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Maria Plyta (27 November 1915 – 4 March 2006) was a Greek film director and screenwriter known for her work with the melodramatic and her capacity to convey a distinctly feminine sense of culture, civilization, and identity. Through her work, she managed to create the space necessary for a female voice to speak in the first person and be heard.

Early life
Not much is known regarding Plyta’s personal life as she maintained a relatively quiet life and spent much of her time away from the spotlight. She was born in Thessaloniki on November 26th 1915 and became a single mother in adulthood, it is not known what happened to her partner, only that her last name was hyphenated until 1954. She stated once that she never pictured herself working in film until she found herself "alone and with little money", presumably after becoming a single woman. She worked as a novelist and playwright prior to stepping into the film industry. Following the German occupation, she released her first novels, “Bound Wings” in 1944 and “Chains” in 1946. Her first role in the film industry was that of artistic director and producer for the films "Marinos Kontaras" and "Marina"[1]. Her directing career began in 1948 with her adaption of Dimitris Bogris's “The Engagements” (T’arravoniasmata), released in 1950 and featuring Aimilios Veakis in the leading role.

She recounts, in the only known interview she ever gave, in 1979 that she was inclined to become a filmmaker for two reasons: to see her characters portrayed on screen and to support herself financially

Life and Career
Maria Plyta is considered a pioneer in Greek cinema. Working alongside Athenian writers and directors Alekos Sakellarios and Giorgios Tzavellas, she managed to slowly begin creating a name for herself in a heavily male-dominated field. For the first time in Greek cinematic history, female experience was becoming a central narrative through the newfound establishment of the female gaze. Her debut film, “The Engagements,” which was based on a play by the same name, was released in 1950, and it marked the first time a woman in Greece signed a film as the director.

Plyta was known for her use of the melodramatic as a genre. Her work is characterized by dark atmospheres depicting trauma and loss through her interior settings, lighting, and effective camera shots. When asked what she thought the melodramatic consisted of, she replied, “The melodramatic was not only in the whole of the story but also in the direction. For example, if someone was stubborn, we took it out through a close-up of the clenched fist." She used physicality and physical elements within her scenes to establish metaphors in her melodramatic movies, such as the depiction of alienation through domestic chores, or coercion through brief glimpses into the bedroom. The most obvious example of this skill can be found in the 1962 film, "The Shoe-Shine Boy", when two young characters begin to have sex and a cross appears above them on the wall symbolizing the relationship of the practice of marriage with regard to intercourse.

Filmography
* please note that translations vary regarding the film titles