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Miklós Rózsa was born in Budapest and was introduced to classical and folk music by his mother, Regina (née Berkovits), a pianist who had studied with pupils of Franz Liszt, and his father, Gyula, a well-to-do industrialist and landowner who loved Hungarian folk music.
Jungle Book (1942) To Be or Not to Be (1942); music also by Werner R. Heymann; Five Graves to Cairo (1943) Sahara (1943) So Proudly We Hail! (1943); music also by Edward Heyman; The Woman of the Town (1943) Dark Waters (1944) Double Indemnity (1944) The Hour Before the Dawn (1944) Blood on the Sun (1945) Lady on a Train (1945) The Lost Weekend ...
Johnny Rozsa (born 1946), American photographer; Miklós Rózsa (1907–1995), Hungarian composer and writer of film scores. Norbert Rózsa (born 1972), Hungarian swimmer; Péter Rózsás (1943–2024), Hungarian table tennis player; Sándor Rózsa (1813–1878), Hungarian outlaw; Vera Rózsa (1917–2010), Hungarian singer
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Note: This is for articles on novel series—which are a set or series of novels or books that should be read in order as is often the case in speculative fiction and all its subgenres. Can be thought of as one over-riding storyline, and is often without plot re-introduction, reiteration or reminder, save for cursory mention of past events.
Among Rózsa's students were Sarah Walker, Cynthia Hoffmann, Kiri Te Kanawa, Ileana CotrubaČ™, [2] Sonia Theodoridou, Agathe Martel, Karita Mattila, Dorothea Röschmann, Tom Krause, Jyrki Niskanen, Mossa Bildner, Martina Bovet, Clarry Bartha, Anne Sofie von Otter, Anne Howells, Anthony Rolfe Johnson, Lillian Watson, François le Roux, Nora Gubisch, Marie Te Hapuku, Ildikó Komlósi, Louise ...
Note: This is for articles on Novel sequences - which are a set or series of novels which have their own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently or out of sequence or in sequence. This includes series described by the same author/authorial partnership that can read sequentially.
Sándor Rózsa is also discussed in the book Straszliwi zbojnicy z Bieszczadow i okolicy (Terrible Robbers of the Bieszczady and Surrounding Areas) by Polish author Robert Bankosz. His appearance as a hero of folk ballads is secondary. A wide variety of ballads have been sung under his name, but none can be specifically identified with his ...