Acting credits
18
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.

Acting
These indicators come from TMDB. They are relative signals, not review ratings.
Acting credits
18
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.
TMDB popularity
0.5
Low visibility
TMDB internal trend index. Higher usually means more searches and page activity now.
TMDB ID: 125276
IMDb ID: nm0440358
Known for: Acting
Born: December 8, 1910
Died: February 8, 1990
Age: 79
Place of birth: Budapest, Hungary
Gender: Female
Adult content flag: No
Career span: 1939 - 1948
Years active: 10
Wikidata: Q453895
Also known as
Katalin Kanczler • Katalin Karady • Karády Katalin • Karádi Katalin • Katalin Karádi • Karady Katalin • Kanczler Katalin
Katalin Karády (December 8, 1910, Budapest - February 8, 1990, New York) was a Hungarian actress and singer. A leading actress in Hungarian movies made between 1939–1945, she is best known outside Hungary as an awardee of the Righteous among the Nations honorific for rescuing a number of Hungarian Jews. She started acting in 1936, taking classes from Ernő Tarnay, and Artúr Bárdos. After gaining the attention of journalist Zoltán Egyed in a bar in Buda (who also proposed the name Karády) she was introduced to Ilona Aczél, a former actress, in whose acting school she learned the basics of the profession in the following three years, including singing. Karády's first performance was at the end of the 30s, in the Joób Dániel theatre. Between 1931 and 1941, she appeared in the Pesti and Vígszínház theatre in various roles. Her first movie role, Halálos Tavasz (Deadly Spring) gave her instant fame as a diva and sex-symbol, supported by her unusual, humming voice, and "femme fatale" character. In the next nine years, she appeared in 20 movies. Zoltán Egyed became her manager, and successfully created a Hollywood-like image around her, as a result, thousands of fans tried to mimic her clothing, hairstyle and behavior throughout the country. Karády's personal life was a constant topic of gossip, conflicting rumors came and gone about she being a man-eater, or lesbian. The theories were stirred up even more as she had intimate relationship with Regent Miklós Horthy's chief of secret service, István Ujszászy, who also proposed her, and bought her a villa. The 2001 film Hamvadó Cigarettavég by Péter Bacsó is dedicated to her memory. In 2004, for her courageous acts during World War II, she received the posthumous Righteous medal from the Yad Vashem Institute.


Movie credits linked with Katalin Karády.
as Éva
as Machita
as Anada
as Szováthy Éva
as Benedek Pálma
as Anna
as Mariya
as Balásfy Ágnes / Balásfy Eszter
as Harmonikás Gizi
as Rózsa / Rosina
as Horváth Margit
as Mária
as Ralben Edit