Birthday:
Birthday:

Manos Hatzidakis (also spelled Hadjidakis; Greek: Μάνος Χατζιδάκις; 23 October 1925 – 15 June 1994) was a Greek composer and theorist of Greek music, widely considered to be one of the greatest Greek composers and one of the most globally recognised. His legacy and contribution are widespread among the works of contemporary Greek music, through the second half of the 20th and into the 21st century. He was also one of the main proponents of the "Éntekhno" form of music (along with Mikis Theodorakis). In 1960, he received an Academy Award for Best Original Song for his song Never on Sunday from the film of the same name. Hatzidakis was born on 23 October 1925 in Xanthi, Greece, to lawyer Georgios Hatzidakis, who came from the village of Myrthios, Agios Vasileios in the Rethymno prefecture in Crete; and Aliki Arvanitidou, who came from Adrianoupolis. His musical education began at the age of four and consisted of piano lessons from the Armenian pianist Anna Altunian. At the same time, he learned to play the violin and the accordion. After the separation of his parents, Hatzidakis moved permanently to Athens in 1932 with his mother. A few years later in 1938, his father died in an aircraft accident. This event, in combination with the beginning of World War II, brought the family into a difficult financial situation. The young Hatzidakis earned his livelihood as a docker at the port, an ice seller at the Fix factory, an employee in Megalokonomou's photography shop and as an assistant nurse at the 401 Military Hospital. At the same time, he expanded his musical knowledge by studying advanced music theory with Menelaos Pallandios, in the period 1940-1943. At the same time, he studied philosophy at the University of Athens. However, he never completed this course. During this period, he met and connected with other musicians, writers and intellectuals. Among these were Nikos Gatsos, George Seferis, Odysseas Elytis, Angelos Sikelianos and the artist Yannis Tsarouchis. During the last period of the Axis occupation of Greece, he was an active participant in the Greek Resistance through membership of the United Panhellenic Organization of Youth (EPON), the youth branch of the major resistance organisation EAM, where he met Mikis Theodorakis with whom he soon developed a strong friendship. Although he had made a statement on the exigency of Greece's entrance to the EEC (European Economic Community, later: European Union), he believed that within the European realm, Greece would be culturally assimilated completely. In the later years of his life, Hatzidakis explained that his work was meant not to entertain but to reveal. Further, he disclaimed part of his work, written for the Greek cinema and theater, as non-representative contract undertaking of his. ... Source: Article "Manos Hatzidakis" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Birthday: October 22, 1925
Death: June 15, 1994

June 12, 1974

December 12, 1955

September 02, 1964

March 05, 1956

October 24, 1960

January 14, 1952

May 09, 1968

April 04, 1955

January 01, 1988

January 01, 1946

April 01, 1957

August 14, 1956

January 30, 1960

May 24, 1960

October 01, 1961

May 10, 1984

April 14, 1968

August 21, 1975

January 01, 1973

September 23, 1991

December 28, 1955

February 08, 1960

December 15, 1963

December 11, 1963

September 13, 1971

February 06, 1954

February 20, 1961

November 16, 1959

March 14, 1960

October 29, 1956

November 13, 1961

July 18, 1955

September 05, 1973

January 01, 1957

November 07, 2018

November 03, 1952

April 01, 1983

November 11, 1963

June 18, 1958
November 06, 1958

January 01, 1956

December 27, 1957

October 30, 1961

March 09, 1959

January 01, 1959

November 28, 1958

October 01, 1979

March 11, 1961

June 20, 1962

August 01, 1957

August 01, 1962

May 08, 1958

April 12, 1995

February 10, 1958

March 18, 1957

June 24, 1960

June 10, 1970

October 20, 2025

December 16, 1963

December 03, 1951

February 06, 2026