Karolina Slunéčková

Karolina Slunéčková, (born Karolína Olga Slunéčková) (8 April 1934 – 11 June 1983), working under the name Olga Sluníčková,[1] was a Czech actress, and wife of actor Rudolf Vodrážka.[2]

Karolina Slunéčková
nicknames:Karolka, Olinka, Olga
Born
Karolína Olga Slunéčková

8 April 1934
Died11 June 1983
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Occupationactress

Life

Karolina as Natasha in one of her first roles at the Theater in Vinohrady War and Peace

Karolina Slunéčková was born on 8 April 1934 in Kladno.[3] She moved with her parents to Ústí nad Labem. During the occupation of the Sudetenland by the German population, they were not able to emigrate, so throughout the war they went to the German school.

The essence of the acting was handed over by Professor Věra Petáková. When her love and passion for playing did not calm down during the years and her dream was not able to talk to her, she went to study in Českých Budějovic, where she studied at Theatre Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts (DAMU).[4]

In 1956, immediately after the end of DAMU, she got an engagement at the Vinohrady Theatre[4] (at that time the Theater of the Czechoslovak Army). From the very beginning, she played great roles, such as Natasha in War and Peace, starting with her long monologue to the audience. Each of her roles was always different but completely authentic and distinctive. She played dramatic and comedy. For her role in life we can consider the role of Margaret in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof(1966), where half the performance took place in a black jumpsuit. Only two performances were filmed, namely A Flea in Her Ear (1969) and The Man Who Came to Dinner (1977).

Karolina got the biggest chance in the movie The Orange Boy (1975), where she played the mother of Otakar Brousek Junior's mother.[5]

Karolina met future husband Rudolf Vodrážka while still at school. After a few years they married and in 1960 their son Rudolf was born.[5]

Just a week before her death, she came to the theater, pleased to work again. Unfortunately she never looked at the stage. She died on 11 June 1983 at age 49.[6]

Selected theater roles

  • 1977 George S. Kaufman, Moss Hart: The Man Who Came to Dinner, Lorraine Sheldonová, Vinohrady Theatre, directed by Stanislav Remunda

Radio roles

[7]

gollark: Anything could be None and you won't know until it is too late.
gollark: No it's not. It's like `Maybe` but can apply to any type, it's horrible.
gollark: It's uncool. Down with `None`!
gollark: It now does that and works fine.
gollark: Currently attempting to fix what's basically a thread-safety issue in the counter thing.

References

  1. Czech film, page 153
  2. Czech Theater page 115
  3. "Karolína Slunéčková" (in Polish). filmweb.pl. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  4. "Tajemství Karoliny Slunéčkové: Byla na černochy, ale románek měla s Munzarem!" [The secret of Karolina Slunéčková: She was black, but she had a romance with Munzar] (in Czech). AHA Online. 28 October 2013.
  5. Czech film pages 153–156.
  6. "Tahle herečka měla nejkrásnější nohy v Československu" [This actress had the most beautiful legs in Czechoslovakia] (in Czech). Sedmička Týden. 20 October 2013. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  7. Velíšek,, Martin (9 June 2016). Sen noci svatojánské – dvě archivní nahrávky z let 1950 a 1964 [Midsummer Nights Dream – Two archival recordings from 1950 and 1964] (in Czech). Czechoslavakian radio. Retrieved 8 November 2017.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)

Bibliography

  • Česká divadla : encyklopedie divadelních souborů [Czech Theater: encyclopedia of theater ensembles] (in Czech). Prague: Divadelní ústav. 2000. ISBN 8070081074
  • Fikejz, Milos (2008). Český film : herci a herečky. III. díl : S–Ž [Czech film: actors and actresses. III. part: S-W .]. Prague: Libri. ISBN 9788072773534
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