Dragan Maksimović
Dragan Maksimović | |
---|---|
Maksimović playing Lazar in movie "Time of Miracles" | |
Born |
Podujevo, FPR Yugoslavia | February 7, 1949
Died |
February 4, 2001 51) Belgrade, Serbia | (aged
Cause of death | Beaten to death |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1971–2001 |
Dragan Maksimović (7 February 1949 - 4 February 2001), nicknamed Maks, was a Serbian actor. He was born in Podujevo.
Biography
Dragan performed in more than sixty theatrical plays, movies and TV productions, between 1971 and 1999. His debut was in National Theatre in Belgrade playing Soldier in play "Mother courage and her Children", 1971.
On 17 November, 2000, Maksimović was brutally attacked in Zeleni Venac, in day-time, by a group of FK Rad supporters (after their team lost a match against Obilić), who assumed he was Romani. He died on 4 February 2001 in the hospital.[1][2][3] On the initiative by film director Goran Marković, a commemorative plaque was placed at Zeleni Venac on 18 November 2006.[3] The perpetrators remain at large.[3]
Selected filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | The State of the Dead | Luka Mandic | |
1999 | The Dagger | Zulfikar | |
1998 | The Wounds | Patient | |
1998 | The Hornet | Azem | |
1996 | Pretty Village, Pretty Flame | Petar | |
1993 | Byzantine Blue | Lovokradica | |
1992 | The Black Bomber | Psycho | |
1992 | We Are Not Angels | Hippie | |
1989 | Time of Miracles | Lazar | |
1988 | The Bizarre Country | Painter | |
1981 | The Fall of Italy | Rafo | |
1980 | Petria's Wreath | Misa | |
1979 | Meetings with Remarkable Men | G. I. Gurdjieff |
References
External links
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