George Voskovec
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2022) |
George Voskovec | |
---|---|
Sasau, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary | |
Died | July 1, 1981 Pearblossom, California, U.S. | (aged 76)
Resting place | Olšany Cemetery, Prague |
Citizenship | (until 1955) |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1926–1981 |
Spouses |
|
Children | 2 |
Jiří Voskovec (Czech pronunciation: [ˈjɪr̝iː ˈvoskovɛts] ⓘ), born Jiří Wachsmann and known in the United States as George Voskovec (June 19, 1905 – July 1, 1981)[1] was a Czech-American actor. Throughout much of his career, he was associated with actor and playwright Jan Werich. In the U.S., he is known for his role as the polite Juror #11 in the 1957 film 12 Angry Men.
Life and career
This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2022) |
Voskovec was born as Jiří Wachsmann in Sázava in Bohemia to Jiřina Valentina Marie (née Pinkasová; 1867-1939) and
Václav Vilém Eduard (
He attended school in Prague and Dijon, France. In 1927, together with Werich, he joined the Osvobozené divadlo (Liberated Theater), which had been created two years earlier by members of the avant-garde Devětsil group, Jiří Frejka and Jindřich Honzl. After disagreements led Frejka to leave the group in 1927, Honzl asked Voskovec and Werich, both law students who had created a sensation with their Vest Pocket Revue that year, to join the theatre. When Honzl, who had directed their productions, left in 1929, Voskovec and Werich took control of the theatre and changed its name to the Liberated Theatre of Voskovec and Werich, assuming all responsibility for direction, writing, librettos, and other artistic decisions.[citation needed]
The Liberated became a center for Czech clownery, a reaction to contemporary political and societal problems. Their performances began with the primary goal of evoking laughter through fantasy, but with the changing political situation in Germany their work became increasingly anti-fascist, which led to the closure of the Liberated Theater after the Munich Agreement in 1938.[citation needed]
Both Voskovec and Werich fled to the United States in early 1939. For the rest of his life, Voskovec lived primarily in the United States, interrupted only by brief stays in Czechoslovakia in 1948 and in France from 1948 to 1950. Until the mid-1940s, Voskovec worked and wrote mostly with Jan Werich, but after Werich's return to Socialist Czechoslovakia, they met only a few more times. After his return to the United States in 1950, Voskovec was detained at Ellis Island for eleven months for his alleged sympathy for Communism.[citation needed]
Although Voskovec lived in three countries and his maternal grandmother was French, he always maintained that "I am a born and bred Czech." In 1955, he became an American citizen.
Voskovec acted in 72 movies. Only the first five of these were Czech; the rest being American or British. His most famous American movie role was the polite Juror #11 in
In 1975, he published the Czech spoken
Voskovec starred on Broadway in 1961 along with Hal Holbrook in Do You Know the Milky Way by German playwright Karl Wittlinger. In 1964, he appeared in an episode of The Fugitive.[citation needed]
Death
Voskovec died in 1981 of a heart attack in Pearblossom, California, at the age of 76. He is survived by two daughters, Victoria and Georgeanne. His interment was at Olšany Cemetery in Prague.
Minor planet
Selected filmography
- The May Fairy (1926) - Ríša
- Ve spárech upíra (1927)
- Paní Katynka z Vaječného trhu (1929) - Iškariot
- Pudr a benzín (1932) - Driver
- Peníze nebo život (1932) - Pepík
- Workers, Let's Go (1934) - Filip Kornet, Shuffer
- The World Is Ours (1937) - Newspaper hawker
- Anything Can Happen (1952) - Pavli
- Affair in Trinidad (1952) - Doctor Franz Huebling
- The Iron Mistress (1952) - John James Audubon
- 12 Angry Men (1957) - Juror #11
- The 27th Day (1957) - Prof. Klaus Bechner
- Uncle Vanya (1957) - Voinitsky (Uncle Vanya)
- The Bravados (1958) - Gus Steinmetz
- Wind Across the Everglades (1958) - Aaron Nathanson
- BUtterfield 8 (1960) - Dr. Tredman
- Hamlet (1964) - Player King
- The Spy Who Came in from the Cold(1965) - East German Defense Attorney
- Mister Buddwing (1966) - Shabby Old Man
- The Desperate Ones (1967) - Doctor
- The Boston Strangler (1968) - Peter Hurkos
- The Iceman Cometh (1973) - Piet Wetjoen
- Man on a Swing (1974) - Dr. Nicholas Holnar
- The Nativity(1978) - Joachim
- Somewhere in Time (1980) - Dr. Gerald Finney
- Barbarosa (1982) - Herman Pahmeyer (final film role)
References
- ^ "California Death Index". Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2007-10-09.
- ^ "Jiří Voskovec".
- ISBN 978-3-540-29925-7.
External links
- George Voskovec at IMDb
- George Voskovec at the Internet Broadway Database
- George Voskovec at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
- Voskovec and Werich on Radio Praha
- Between Art and Life: Voskovec and Werich and The Affair of 1934 – by Holly Raynard, University of California, Los Angeles
- Czech music in exile: Jaroslav Jezek – History of collaborative work with Jaroslav Jezek
- George Voskovec at Find a Grave