
Ljuba Tadić
Acting · Born 1929-05-31 · age 76 at death · Uroševac, Serbia, Yugoslavia
Ljubivoje "Ljuba" Tadić (Serbian Cyrillic: Љубивоје Тадић Љуба) (31 May 1929 — 28 October 2005) was a Serbian actor who enjoyed a reputation as one of the greatest names in the history of former Yugoslav cinema. He made his screen debut in 1953, but his first truly memorable role was in the 1957 film Nije bilo uzalud. In this film, like in many others, he played the villain, but he turned out to be the most memorable character. Later he built on this reputation and continued to play important historical and larger-than-life characters. He also made history by uttering an obscenity in one of the final scenes of 1964 World War I epic Marš na Drinu, which was the first such instance in the history of former Yugoslav cinema. Description above from the Wikipedia article Ljuba Tadić, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Titles

Ulysses' Gaze

The Master and Margarita

Cabaret Balkan

The Battle of Sutjeska

Siberian Lady Macbeth

March on the River Drina

Battle of Kosovo

Hot Wind

Time of Miracles

Cyclops

Black and White Like Day and Night

Special Treatment

The Fragrance of Wild Flowers

Awakening from the Dead

Pretty Women Walking Through the City

Volunteers

The Morning

Before the Truth

Doctor Mladen

Wolf of Prokletije

Breakdown

Outrage

Citizen Pokorni

Zarki

The Girl in the Park

Wild Seed

Big and Small

Doctor Homer's Brother

Raindrops, Waters, Warriors

The Ballad of the Ferocious...

A Bloody Tale

Mamula Camp

No Problem

Noon
Times without War

The Steppe

Out of Step

Girl from the Mountains

Cross Country

It Was Not In Vain

The Dream
Fear

Escapes

Golden Apple

Bomb at 10:10

Ward Six

Tailor's Secret

Vuk Karadžić

A Girl with the Lamp

The Walled In

A Trap for the General

The First Citizen of a Small Town

A Day Longer Than a Year

Cursed Money

Father by Force

Good Morning, Belgrade

Some Far-Away Light

A Suspicious Character

Pavle Pavlovic

Inspector