- Born
- Died
- Edgardo Cozarinsky was born on January 13, 1939 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was a director and writer, known for Ronda nocturna (2005), Apuntes para una biografía imaginaria (2010) and Guerriers et captives (1989). He died on June 2, 2024 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- Cozarinsky was diagnosed with cancer in 1999. This motivated him to dedicate his remaining time to his writing.[1] While still in the hospital following his diagnosis he wrote the first two stories for La novia de Odessa (The Bride from Odessa). From that date on, his film work became sparse and he started publishing "all the books I had not put on paper", fiction mostly but also essays and chronicles.
- Edgardo Cozarinsky was an Argentine writer and filmmaker.
- During the turmoil of Argentina's Dirty War, Cozarinsky left Buenos Aires for Paris, where he concentrated on his filmmaking. He produced fiction films and "essays", mixing documentary material with personal reflections on the material. The most distinguished of these is La Guerre d'un seul homme (One Man's War, 1981), a confrontation between Ernst Jünger's wartime diaries and French newsreels of the occupation period. At a time when European television networks were willing to support such ventures, Cozarinsky was able to develop this approach in a series of original works.
- In 1973 he won a literary prize for his essay on gossip as narrative device in the writings of James and Proust.
- In 2005 he wrote and directed a play (Squash) and wrote a mini-opera Raptos (Raptures). In that year he also appeared on the alternative stage along with his medical doctor, in one of Vivi Tellas' "documentary theater" ventures -Cozarinsky y su médico.
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