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Gustav Opočenský
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.
7.0Jan Žižka
1956
5.6Marathon
1968
6.2Tomorrow I'll Wake Up and Scald Myself with Tea
1977
7.6Witchhammer
1970
6.2On a Wayward Princess
1987
5.5Putování Jana Amose
1983
7.2Shadows of a Hot Summer
1978
5.6Days of Betrayal
1973
7.0Romaneto
1981
7.2The Ear
1970
6.3Jan Hus
1955
4.7Hry lásky šálivé
1971
10.0Cesta na jihozápad
1989
6.2Concert at the End of Summer
1980
6.0Funeral Ceremony
1969
4.5Oldrich and Bozena
1985
6.1Against All
1957
5.0Za volantem nepřítel
1975
4.3Na konci světa
1975
9.0Ballad for a Bandit
1979