Jana Andrsová

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Jana Andrsová
File:Jana Andrsová (Hradec Králové, 2016).jpg
Andrsová in Hradec Králové, on the set of a music video in which she appears, 2016
Born (1939-08-08) 8 August 1939 (age 84)
Prague
 Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
Nationality Czechoslovakian, Czech
Education Dance Conservatory in Prague
Occupation actress, ballerina
Spouse(s) Saša Večtomov (m. 1964–1989, his death)
Children Veronika, Andrea, Johana

Jana Andrsová, married Večtomová (born August 8, 1939), is a Czech ballerina and actress. In 1957 she graduated from the Dance Conservatory in Prague, then began to work with the Vitus Nejedly Army Art Ensemble.[1]

Laterna Magika

From 1959 to 1978 Ms. Andrsová worked with Josef Svoboda's avant-garde multimedia company Laterna Magika,[2] initially as a chorus girl and later (beginning in 1973) as a prima ballerina.[1] In Allen Hughes' review of the company's August 1964 Carnegie Hall debut of a presentation that gave 23 performances at that venue under the direction of Miloš Forman,[3] they are described as "a Czech theatrical spectacle that first came to international attention at the Brussels World's Fair."[4][n 1] In 1966 Andrsová starred in Alfréd Radok's choreographed multimedia production Laterna Magika: Variation 66, The Opening of the Wells, cowritten by Forman in collaboration with Jan Švankmajer.[5]

Filmography

  • Strakonický dudák (1955) – wood nymph
  • Jak se Franta naučil bát (1959) – miller's daughter Veronika
  • Rusalka (1962) – Rusalka (part sung by Milada Šubrtová)[6]
  • Hoffmannovy povídky (1962) – Olympia
  • Dvanáctého (1963) – dancer
  • Svět je báječné místo k narození (1968) – herself
  • Bludiště moci (1969) – ballerina
  • Kočičí princ (1978) – mother

Notes

  1. "Laterna Magika is not a simple affair," Hughes continues by way of introduction. "It combines motion pictures, stereophonic sound and live performers in so elaborate a way that a considerable amount of construction has had to be done in Carnegie Hall to make it work. The stage has been extended and built up with a series of platforms and steps shrouded in black velvet hangings, and several boxes in the back of the auditorium have been made into rooms containing projection equipment. At one point, a small instrumental ensemble plays from a side location in one of the seating tiers."

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 FDb, Jana Andrsová.
  2. Danková, Z., "Laterna magika uvede Otvírání studánek—obnovené představení", Epoch Times, Mar. 9, 2013.
  3. Dietz, D., The Complete Book of 1970s Broadway Musicals (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015), p. 433.
  4. Hughes, A., "Theater: A Musical Spectacle From Czechoslovakia", New York Times, Aug. 4, 1964.
  5. Miloš Forman's Official Website, About Theatre.
  6. filmexporthomevideo, "Rusalka Jana Andrsová", YouTube, May 30, 2012.