- Born
- Nickname
- Stanci
- Height5′ 7″ (1.70 m)
- Stanka Gjuric is a poet, essayist, actress, columnist and filmmaker from Croatia. She was born in Cakovec (North of Croatia), but today she lives in Zagreb. She published 20 books, and received numerous literary awards for her poetry. Stanka is a member of Croatian Independent Artists and Croatian Academy of Science and Art in Diaspora (Basel, Switzerland). With her first short film 'Ubojite misli' (Battle Thoughts) she gains International recognition.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Filip Ninac
- Stanka Gjuric was born in Cakovec as the only child of parents who were employed in the civil service. From an early age she showed her talent for writing, and began writing poems when she was nine. Today she is prominent Croatian poetess who published 18 books. Beside writing, and working as a model, and film actress she also worked on Croatian Independent TV, and Croatian National Television as actress and as manager of her authoring contribution in TV show "Metropolis". Stanka also collaborated with many Croatian journals as Vecernji list, Nedjeljna Dalmacija, etc., where she has, for many years, an advisory columns as well as columns of lyric essay's. From October 2006, she started to make short films as director, editor, cinematographer, screenwriter ad producer of her own independent films.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Filip Ninac
- ParentsDragan Gjuric
- RelativesLuka Gjuric(Niece or Nephew)Jurica Gjuric(Niece or Nephew)Tomislav Gjuric(Half Sibling)
- Bishop in the family of Stanka Gjuric: Alojzije Misic's parents were Mate Misic and Marija (maiden name Cigic). Alojzije had two sisters, Marija and Persa. Marija married Ivan Gjuric (and had four children with him: Andrija - Stanka's grandfather, Ljudevit, Viktorija and Antun), so Alojzije Misic was uncle of Stanka's grandfather Andrija.
- I don't believe that women care all that much about male friendship, however, to be to a man, primarily and only a friend, who is a woman, is a major gesture that she can make both for him and for herself, for the mere fact that she wins him over with a completely uncommon weapon that has very little contact with her very recognisable and primordial female seductiveness, at the same time catching him in a trap from which he can escape only as a proven and frequently disgraced coward. To make a man your friend really is an exploit worth of admiration, because of all the hardships that, by way of being an authentic feat, it entails.
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