Tarık Akan
Tarık Akan | |
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Tarık Akan in 2008. | |
Born |
Tarık Tahsin Üregül 13 December 1949 İstanbul, Turkey |
Died |
16 September 2016 66) İstanbul, Turkey | (aged
Alma mater |
Yıldız Technical University, College of Journalism |
Occupation |
|
Years active | 1970–2009 |
Notable work |
|
Awards |
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Tarık Akan (born as Tarık Tahsin Üregül, 13 December 1949 – 16 September 2016) was a Turkish film actor and producer, who has been active since the 1970s.
Early life
Tarık Akan was born as Tarık Tahsin Üregül in Istanbul on 13 December 1949.[1] He was the third child of the family after a daughter and a son. His family was constantly moving around Turkey due to his father's occupation in the military. Schooled in Erzurum, he completed the elementary education in Kayseri. Following his father's retirement, the family moved to Istanbul and settled in Bakırköy. Akan attended Yıldız Technical University to study mechanical engineering, graduated later from the College of Journalist.[2]
Before he started his acting career, he worked as a lifeguard at beaches and at a boat renting place in Bakırköy.[2]
He completed his military service in Denizli in 1979.[2]
He was jailed for two-and-half months with cell confinement following the 1980 Turkish coup d'état. A right-wing politics daily defamed him with a false news in the headline for a speech he allegedly addressed in Germany in early 1981, leading to a long court case demanding for 12 years imprisonment.[2]
In 1986, he married to Yasemin Erkut. He became father of a son, Barış Zeki Üregül, the same year. Two years later, twins, Yaşar Özgür, a son, and Özlem, a daughter, were born. The couple divorced in 1989.[2]
His son Barış Zeki began an acting career in 2009 with the film Deli Deli Olma, in which he played with his father and portrayed the young actor Tarık Akan.[2]
Acting career
He entered a movie actor contest of the magazine Ses ("Voice"),[1][2] and ended up runner up. He studied acting under the eye of famous Turkish film director Ertem Eğilmez (1929–1989).
He made his film debut in 1970 at the age of 21 in Vefasız, and adopted the stage name "Tarık Akan". Between 1970 and 1975, in the heyday of Yeşilçam, he acted in 12 films a year in average. He appeared with Emel Sayın in Mavi Boncuk, Hülya Koçyiğit in Sev Kardeşim, Hale Soygazi in Gece Kuşu Zehra, and entered into the "list of unforgettables" with Hababam Sınıfı.[2]
At first, most of his roles were in romantic comedies. Later in his career, he has taken on more political and dramatic roles. The first film of this genre was Nehir, in which he shared the role with Cüneyt Arkın. Political films like Maden, Sürü, Yol and Kanal followed.[2]
He acted in a total of 110 films, and won numerous awards from various festivals including Cannes and Berlin. He won an Honourable Mention at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival for his role in Pehlivan.[1][2][3]
Later years
He also directed several productions such as documentaries and serials for television. In 2002, he published his first book Anne Kafamda Bit Var, a biography of his life and his time in prison.[2]
In 1991, he took over the elementary school in Bakırköy, in which he was educated, and transferred it to his own Özel Taş İlköğretim Okulu.[2]
In 2005, he became the chairman of the education-aimed "Nesin Foundation", succeeding Ali Nesin, the son of the founder Aziz Nesin.[2] In his later years, he was served as chairman of the "Nazım Hikmet Cultural and Arts Foundation".[1]
Illness and death
Akan contracted lung cancer, and was in treatment for over one year. In the early hours of 16 September 2016, he died at the age of 66 in the intensive care station of a private hospital in Istanbul.[1][2]
