Jeremy Irons in NY Times T Magazine – Hungarian Rhapsody

Hungarian Rhapsody

Culture, Travel   By KATHRYN BRANCH| September 20, 2011, 6:26 pm

Original article HERE

Photo by Monika Höfler

A rich film tradition and low production costs have long brought stars to Budapest, among them Jeremy Irons, 63, pictured here on the shores of the Danube River. Irons made “Nijinski,” his first movie in the capital, in 1980, and returned to make “M. Butterfly,” “Being Julia” and Showtime’s “The Borgias.” When not on set, Irons explores the city’s “wonderful crumbling faded beauty” on his motorcycle. “It’s very hard to find the soul of a city,” he says, but he suggests starting at the Dohany Street Synagogue (011-36-1-413-5500), the Hungarian State Opera (right; opera.hu) and the Western Railway Station (Terez korut at Nyugati ter), designed by the Eiffel Company of Paris. Irons also recommends Cafe Kor (011-36-1-311-0053; cafekor.com), Pomo D’Oro (011-36-1-302-6473; pomodorobudapest.com) and Nobu (noburestaurants.com/budapest), inside the Kempinski Hotel (011-36-1-429-3777; kempinski.com), where he usually stays.

Jeremy Irons attends opening of Nobu Budapest

Jeremy Irons attends the official opening of Nobu restaurant in Budapest, October 10, 2010.

British actor Jeremy Irons was on the red carpet at he Nobu Restaurant in Budapest on October 10, 2010, during the official opening. NOBU Restaurant had been opened in a business partnership between Nobu Matsuhisa, actor Robert De Niro and other managing partners. With the original restaurant in New York, the Nobu brand is now an empire that spans across the globe, from London to Tokyo, Las Vegas to Malibu, Milan to Miami Beach, Hong Kong to Waikiki, Melbourne to San Diego, Los Angeles to Dubai and Moscow to Cape Town.

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AFP PHOTO / FERENC ISZA (Photo credit should read FERENC ISZA/AFP/Getty Images)

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