Sen(My Dreams, My Love and You), in which she portrays three different women, each of whom is a facet of Türkân Şoray herself.
Some of her awards are:
- Antalya Film Festival Best Actress Award
- 1964-Acı Hayat
- 1968-Vesikalı Yarim
- 1987-Hayallerim, Aşkım ve Sen
- 1994-Bir Aşk Uğruna
- Moscow Film Festival Grand Jury Prize
- 1973-Dönüş (her directorial debut)
- Tashkent Film Festival Best Actress Award
- 1978-Selvi Boylum Al Yazmalım
- Bastia Film Festival Best Actress Award
- 1992-Soğuktu ve Yağmur Çiseliyordu
- 1996 Istanbul Film Festival, Honorary Cinema Award[16]
- 1999 Rome Film Festival, Honorary Award
She is also a member of Eurasian Academy.[17][18][19]
Filmography
[edit]As an actress
[edit]As a director
[edit]- Dönüş – 1972
- Azap – 1973
- Bodrum Hakimi – 1976
- Yılanı Öldürseler – 1981 (with Şerif Gören)
- Uzaklarda Arama – 2015
Music albums
[edit]- Türkan Şoray Söylüyor (2015)
Books
[edit]- "Sinemam ve Ben" (autobiography), Türkan Şoray, NTV Yayınları, 2012, İstanbul.
Books about her
[edit]- "Türkân Şoray, Bir Yıldız Böyle Doğdu" (documentary novel), Agah Özgüç, Göl publications, 1974, Istanbul.
- "Sümbül Sokağın Tutsak Kadını" (biography), Atilla Dorsay, Remzi Bookstore, 1997, Istanbul. ISBN 975-14-0612-9
- "Türkân Şoray" (biography), Agah Özgüç, Açıkşehir publications, 2001, Istanbul. ISBN 975-93383-00
- "Türkân Şoray ile Yüz Yüze", Feridun Andaç, Drahma publications, 2010, Istanbul.
- "50 Yıllık Aşk - Türkan Şoray", Ercan Akarsu, Esen Books, 2014, Istanbul. ISBN 978-605-4609-40-6
- "Sinema Emekçisi - Türkan Şoray", Ercan Akarsu, Esen Books, 2015, Istanbul. ISBN 978-605-4609-67-3
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Evet, biz Çerkez'iz. Kuzey Kafkaslar'daki Kabartay Çerkezleri'ndeniz.Annemin babası Selanikli. Baba tarafım ise Kafkasya'dan gelme". Archived from the original on 29 November 2016.
- ^ a b "Çerkes kızı olmak hoşuma gidiyor - GAZETE VATAN". M.gazetevatan.com. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
- ^ a b Yeşim Tabak (2 December 2013). "Türkan Şoray ile Söyleşi" (PDF). Mithat Alam Film Merkezi. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ Esra Yalçınalp (July 2013). ""Karun Hazinelerini Sevgi İçin Reddederim."". Skylife. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ "'Dünyanın En Çok Film Çeviren Kadın Oyuncusu'". Haber Vitrini. 21 October 2006. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ "Şoray 'UNICEF-İyi Niyet Elçisi' oldu". Yeni Şafak. 2010. Retrieved 2 August 2010.
- ^ "Türkiye'nin İlk Kadın Filmleri Festivali" (PDF). Uçan Süpürge. May 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ "Soru: Türkân Şoray'ın ilk yönetmenlik denemesi olan ve başrollerini Kadir İnanır'la paylaştığı filmin adı nedir?". Bunu Bil, NTVMSNBC. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
- ^ "Türkan Şoray kimdir ve nerelidir? Türkan Şoray filmleri".
- ^ "Nazan Şoray kimdir, kaç yaşında? Nazan Şoray'ın filmleri ve biyografisi". 10 March 2022.
- ^ "Türkân Şoray'ın Kaleminden". Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
- ^ "Türkan Şoray nasıl oyuncu oldu". 17 February 2010.
- ^ "Türkân Şoray'la anılar". Zaman. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
- ^ a b "Türkan Şoray: 'Gözlerimle oynamayı Lütfi Akad'dan öğrendim'". Radikal. 8 April 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ Arslanbenzer, Hakan (2014-06-28). "Türkan Şoray: The woman in the red scarf". Daily Sabah. Retrieved 2024-02-26.
- ^ "15. Uluslararası İstanbul Film Festivali / 1996". İKSV. 2008. Archived from the original on 2009-07-08. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
- ^ "Lotfi A. Zadeh - Eurasia Academy". Eurasia-academy.org. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-11-21. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Robert Hossein, Turkan Soray awarded Eurasian Legend Award". Today.az. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
External links
[edit]- 1945 births
- Living people
- People from Eyüp
- Turkish people of Circassian descent
- State Artists of Turkey
- Turkish film actresses
- Turkish film directors
- Turkish women film directors
- Best Actress Golden Orange Award winners
- Best Actress Golden Boll Award winners
- Golden Orange Life Achievement Award winners
- Golden Butterfly Award winners
- 20th-century Turkish actresses