Otakar Vávra

Otakar Vávra

Born 02/28/1911
Hradec Králové, Austria-Hungary

Died 09/15/2011 (100 years old)
Prague, Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czech Republic

Biography

Otakar Vávra (1911–2011), director and teacher, a legend of Czech film, whose extensive oeuvre spread across five decades. He made a major impact with two features from 1937 (History of Philosophy and Virginity). These works already showed the characteristic traits of what was to come – a preference for high-grade literary models, well-constructed screenplays, a perfectionist's approach to directing, and collaboration with leading names, often stage actors.

He was chiefly disposed towards realistic dramas treating psychological and historical themes, and his films often conveyed his socio-critical and political awareness (Presentiment, Golden Queen, his Hussite trilogy, Witches' Hammer, The Liberation of Prague). Vávra played a major role in film education, establishing a new concept for FAMU, where he taught a number of principal figures of the New Wave.

MFF Karlovy Vary

Screenwriter

Director

Actor

Guest