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Gustav Opočenský

1920-12-07 – 1992-12-17 (age 72) Prague, Czechoslovakia
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Biography

Gustav Opočenský was the son of Bohemian poet and journalist Gustav Roger of Opočenský (1881-1949).

Originally, he began to study law, but after closing Nazi colleges in 1939 he headed for the theater, close to art, thanks to his father. He did not undergo any professional training, but after the war he gained his first permanent engagement in the Realistic Theater in Prague (1945-1946). Due to his unbridled inheritance, his father in the mid-1950s came into conflict with the Communist power, he had to go to the theater in Cologne from Pardubice and eventually in 1956 he banned the ban on artistic activity. Then he worked as a miner, later a worker in Stalin's races in Záluží near Most, but at the beginning of the following decade he managed to return to the theater.

Subsequent banning of activity silenced Opočenský for twelve years, he reappeared in the film MARATÓN (1968).

We can also remind him of his comedic role as an old Nazi in the movie ZÍTRA VSTANU AND I WILL BE TEA (1977).

Gustav Opočensky's wife was actress Eva Strupplová (* 1926). Bohemian and artistic family genes also accompany the lives of their two sons, the artist and musician Petr Opočenský (* 1950) and sculptor Pavel Opočensky (* 1954).

Known For

Jan Žižka
Jan Žižka

1956

as Jindrich from Hradec

Witchhammer
Against All
Against All

1957

as Mikulas

Marathon
The Ear
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Evropa tančila valčík

1989

as Count Hartenberg

Romaneto
Jan Hus
Jan Hus

1955

as Popish Messenger

Days of Betrayal
Shadows of a Hot Summer
Shadows of a Hot Summer

1978

as Ranený Banderovec

Oldrich and Bozena
Funeral Ceremony
Cesta na jihozápad
Cesta na jihozápad

1989

as Topahekuahah

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Svědek umírajícího času

1991

as Fels (voice)

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Záchvěv strachu

1984

as Gravedigger

On a Wayward Princess
On a Wayward Princess

1987

as Luciper