Yılmaz Güney

Yılmaz Güney
Güney raises his fist while accepting the Palme d'Or award at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival.
Born
Yılmaz Pütün

(1937-04-01)1 April 1937
Yenice, Karataş, Adana, Turkey
Died9 September 1984(1984-09-09) (aged 47)
Paris, France
CitizenshipTurkey (He was stripped of his Turkish citizenship in 1983 by then-president Kenan Evren)
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter, actor
Years active1958–1984
Spouses
(m. 1967; div. 1968)
    Fatoş Güney
    (m. 1970)
    Children2
    AwardsPalme d'Or (1982)

    Yılmaz Güney ( Pütün; 1 April 1937 – 9 September 1984) was a Turkish film director, screenwriter, novelist, actor and communist political activist. He quickly rose to prominence in the Turkish film industry. Many of his works were made from a far-left perspective and devoted to the plight of working-class people in Turkey. Güney won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1982 for the film Yol (The Road) which he co-directed with Şerif Gören. He was at constant odds with the Turkish government over the portrayal of Kurdish culture, people and language.

    After being convicted of killing judge Sefa Mutlu in 1974 (a charge which he denied), Güney fled the country and was later stripped of his citizenship. A year before his death in 1983, he co-founded the Kurdish Institute of Paris together with the Kurdish poets Cegerxwîn and Hejar among others.