Engin Akyurek maybe the best actor in the world ever-BIO/Updates pg4&a - Page 27

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muskaan2298 thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
Yes even I read this on Twitter, that Engin has signed a new series. Literally the entire Twitter is filled with this and I really hope that this is true. This time I wanna be part of the excitement too, if he does a show then I wanna be there originally and not join later.
SaraFatma thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
it starts with alot of snippets of info on turkish magazine websites, then artistanbul or ozle confirms the news, then a look test is released on the official website.
tims is one of the biggest production houses in Turkey i think they made 'mera sultan' and 'bir bulut olsam'. so i am really excited for it as previously the combo worked well.

i just hope they got the best screen writers and have learned from their mistakes. when they make old school romance or thriller the shows do really well, when they go for ultra modern thriller and over sexualized americanized romance the show gets bashed and poor ratings.

hope there will be balance this time in the story. he has impressed with KPA, BBO, FG. so expectations are even higher this time expecially after tall the awarda and nominations he won he has to do ever better.

i can only imagine the pressure on his shoulders at this moment, he probably doesnt want to dissapoint his fans but also wants to grow as an actor. what dilemmas must be playing in his head. oh well his new article was to release this month.

jaldi se translation aye uska, apparently its one of the best he has written sun ne mein aya hai.
SaraFatma thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
'A Marble'
Article written By Engin Akyurek for Kafasina Gore Magazine-
[Translated by Engin Akyurek Universal Fans Club]


My summer holiday had started three months after I learned how to read. I didn't have my red ribbon (1) that I proudly carried on the left side of my chest. My black school uniform which wrapped my body was wide open and, flying like a cloak, had visually completed my report card which was full of good grades. I had my report card on one hand and my holiday book on the other. I guess I don't have to tell you that my book bag carried on my back looked like a camel hump. Although it was the last day of the school, I couldn't fit my holiday book into my book bag because it was full of beans and colored reading papers. My bag was like a legumes warehouse.

Of course, this had nothing to do with our brains turning into a kneading trough as we grew older. (2) By the way, don't look down on this holiday book, because this book which was sold by using very tactical sales techniques was the rescuer of our entire holiday and the assurance of our future. No more than a coloring book, it was an insult to human intelligence, let alone a colorful activity for hot summer days ahead. It was impossible to love the kid on the cover of the book even if he was your child. It was that bad. He was looking at us as if he was saying "you are an idiot." Yes, we hadn't solved Egyptian hieroglyphics and all we could do was to write "Ali look at the horse." But, we were human after all, not a horse. Years later, we would understand that too much was expected from a generation who was entrusted to a holiday book. I hadn't liked the book at all; it was a total disappointment for me.


After I showed my report card to my family, I had hidden the holiday book that I concealed under my shirt into one of the secret corners of our china cabinet. I had built a set in front of it with our whiskey bottles filled with tea. It wasn't the right thing to do to throw it out into the garbage because our teacher would check our homework when school started. I have to tell you that I had already added a mustache and a beard on the kid's picture on the cover. I had planned to solve all the questions in the book two days before school started. It was a nice plan.


Summer holiday was readily spent like the money you got out of nowhere. 15 days had already passed before the marbles season started. German-Turks (3) and their families hadn't come yet. When they came, it was fun to beat them in a marbles game and pick their marbles. Since our neighborhood sits on a higher hill, it was a little bit difficult to play on the ridge. Children of lower neighborhoods were a little bit afraid of playing as a visitor. Big and contentious matches could continue until dinner time or until we heard the voice of someone's mother. If you ever played marbles, you would know that every game had its own ground. Therefore, the feasibility of each neighborhood's ground was done by the older boys of that neighborhood. Our little hands could take every kind of geometric shape like a protractor. If you wanted play the pit, the tilt, or the head game, your thumb, your wrists, or your eyes had to be strong, respectively.


I wanted to make a very strong entrance into the marbles season which I had started with a very little capital. We knew that there wouldn't be huge fluctuations in marbles exchange before the children of German-Turks arrived and we would yield to domestic market conditions. I was on watch both for marbles and the Kapikule border gate (4).