On September 18, he was interred at Zuhuratbaba Cemetery in Bakırköy following a memorial service held in Harbiye Muhsin Ertuğrul Stage and the religious funeral service at Teşvikiye Mosque. The funeral was attended by thousands of people, his castmates, former President of Turkey Ahmet Necdet Sezer and the leader of the main opposition party Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu.[4][5]
Filmography
1970s
- Solan Bir Yaprak Gibi (1971)
- Emine (1971)
- Vefasız (1971)
- Beyoğlu Güzeli (1971)
- Melek mi, Şeytan mı? (1971)
- Kaderimin Oyunu (1972)
- Feryat (1972)
- Aşkların En Güzeli (1972)
- Sisli Hatıralar (1972)
- Suçlu (1972)
- Azat Kuşu (1972)
- Para (1972)
- Sev Kardeşim (1972)
- Tatlı Dillim (1972)
- Üç Sevgili (1972)
- Yeryüzünde Bir Melek (1973)
- Bebek Yüzlü (1973)
- Umut Dünyası (1973)
- Yalancı Yarim (1973)
- Canım Kardeşim (1973)
- Oh Olsun (1973)
- Yaz Bekarı (1974)
- Boşver Arkadaş (1974)
- Kanlı Deniz (1974)
- Esir Hayat (1974)
- Mahçup Delikanlı (1974)
- Memleketim (1974)
- Mavi Boncuk (1974)
- Hababam Sınıfı (1975)
- Çapkın Hırsız (1975)
- Ah Nerede (1975)
- Evcilik Oyunu (1975)
- Delisin (1975)
- Merhaba (Bizim Aile) (1975)
- Ateş Böceği (1975)
- Hababam Sınıfı Sınıfta Kaldı (1975)
- Gece Kuşu Zehra (1975)
- Kader Bağlayınca (1976)
- Öyle Olsun (1976)
- Aşk Dediğin Laf Değildir (1976)
- Şeref Sözü (1977)
- Sevgili Dayım (1977)
- Nehir (1977)
- Baraj (1977)
- Bizim Kız (1977)
- Lekeli Melek (1978)
- Kanal (1978)
- Maden (1978)
- Seninle Son Defa (1978)
- Sürü (1978)
- Adak (1979)
- Demiryol (1979)
1980s
- Adak (1980)
- Herhangi Bir Kadın (1981)
- Delikan (1981)
- Kaçak (1982)
- Yol (1982)
- Arkadaşım (1982)
- Çocuklar Çiçektir (1983)
- Derman (1983)
- Gecenin Sonu (1983)
- Beyaz Ölüm (1983)
- Pehlivan (1984)
- Yosma (1984)
- Alev Alev (1984)
- Damga (1984)
- Kan (1984)
- Paramparça (1984)
- Tele Kızlar (1985)
- Bir Avuç Cennet (1985)
- Beyoğlu`nun Arka Yakası (1986)
- Acı Dünyalar (1986)
- Kıskıvrak (1986)
- Adem ile Havva (1986)
- Ses (1986)
- Kızımın Kanı (1987)
- Yağmur Kaçakları (1987)
- Dönüş (1988)
1990s
- Berdel (1990)
- Karartma Geceleri (1990)
- Bir Küçük Bulut (1990)
- Bir Kadın Düşmanı (1991)
- Uzun ince Bir Yol (1991)
- Devlerin Ölümü (1991)
- Yolcu (1993)
- Çözülmeler (1993)
- Aşk Üzerine Söylenmemiş Herşey-Hep Aynı (1995)
- Mektup (1996)
- Eylül Fırtınası (1999)
2000s
- Hayal Kurma Dersleri (2000)
- Meşrutiyet - Abdülhamit Düşerken (2002)
- Gülüm (2002)
- Vizontele Tuuba (2004)
- Ankara cinayeti (2006)
- Piano Girl (2009)
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Son dakika haberi: Tarık Akan'ın cenaze töreni ile ilgili flaş açıklama!". Milliyet (in Turkish). 2016-09-16. Retrieved 2016-09-16.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "Son dakika haberi: Sanat dünyası şokta Tarık Akan yaşamını yitirdi". Hürriyet (in Turkish). 2016-09-16. Retrieved 2016-09-16.
- ↑ "Berlinale: 1985 Prize Winners". berlinale.de. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ↑ "Thousands bid farewell to Akan". Hürriyet Daily News. 2016-09-19. Retrieved 2016-09-19.
- ↑ "Tarık Akan'ın Zuhuratbaba Mezarlığı'nda toprağa verildi". Sözcü (in Turkish). 2016-09-18. Retrieved 2016-09-19.
External links
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Murat Soydan |
Golden Orange Award for Best Actor 1973 for Suçlu |
Succeeded by Hakan Balamir |
Preceded by Kemal Sunal |
Golden Orange Award for Best Actor 1978 for Maden |
Succeeded by not awarded |
Preceded by Genco Erkal |
Golden Orange Award for Best Actor 1984 for Pehlivan |
Succeeded by Hakan Balamir |
Preceded by Aytaç Arman |
Golden Orange Award for Best Actor 1989 for Üçüncü Göz 1990 |
Succeeded by Ekrem Bora |
Preceded by not held |
Golden Boll Award for Best Actor 1992 for Karartma Geceleri |
Succeeded by Menderes Samancılar |
Preceded by Fırat Tanış |
Golden Orange Award for Best Actor 2003 for Gülüm |
Succeeded by Olgun Şimşek |