Jerzy Duszyński ([ˈjɛʐɨduˈʂɨɲskʲi]; May 15, 1917–July 23, 1978) was one of the most popular actors in a post-war
Poland. He starred in a number of film productions as well as theatrical plays.[1]
Biography
Duszyński was born in
Moscow to the family of Feliks (a civil servant and state administration official, activist of the Polish Red Cross) and Maria Duszyński who were evacuated from Poland right before the offensive of the German Army during
World War I. After the end of World War I, along with his parents he returned to Warsaw and then soon afterwards the family moved to
Mińsk Mazowiecki, where he graduated in 1935 from
I Gimnazjum Humanistyczne.
After finishing high school, he continued his education at the Municipal School of Arts and Decorative Painting in Warsaw (now the
Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw), where he studied for only one year. In 1936, he passed the entrance exam at the Theater Arts Department of the
National Institute of Theatrical Arts, where he studied along with
Hanka Bielicka and
Danuta Szaflarska. He successfully completed his studies in June 1939.
His stage career began just before World War II, with a debut on 25 July 1939 in the role of the minister's cousin in ("Geneva") in Polish Theater in Warsaw and then in
Wilno, where he performed between 1939–41 at Theater on Pohulanka together with
Hanka Bielicka and
Danuta Szaflarska. After Soviet troops entered the city, he played at Vilnius Polish Dramatic Theater. At the end of 1944 he moved with the theater's team to
Białystok and by the end of 1944–45 season he performed in local theater. Between 1945–49 he was an actor of the Teatr Kameralny Wojska Polskiego of
Łódź. Together with a team of theater (which changed its name to Współczesny) moved to Warsaw and performed in it until 1955. In the 1955–56 season and in the years 1958–60 he was an actor of Teatr Syrena, 1956–57 Teatr Narodowy, 1960–66 Teatr Ateneum, 1966–71 Teatr Klasyczny, 1971–78 Teatr Rozmaitości.
Jerzy Duszyński's film career was supposed to start in 1939 in Hania – a film directed by
Józef Lejtes, for which the shooting began in summer of 1939, but – due to the outbreak of the war – the film was never completed.
After the war he played in two popular films:Skarb and Zakazane piosenki, that have made him the first male star of the post-war Polish cinema.