Hardi Tiidus
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Hardi Tiidus | |
|---|---|
Tiidus in 1968 | |
| Born | November 8, 1918 Tallinn, Estonia |
| Died | March 21, 1999 (aged 80) Tallinn, Estonia |
Resting place | Forest Cemetery, Tallinn |
| Alma mater | Gustav Adolf Grammar School University of Tartu |
| Occupations | Television presenter, editor, journalist, translator |
| Known for | Vana hõbe |
Hardi Tiidus (8 November 1918 – 21 March 1999) was an Estonian television presenter, editor, journalist and translator.[1] He worked at Eesti Televisioon (ETV) from 1956 to 1978 and hosted programmes including Vana hõbe, Viis viie vastu and Vabadus, võrdsus, vendlus.[1] He was active in Estonia's quiz-game (mälumäng) culture and translated about fifty books into Estonian.[2] Tiidus was widely known by the nickname Vana Hõbe ("Old Silver").[3]
Tiidus was born in Tallinn on 8 November 1918.[1] He graduated from Gustav Adolf Grammar School in 1937 and studied civil engineering at Tallinn University of Technology from 1937 to 1941.[1] He later graduated from the University of Tartu in 1952 as a historian.[1]
Career
From 1956 to 1978, Tiidus worked at Eesti Televisioon (ETV), where he presented programmes including Vana hõbe, Viis viie vastu and Vabadus, võrdsus, vendlus.[1] ERR coverage of a memoir volume about him also discusses his work as a long-time television/radio staff member and book translator.[4]
Tiidus became a public populariser of classical antiquity through the ETV series Vana hõbe. The ERR archive listing describes the programme as a long-running series about ancient Greece and Rome (134 episodes).[5] A contemporary newspaper profile described it as a 135-part series and noted the publication of his book Vana hõbe. Lugusid Vana-Kreekast ja Vana-Roomast (1997).[6]
Translation work
Film appearances
Tiidus appeared in episodic roles in Estonian films; his screen credits are listed in the Estonian Film Database (EFIS).[8] Selected films include:
- Mehed ei nuta (1968)[9]
- Varastati Vana Toomas (1970)[10]
- Noor pensionär (1972)[11]