Maria, Mirabela
0 sources
Maria, Mirabela
Summary
Maria, Mirabela is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Maria, Mirabela's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Maria, Mirabela was directed by Ion Popescu-Gopo[4].
- Maria, Mirabela was directed by Natalia Bodiul[5].
- Ion Popescu-Gopo wrote the screenplay for Maria, Mirabela[6].
- Maria, Mirabela's composer is recorded as Eugen Doga[7].
- Maria, Mirabela's composer is recorded as Grigore Vieru[8].
- Maria, Mirabela's genre is fantasy film[9].
- Maria, Mirabela's genre is children's film[10].
- Maria, Mirabela's genre is musical film[11].
- Maria, Mirabela's genre is comedy film[12].
- Maria, Mirabela's genre is live-action/animated film[13].
- Maria, Mirabela was followed by Maria and Mirabella in Transistorland[14].
- A cast member of Maria, Mirabela was Medeea Marinescu[15].
- A cast member of Maria, Mirabela was Gilda Manolescu[16].
- A cast member of Maria, Mirabela was Ingrid Celia[17].
- A cast member of Maria, Mirabela was Ion Popescu-Gopo[18].
- Maria, Mirabela was produced by Q125942880[19].
- Maria, Mirabela was produced by Nikolay Evlyukhin[20].
- Maria, Mirabela was produced by Q125942774[21].
- Maria, Mirabela's production company is recorded as Casa de Filme 5[22].
- Maria, Mirabela's production company is recorded as Buftea Studios[23].
- Maria, Mirabela's production company is recorded as Moldova-Film[24].
- Maria, Mirabela's production company is recorded as Soyuzmultfilm[25].
- Maria, Mirabela's production company is recorded as Sovinfilm[26].
- Maria, Mirabela's director of photography is recorded as Alecu Popescu[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Q125942880[19], Nikolay Evlyukhin[20], and Q125942774[21]. Directors include Ion Popescu-Gopo[4] and Natalia Bodiul[5]. Ion Popescu-Gopo wrote the screenplay for Maria, Mirabela[6]. Cast members include Medeea Marinescu[15], Gilda Manolescu[16], Ingrid Celia[17], and Ion Popescu-Gopo[18].
Publication
Publication dates include December 21, 1981[28], March 3, 1982[29], January 8, 1983[30], October 27, 1983[31], April 1, 1983[32], and 1987[33]. Original languages include Romanian[34] and Russian[35]. Genres include fantasy film[9], children's film[10], musical film[11], comedy film[12], and live-action/animated film[13].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Maria, Mirabela was followed by Maria and Mirabella in Transistorland[14].
Why It Matters
Maria, Mirabela has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 16 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]