I was checking my holiday book now and then. If my mother ever found the book, I wouldn't be able to lift my head from the book until my military service, let alone play marbles. The beard and mustache that I drew on the kid with a pencil was the proof of how my mother would sort me out. Whether it is a visitor game at the lower neighborhood or a hosting game in our neighborhood, my hands had started getting cracked and flaking off like a Somali map. Especially in a pit game, we pressed our hands on the ground so tight that it would take the color of the ground. It is true that I soaked my hands in soft soap not to show my flaking hands to my father at the dinner table. My tanned face, my sunburnt neck, and my hands like a cracked chicken leg were the summary of my three months after I learned how to read. My small capital had begun to grow and my marbles that I hid in the shoe cabinet had begun to spread towards my winter shoes. I was very proud of myself because I was doing great things with my small capital. I wished the kid on the cover of the holiday book could have seen my success.


It was very difficult to hide my marbles every night. If my father had found them, I could have been banned to play marbles by the local court (means his family) before German-Turks arrived. God forbid.


It was the middle of my summer holiday. I could make waves on my hair with my comb. My face on the mirror had shown that I grew up a little more. Well, it was almost four months since I learned how to read.


My mother made me read the newspaper at every breakfast. That was my entire education. All books were boring. All the characters in those books were either too idiotic or lotus eaters who enjoyed their vacation here and there. It was easy to talk under an umbrella during the summer, but I was spending my holiday by playing marbles on a dirt field. Life would shortly teach me to be interested in the things that I hadn't experienced before.

When the children of German-Turks arrived, our neighborhood became livelier. German cars were as if they were swearing at our Tofa (5) brand cars. I had never wanted to witness an Eagle (6) being belittled like this. German cars with their strong muscles were taking up as much space as their owners' belly. If they had invented smartphones, we would have taken a selfie but only German-Turks had cameras back then. A German-Turk, leaning his belly fat against the wall and lining us up like glassware, had said "Guys, let me take a picture of you in front of the car." Back in those days, we used to take a picture in front of new white appliances, too (7). We had lined up in front of the German-Turk's car like penguins and smiled like humans. He had said "I will send this picture to all of you." But, we hadn't gotten a single greeting from him, let alone a picture. That picture of me which he had taken with my marbles in my pockets had been lost forever along with the Deutschmark bills hidden under the German-Turk's belly fat. We had smiled so beautifully in that picture.


I was winning in the marbles games and collecting the German-Turk children's marbles. Then, I was selling them from a daily rounded exchange rate. I was very happy. The entire neighborhood was expecting German-Turks to come back home; how could they leave such a beautiful country?


By the end of my summer holiday, I had bags of marbles. I had understood how the banking business started because it was very difficult to hide that many marbles. I was sneakily hiding them at the out-of-sight corners of the house.


My mother had found my holiday book just one week before school started. My marbles had also been exposed as if the kid on the cover told everything. My father had announced the completion of my collapse: "Take these marbles out and never bring them back. The school will start next week. Look at your hands! One can't tell if you are a beggar or a student." The marbles at home were just one tenth of what I had and the ones that I hid under trees or over roofs were my real treasure. The children of German-Turks had lost all their fortune.


It was one week before the school started. My long and wavy hair was cut in crew-cut (it was very ugly hair style that unmans a human) and I was out of spirits. I had to go home in the evening and solve the questions in my holiday book. I had lost all my spiritual and material connection with my marbles. My father was right; the school was starting and I had no business with marbles. I had decided to make an announcement for the children of our neighborhood; I would climb the highest hill and distribute my marbles among them without allowing any sense of looting.



I was there at the exact hour as I promised. My child eyes were seeing a massive crowd before me. There were children from other neighborhoods as well. The children of German-Turks were also there, hoping that they could get back what they had lost. In their eyes, I was like a lunatic distributing his wealth.

The marbles that I put into two big black bags were not visible. The older boys of our neighborhood had told me that they would shoot me instead of marbles if I was joking. I knew that they meant it. Rising on my toes, I had started throwing my marbles away. It was a mad scramble to get marbles. Throwing marbles away, I was trying to push the mad crowd away from me. My arms could become a bird and fly away and my elbows could head for the sky like an arrow. I was scared and sad but also enjoying this situation. Throwing the marbles that I honestly earned was causing egocentric ripples on my younger self. I was throwing the marbles so away that you almost needed to pass at least two neighborhoods to catch them.

When I came home in the evening, I saw my father nailing something with a nail between his lips and a hammer in his hand. The nail at the corner of his mouth showed that he was angry.

"Dad, what happened?"

"Our window was broken. A blackguard has thrown a marble from the hill."



