- Born
- Died
Wojciech Pszoniak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Wojciech Pszoniak (born in 1942 in Lwów, currently Ukraine), is a Polish film and theater actor.
Pszoniak gained international visibility following Andrzej Wajda's 1975 film The Promised Land, in which he played Moritz, one of the three main characters.
The actor left Poland during the period of political unrest in 1980-1981, which saw the appearance of the Solidarity trade union and ended with the imposition of martial law on December 13, 1981. Pszoniak found roles in France, where he is currently living and working. Since the fall of communism in Eastern Europe in 1989, Pszoniak has appeared in Polish movies and plays.
Internationally, he simplified his first name into Wojtek, which is the standard diminutive of the relatively formal Wojciech in the Polish language.
Pszoniak often plays Jewish characters, although he is not of Jewish descent. In France, this is partially attributable to his role in The Promised Land, as well as his foreign accent.
As actor
If You Saw His Heart
Z dala od orkiestry
Eccentrics, the Sunny Side of the Street
Carte Blanche
To Life
Demons Years Later
Cassos
The Mole
The Winner
Black Thursday
Nie ten człowiek
Robert Mitchum Is Dead
The Rabbi's Cat
The Rite of Passage
Mystification
Lesser Evil
Hope
Strike
Notturno
Viper in the Fist
The Pact of Silence
Chaos
The Annuity
Second life
Bajland
Our God's Brother
Pour l'amour d'Élena
La chica
Chicken Talk
Holy Week