*** Welcome to piglix ***

Milena Jelinek


Milena Jelinek (Czech: Milena Jelínková, née Tobolová) (born 1935) is a Czech American screenwriter, playwright and teacher. She wrote the screenplay for the film Zapomenuté světlo (Forgotten Light), which was awarded three Czech Lions in 1997. Her name is associated with the golden generation of Czech filmmakers, known as Czech New Wave. She was married to the late Frederick Jelinek.

From 1955, she studied at the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. The film director Ivan Passer was one of her classmates, and the writer Milan Kundera was her literature teacher. One of her early screenplays, written under her maiden name and titled Snadný život (An Easy Life), was filmed by Miloš Makovec and Jiří Brdečka. Already during her studies, she took part in various anti-communist protests. According to her own words, the Czechoslovak president Antonín Novotný in a speech against "unreliable writers" even listed her name as a "subversive person".

Frederick Jelinek emigrated from Czechoslovakia to the USA in 1949, however, in 1957 he visited Vienna as a participant of a professional conference. During his stay, he decided to visit his old friends in Prague. He met and befriended Milena Tobolová during a meeting with the film director Miloš Forman in a Prague's café. Gradually, they became close and eventually they decided to marry. However, their application for marriage was denied on several occasions by communist authorities. In 1960, Frederick Jelinek was proclaimed "persona non grata" in Czechoslovakia and his planned visits were banned permanently. Coincidentally, the same year Tobolová received permission by the government to leave the country. Her son William Jelinek later claimed: "As an inaugural gift to Kennedy, the Czechs released nine dissidents and one of them was my mother". In January, 1961, she left to the USA and shortly after that she married Jelinek.


...
Wikipedia

...