Michaà  Waszyà Âski (29 September 1904 â 20 February 1965) was first a film director in Poland, then in Italy, and later (as Michael Waszynski) a producer of major American films, mainly in Spain. Known for his elegance and impeccable manners, he was known by his acquaintances as "the prince".
Waszyà Âski was born as Mosze Waks into a Jewish family in 1904 in Kovel, a small town in Volhynia (now in Ukraine), which at the time was part of Imperial Russia. He came from a moderately wealthy Jewish family of Hasidic descent. His father Piotr was a blacksmith, and his mother, Cecylia (née Flesz), a poultry merchant. Waks's artistic inclinations were noticed while still in cheder, although he was also regarded as an undisciplined child. In 1918, he was expelled from the yeshiva in Kovel, according to his own account, for asking about the existence of devils, for which he was slapped by a teacher. A year later, he left Kovel.
In Kiev, Waks participated in local theater productions, collaborating on a puppet theater with Konstantin Mardzhanov, Grigori Kozintsev, Sergei Yutkevich, and Aleksei Kapler. From Ukraine, he moved first to Warsaw and later to Berlin. As a young man he worked as an assistant director under the legendary German director F.W. Murnau.
In 1922, while living in Warsaw, he changed his name to the more Polish-sounding Michaà  Waszyà Âski at the suggestion of director Wiktor Biegaà Âski, and converted to Catholicism.
In 1931, Waszyà Âski moved from the poorer predominantly Jewish district of Muranów to Warsaw's more upscale Saska KÃÂpa neighborhood. Throughout the coming decade, he became a prolific film director in Poland, directing 37 of the 147 films made in Poland in that decade, or one out of four.
Along with popular films in Polish produced for a wide local audience, he returned to his native language of Yiddish when in 1937 he directed an important film in The Dybbuk. Based on the widely-produced play by author and ethnographer S. An-sky, the film is often considered among the greatest achievements of Yiddish cinema. Released internationally, Waszyà Âski's The Dybbuk is regarded by scholars today as a monument of the rich cultural life of East European Jewry before the Holocaust.
At the beginning of World War II Waszyà Âski fled to Biaà Âystok. That city was taken in mid-September 1939 by the Germans, but within weeks, as a result of the MolotovâÂÂRibbentrop pact, the city was given to the Soviet Union and occupied by its army. Waszyà Âski began a new career as a theater director, first in Biaà Âystok and later in Moscow, before being exiled by Soviet authorities to Siberia.
Then, in the summer of 1941, after Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Waszyà Âski joined the newly formed Polish Army of general Wà Âadysà Âaw Anders (loyal to the Polish government in Exile in London) and subsequently was relocated to Persia (Iran), Iraq, Mandatory Palestine, and later, as a soldier of the 2nd Corps of the Polish Army, to Egypt and Italy. As a member of the army film unit, he filmed the Battle of Monte Cassino, where the Polish Army suffered great losses, but helped to win the day. After World War II, he stayed in Italy, where he directed a Polish-language feature film about the Battle of Monte Cassino, and then three Italian films.
Later in his career, Waszyà Âski worked as a producer for the major American studios in Italy and (primarily) Spain, credited as Michael Waszynski. His credits include The Quiet American (1958) (associate producer), El Cid (1961), and The Fall of the Roman Empire (film) (1964) (executive producer and associate producer).
He died of a heart attack on 20 February 1965 in Madrid and was buried in a ceremonious Roman Catholic funeral in Rome.