Zsazsa Gábor’s ashes laid to rest in Budapest
The ashes of Zsazsa Gábor were laid to rest on Tuesday in the Fiumei Street graveyard in Budapest, almost five years after her death.
Prince Frederic von Anhalt, the Hollywood celebrity’s last husband, brought the Golden Globe Award-winning actress’s ashes from America, thereby fulfilling her wish to rest forever in her homeland. The National Heritage Institute and the Hungarian Hollywood Council were also involved in bringing her remains to Hungary.
A mourning ceremony for Gábor (originally Sári Gábor) was first held in Los Angeles in 2016.
Von Anhalt said at today’s ceremony that the event marked a celebration of the life of the actress. He said she had never forgotten her homeland during her career.
Éva Vándor, the actress who dubbed Gábor’s voice into Hungarian said Gábor had been the first real celebrity, “a Hungarian diva” from whom the American dream had come true. She described Gábor as “cheerful, humorous and brave”.
In his farewell speech, Balázs Bokor, the president of the Hungarian Hollywood Council, noted that Gábor hadn’t reached celebrity status via Facebook or Instagram. S
he had remained a Hungarian for her entire life, he said, and while “Zsazsa wanted to see the world, she always thought of Hungary.”
Bokor also noted that plans for a Hungarian film chronicling the life of Gábor was in the pipeline.
Gábor was among the few Hungarians to have received a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.
In 1936, Gábor became a Miss Hungary and moved to America with her family five years later.
She married nine times, tying the knot with Von Anhalt in 1986, and died on December 18, 2016.
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Source: MTI
She and her sister EVA – two of the brightest stars in the US- very smart and funny
my grandmother Torkos Margit sometimes traveled and cooked for the mom & the things she would tell me when she got home makes me feel that the girls were just a magnification of Joli’s personality. The apples didn’t fall from the tree.
LOVED watching E’va in Green Acres, a popular tv show in Canada when I was a teen. My family had ‘gentlemen farms’ but it didn’t go like that in my family. We were more like average Magyar, capable of doing anything and everything to get ahead in life. So it was extra funny what a useless adult both characters were in that sit-com.