Czech actor and filmmaker Juraj Herz died on April 8, at
the age of 83. He became famous after making one of the most important
Czechoslovak films, “The Cremator”, in 1968. Herz was born on September 4, 1934
in Kežmarok Czechoslovakia. He studied at a secondary school in Bratislava and
at university in Prague, where he stayed and worked at the Semafor Theatre and
at the film studios in Barrandov. In 1987 he emigrated to Germany. Herz has
made several great films that have become cult movies, like Petrolejové lampy
(Oil Lamps, 1971), The Cremator, Ferat Vampire (1981), and Sweet Amusements of
Past Summer (1969). His last big movie was Habermann’s Mill (2010). Herz
appeared as a poker player in the 1964 Czech western “Lemonade Joe.”
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That's not Juraj Herz in the picture, it's another actor, Miloš Nedbal. Herz is the guy in the middle: https://kultura.zpravy.idnes.cz/foto.aspx?foto1=TS728810_joe.jpg
ReplyDeleteThanks for the correction.
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