
Director
Otakar Vávra
Born 1911 · Hradec Králové, Austria-Hungary [now Czech Republic]
Otakar Vávra (28 February 1911 – 15 September 2011) was a Czech film director, screenwriter and pedagogue. Vávra attended universities in Brno and Prague, where he studied architecture. During 1929–30, while still a student, he participated in the making of a handful of documentaries and wrote movie scripts. In 1931, he produced the experimental film Světlo proniká tmou. The first movie he directed was 1937's Panenství. His 1938 film The Merry Wives was praised in Variety for "first-rate direction, a salty yarn and elaborate production effort", even though it had undergone certain cuts because it was considered too "ribald" by American censors. Vávra was a member of the Communist Party from 1945 to 1989. After the Communists seized power in 1948, Vávra adapted quickly to the new political climate and produced films praising the current regime and supporting the new, official interpretation of the past. In the 1950s he filmed the "Hussite Trilogy", one of his most famous works, consisting of Jan Hus (1954), Jan Žižka (1955) and Against All (1957).[2] In the 1960s, Vávra made his most celebrated films Zlatá reneta (1965), Romance for Bugle (1966) and Witchhammer (1969). Romance for Bugle was entered into the 5th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Special Silver Prize. In the 1970s Vávra produced his "War Trilogy" consisting of semi-documentary movies Dny zrady, Sokolovo and Osvobození Prahy, all being heavily influenced by communist propaganda. The film Dny zrady (Days of Betrayal, 1973) was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival where it won a Diploma. In 1979 he was a member of the jury at the 11th Moscow International Film Festival. Since the 1950s Vávra taught film direction at Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. Among his students were several directors of the "Czech New Wave".
Directed

Witchhammer
Director · 1970
Láska
Director · 1949

Krakatit
Director · 1948
Moje Praha
Director · 2002

The Night Guest
Director · 1961

Humoreska
Director · 1939

The Masked Lover
Director · 1940

Camel Through The Eye Of A Needle
Director · 1937
We Live in Prague
Director · 1934

Jan Žižka
Director · 1956
Vlast vítá
Director · 1945

The Merry Wives
Director · 1938

Jan Hus
Director · 1955

Golden Queen
Director · 1965

The Girl in Blue
Director · 1940
Presentiment
Director · 1947

Rozina the Love Child
Director · 1945

Silent Barricade
Director · 1949
Acting
Writing

Witchhammer
Screenplay · 1970
Year of the Revolution 1848
Creative Producer · 1949

Passage in the Paradise
Screenplay · 1936
Láska
Screenplay · 1949

Krakatit
Creative Producer · 1948

Morality Above All Else
Screenplay · 1937

Uličnice
Screenplay · 1936
Moje Praha
Story · 2002

Three Men in the Snow
Screenplay · 1936

Hostinec „U kamenného stolu“
Screenplay · 1949

Na dobré stopě
Creative Producer · 1949
Wild Beasts
Creative Producer · 1948

