Duško Trifunović
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Duško Trifunović (Душко Трифуновић, born 1933 in Sijekovac village near Bosanski Brod, Vrbas Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia — died January 28, 2006 in Novi Sad, Serbia-Montenegro) was a Bosnian and Serbian poet and writer.
Born in the small village to father Vaso and mother Petra, Trifunović moved to Sarajevo in 1957 at the age of 24, allegedly to work as a locksmith, but a chain of events took him into poetry. He published his first book in 1958, and over the next 48 years wrote twenty poetry books, four novels and several dramas.
He also wrote over 300 commercial song lyrics, most notably for Bijelo dugme (big hits "Šta bi dao da si na mom mjestu", "Pristao sam biću sve što hoće", and "Ima neka tajna veza", as well as others like "Glavni junak jedne knjige" and "Ništa mudro"), Indexi (hit "I pad je let"), Zdravko Čolić (hit "Glavo luda"), Vajta (hit "Zlatna ribica"), Jadranka Stojaković, Neda Ukraden and recently for Željko Joksimović.
Trifunović also authored several books for children and worked for Television Sarajevo on several children programmes, the most prominent being Šta djeca znaju o zavičaju (What children know about the homeland).
Since 1992 he spent his time between Novi Sad and Sremski Karlovci in Serbia, where he worked on the television until retirement. He received Branko's award, 6th April Award of city of Sarajevo, Federal and many other acknowledgments.
He was buried in Sremski Karlovci cemetery, where he lived for several last years of his life.
[edit] Selected bibliography
- Tajna veza, selected poems (1994)
- Veliko otvorenje (2000)
- Gola seča, novel (2002)
[edit] Filmography (screenplays)
- Ram za sliku moje drage (1968)
- Život je masovna pojava (1970)
- Adam Ledolomac (1990)
[edit] External links
- Article and interview in Ilustrovana Politika (In Serbian)
- NIN, 31. mart 2005 (In Serbian)
- Večernje novosti, 23. mart 2005 (In Serbian)
- IMDB entry