Tomislav Osmanli | |
---|---|
Native name | Томислав Османли |
Born | Bitola, SR Macedonia, SFR Yugoslavia (now North Macedonia) | 25 October 1956
Occupation | author, playwright, screenwriter, journalist |
Language | Macedonian |
Nationality | Macedonian |
Alma mater | Ss. Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje |
Period | 1974 – present |
Notable works | Film and Politics, Comics: Scripture of the Human Image |
Spouse |
Snežana Stanković
(m. 2013, died) |
Children | 2 |
Relatives | Dimitrie Osmanli (father) |
Tomislav Osmanli (Macedonian Cyrillic: Томислав Османли, Macedonian pronunciation: [tǒmislaʋ osˈmanɫɯ ]; born 25 October 1956) is a Macedonian author, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist.
Osmanli was born in Bitola, People's Republic of Macedonia, at that time a constituent republic of Yugoslavia. His father Dimitrie Osmanli was an acclaimed Macedonian film, theater director and author, whilst his mother was of Greek heritage from Thessaloniki. Osmanli was raised to speak both Macedonian and Greek languages, and was taught Aromanian by his paternal uncle.[1]
The family moved to Skopje when he was two years old. Osmanli studied law at the Saints Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, where his father also lectured and was a profound influence in his formative years.
In 1981 Osmanli published his seminal work Филмот и политичкото (English: Film and Politics) a theoretical study of political cinema. In 1987 Osmanli released Стрип: Запис со човечки лик (English: Comics: Scripture of the Human Image), the first scholarly work dedicated to Comics studies published in Yugoslavia.[2][3]
Osmanli served as an independent editor and member of the editing board of his nation's oldest daily newspaper Nova Makedonija from 1991 to 1998, and as chief of arts and cultural programs at Telma TV between 1998 and 2016.[4][5]
He is a member of the Macedonian Writer's Association and a member of both, the Macedonian PEN and the Aromanian PEN centers. On May 18, 2023, he was proclaimed European Personality of The Year 2022 in his country, by the European movement North Macedonia. Between the number of other, on December 28, 2023 he accepted the Croatian prize St. Donat as a Lifetime creative achievements Award.
Osmanli was married to Snežana Osmanli (née Stanković), a green-field founder and CEO of the prestigious insurance company Eurolink and a vice-president of the Skopje-based think-tank group Council on Foreign Relations, a fellow academic, and most influential adviser to former Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov, witness and actor in the formative years and events of the contemporary Macedonian statehood. The couple had two children, a son Dimitar and a daughter Aleksandra. He was widowed following the death of his wife from cancer in 2013.[6][7] A book entitled The Woman That Could See Behind The Hill with the majority of statements by international and local diplomats, politicians, and businessmen was published bilingually, both in Macedonian and English after her passing.
Apart from his native Macedonian, Osmanli is fluent in Greek, Serbo-Croatian, English, French, and Italian. He is also an avid bibliophile, usually reading several books simultaneously.
He is a laureate of his country's highest state and literary prizes for his artistic work and achievements.