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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lajos_BíróLajos Bíró - Wikipedia

    The grave of Lajos Bíró, Hampstead Cemetery, London. Lajos Bíró (IPA: [ˈlɒjoʒ ˈbiːroː]; born Lajos Blau; [needs IPA] 22 August 1880 – 9 September 1948) was a Hungarian novelist, playwright, and screenwriter who wrote many films from the early 1920s through the late 1940s.

  2. Lajos Biró (geboren als Ludwig Blau 22. August 1880 in Nagyvárad, Österreich-Ungarn; gestorben 9. September 1948 in London) war ein britischer Drehbuchautor ungarischer Abstammung, der insbesondere durch seine Zusammenarbeit mit dem Filmregisseur Alexander Korda bekannt wurde.

  3. Bíró Lajos, születési nevén Blau Lajos (Bécs, 1880. augusztus 22. – London, 1948. szeptember 9.) zsidó származású magyar író, újságíró, forgatókönyvíró. Felesége Vészi Jolán, Vészi József lánya volt.

  4. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Biro_LajosYIVO | Bíró, Lajos

    (1880–1948), novelist, publicist, editor, dramatist, and screenwriter. As was the case with other writers of the second generation of Hungarian Jewish literature, Lajos Bíró saw himself not only as culturally Hungarian but also as a modernist in the artistic sense and as a political and social liberal.

  5. BIRÓ (Blau), LAJOS (1880–1948), Hungarian author and playwright. Biró was born in Vienna. He studied in Hungary, and became a journalist working for the liberal Budapesti Napló and the radical Vil g. In 1906, for political reasons, he went with his family to Berlin, but returned to Budapest in 1909.

  6. He passed away in 1931 at the age of 75. Bíró is considered today as one of the most outstanding Hungarian field entomo logists, who unselfishly served his nation and his science. Reference. Balogh J, Allodiatoris I (1972) In Memoriam Lajos Bíró and Sámuel Fenichel. Acta Zool 42:1–2, Budapest, Hungary.

  7. www.imdb.com › name › nm0083742Lajos Biró - IMDb

    Lajos Biró was born on 22 August 1880 in Nagyvarad, Austria-Hungary [now Oradea, Bihor, Romania]. He was a writer, known for The Thief of Bagdad (1940), The Last Command (1928) and Women Everywhere (1930). He died on 9 September 1948 in London, England, UK.