Gojko Mitić
Gojko Mitić | |
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Born |
Gojko Mitić June 13, 1940 Strojkovce, Morava Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
Occupation | actor, stuntman,director |
Gojko Mitić (Гojкo Митић) (born June 13, 1940 in Strojkovce (near Leskovac), Morava Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a Serbian director, actor, stuntman, and author. He lives in Berlin.
He is known for a numerous series of Red Westerns from the GDR DEFA Studios, featuring Native Americans as the heroes, rather than white settlers as in John Ford's Westerns. Beginning with The Sons of the Great Mother Bear (1966), Mitić starred in 12 films of this type between 1966 and 1984. He contributed to the popular image of Native Americans in German-speaking countries.
In an attempt to move away from his fame based on these Westerns, Mitić in his later career increasingly sought to appear in other genres, on film, on television and on stage. Among other roles he played Spartacus on stage and presented several TV shows.
He also played Karl May's Winnetou in seasons at the "Karl-May-Festspiele" until 2006 in Bad Segeberg near Hamburg, Germany. In one episode he played a role at the German television program Schloss Einstein.
Bulgarian punk rock & ska group Hipodil composed a song, Bate Goiko, dedicated to Gojko Mitić. In 2010, he received the Brothers Karić Award in Serbia.
Selected filmography
- Tecumseh (1972)
External links
- Gojko Mitic's Filmography
- Gojko Mitic at IMDB
- gojkomitic.de (German)
- Biography (German)
- Song about him
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