Miklós Bródy

Miklós Bródy (30 March 1877 – 17 December 1949) was a Hungarian–Romanian composer, conductor, and chess master.

His brother István (1882–1941) was a theatre director, and his son Tamás (1913–1990) was a composer and conductor.

He translated and wrote operettas and set to music several poems by, among others, Endre Ady, Lajos Áprily, Goethe and Heine.

B. C. (1903); A hollandi lány (1908, translation of Miss Hook of Holland by Paul Rubens); Férjhez megy a feleségem (My Wife is Getting Married, operetta, 1921); Thámár (operetta, premiered in Cluj-Napoca in 1922, and in Budapest under the title Az ígéret földje (The Promised Land) in 1929).

[2] He played for Romania in Chess Olympiads: He won team bronze medal at Budapest 1926.

Bródy in 1923