Ezzatollah Entezami

Acting

Ezzatollah Entezami

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Jan 01, 1924 (101 years old)
Death date
Aug 17, 2018

Ezzatollah Entezami

Known For

Oboist
1h 16m
Movie 2017

Oboist

A documentary about Majid Entezami (Persian: مجید انتظامی) (born 9...

The Teacher without Master
1h 3m
Movie 2016

The Teacher without Master

The Teacher without Master

Mehrjui: The Forty-Year Report
1h 48m
Movie 2016

Mehrjui: The Forty-Year Report

Mehrjui: The Forty-Year Report dives into the artistic world of...

The Maritime Silk Road
1h 54m
Movie 2011

The Maritime Silk Road

A young student of Shiraz university joins Captain Soleiman on...

And the blue sky
1h 15m
Movie 2010

And the blue sky

An intimate documentary shedding light on the life of veteran...

Forties
1h 28m
Movie 2010

Forties

Negar is a married woman who works at a musical...

Motherland
1h 51m
Movie 2009

Motherland

After Islamic Revolution in Iran, many iranians left Iran .now...

The Green Fire
1h 44m
Movie 2008

The Green Fire

Based on an ancient story Sang-e Sabor it's the story...

Colors of Memory
1h 42m
Movie 2008

Colors of Memory

The film relates the story of a surgeon (Doctor Pārsā)...

The Night
1h 37m
Movie 2007

The Night

A sergeant who is on a mission to take a...

Biography

Ezzatolah Entezami (also spell Ezatollah Entezami, born 1924 in Tehran, Iran) is an award-winning Iranian actor. Graduated from theater and cinema school in Hanover, Germany in 1958, Entezami started his career on stage in 1941. He has been acting in movies since 1969. His debut performance in Darius Mehrjui's admired classic film, The Cow(Gaav), received the Golden Hugo in Chicago International Film Festival in 1971. He shined in the role of a naive villager who cannot endure the death of his beloved cow and starts to believe that he is the cow himself. He is known as one of the most prominent actors in Iranian cinema and has been labeled as the greatest actor in history of the cinema of Iran. He has worked with most of the prominent Iranian film directors, including Darius Mehrjui (eight films), Ali Hatami (four films), Nasser Taqvaee, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Behrouz Afkhami and Rakhshan Bani-Etemad. He has been awarded the Crystal Simorgh for the Best Actor twice from the International Fajr Film Festival, for Grand Cinema and The Day of Angel. His work and accomplishments were recognized in October 2006 at the Iran cultural center in Paris.