Footnotes:
(1) When first grade students learn how to read, they are given red ribbon to show that they can read.
(2) He means empty like a kneading trough.
(3) Turks who settled in Germany as a worker
(4) Turkish entry point from Europe for German Turks road-traveling
(5) Turkish automaker and one of the three global production centers of Fiat Auto.
(6) The series produced by Tofas during 1980s.
(7) During those years, white appliances or foreign brand cars were not easy to get because Turkey's economic policy was mostly in state control until the very radical economic package announced on January 24, 1980 which shifted Turkey from mixed capitalism to a free market economy.
Edited by SaraFatma - 8 years ago
SaraFatma thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
I found this article so funny and reminiscent of his childhood. Hee seems like a hyper and naughty child.
I think practically everyone has hidden thier summer homework books and only started filling them in the last week so I could relate to this story alot. Especially when his father sats are u a beggar or a student I totally lost it coz its such an asian thing to say loolzzz
The ending is just hilarious. He has a simple and yet witty sense of humour.
Edited by SaraFatma - 8 years ago
daydreamers thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
Thanks for sharing Sara...
Loved this piece to the core...

Witty,funny,real and reflective...

The last line was 🤣 poor father!!!! In what amount the "give up marbles" condition was fulfilled 😆
DefLeppard thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
Thanks @SaraF for sharing the article.

My two cents.
Looks like its a global phenomena where kids are being educated for exams rather than life. No wonder the satirical movie 3 idiots was such big hit movie.
The little Engin's antics to be oh so smart was silly & very relatable.
All kids love to laze vacations & think.of next term only few hours before the school.starts. Any homework given is a mere mockery to the young brains as they are most completed by anxious parents. Hmm call it insecurities.
The only German Turk I am aware of is Mesut Ozil. He is a German national football & Arsenal club player.Infact I was imaginig a marble game between little Mesut & little Engin. :-).lol
Flying kites, playing with marbles were the most sort after past times for boy kids before the advent.of Tv, Mobile phone, Pokemon. Et al.
I still remember watching them play with rival groups, drawing circles & aiming on high bet fancy marbles. Its called Kanche/goli.in India.

A 5 plus year.old Engin walking with his wavy hair, practising like a pro & winning like champion was a treat to read.
Why did he collect so many of them? Cuz he won them?
Here is when the plot thickens.
Man's basic necessities outgrow him soon and he acquires all the material luxuries just like winning the marbles game after game. Then his rational /common sense is lost in all the material conquests. Hence the reference to the German Turks display their gaudy love for.materials be it car, camera etc and have no sensibilities to local folks...who share the same blood/ lineage.
Have you lost your marbles?...isnt it used often?
Little Engin had literally lost his wits ...by winning & gaining those marbles.
To bring back normalcy, he had to lose/give up marbles.
And ending with what damages a material attachment causes was just a teaser.

Kudos for again sending out a very very sublime & attenuated facts of how a overly carnal life can lead to unhappiness.
Edited by DefLeppard - 8 years ago
SaraFatma thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
I know the last line is just everything. It gives a snapshot of Engin the kid.
Who knew this kid who loves to play with marbles and lay claims on others would claim heart of so many people.
And now im so curious to see that picture the german man took with his toothy grin.


Also rumours are going around that he was offered a better offer at TIMS, its a production house and he left Ay Yapim production vompany. In Turkey actor can be signed to only one production company at a time. If this is real then ozlem is thinking something big for him. He worked on BBO with TIMS and became big from there. Sounds exciting and considering that other actors are signedup with ayyapim and Engin is biggest actor to come out from turkey and with TIMS he will probably get alot of attention from this company. Goodluck to him.

Thankyou to you all for reading it.you all are most welcome 😊
Edited by SaraFatma - 8 years ago
DefLeppard thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
@Sara
IMO...its just a narrative technique.
I find it very deep dive.*time for scuba diving* Lol
SaraFatma thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
@defleppard
Can I just say that I loooveee how u read so deeply into the articles and I love ur take on it.

So I pictured mesut and Engin in my head and engin loves soccer and playing it so my mind wandered off to adult mesut and Engin on the field giving each other a hard time he he he...

I like how u say he had to loose the marbles to snap back into reality u know I just love your reviews.
And yes this has to be his most relatable and funny article for me and how u explained it made me see it better and love it even more.
Thankyoy 😃
Edited by SaraFatma - 8 years ago
DefLeppard thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
This was a tricky write up from him.
Infact i spent whole afternoon reading it again n again like an exam prep.

Others were very easy esp traffic/ car etc.
I am saving these thoughts...for one day if I meet him... would love to discuss.
Sounds like a moron...with no hormones..but thatz dummy for you.
Edited by DefLeppard - 8 years ago
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