Milos Forman


Director
Milos Forman

About

Also Known As
Tomas Jan
Born
February 18, 1932

Biography

Perhaps the most famous and acclaimed filmmaker to hail from Czechoslovakia, Milos Forman first found success in his native country before doing likewise in Hollywood. Forman earned international acclaim with films like "Black Peter" (1964), "Loves of a Blonde" (1965) and "The Fireman's Ball" (1967), all of which marked a distinct thematic and stylistic break with the prior generation o...

Family & Companions

Jana Brejchova
Wife
Actor. Born c. 1940; first wife; married from 1951 to 1956; appeared in Ivo Novak's "Stenata/Puppies" (1957).
Vera Kresadlova
Wife
Singer, actor. Married in 1964; separated c. 1968; mother of Forman's twin sons; appeared in Forman's first short film, "Konkurs/Competition" (1961); Forman filed for divorce in L.A. in February 1999.
Beverly D'Angelo
Companion
Actor. Met during the filming of "Hair" (1979); no longer together.
Martina Zborilova
Wife
Mother of Forman's twin sons born in October 1998; married in Connecticut on November 27, 1999.

Bibliography

"Turnaround"
Milos Forman and Jan Novak, Random House (1993)
"Milos Forman: A Bio-Bibliography"
Thomas J Slater, Greenwood Press (1987)

Biography

Perhaps the most famous and acclaimed filmmaker to hail from Czechoslovakia, Milos Forman first found success in his native country before doing likewise in Hollywood. Forman earned international acclaim with films like "Black Peter" (1964), "Loves of a Blonde" (1965) and "The Fireman's Ball" (1967), all of which marked a distinct thematic and stylistic break with the prior generation of Czechoslovakian filmmaking that played a major role in shaping that country's cinematic New Wave of the 1960s. After leaving Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia following the Prague Spring in 1968, Forman embarked on a successful career in Hollywood that saw him make some of cinema's most acclaimed and decorated films of all time. In 1975, he directed the subversive, anti-establishment drama, "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," which became only the second film ever to win Oscars in all five major categories. In the next decade, he directed the lush and vibrant "Amadeus" (1984), which many considered to be one of the best films of the 1980s. Though he tapered off a bit with "The People vs. Larry Flynt" (1996) and "Man on the Moon" (1999), Forman nonetheless made the case for being one of the most accomplished foreign directors to have made considerable contributions to American cinema.

Born on Feb. 18, 1932 in Caslav, Czechoslovakia (later the Czech Republic), Forman was raised in a Jewish home that was torn apart by the Nazi atrocities of World War II. His father, Rudolf, was a professor of education who was arrested by the Nazis in 1940 and sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp, where he died in 1944. His mother, Anna, a Protestant suspected of being Jewish, was also arrested in 1940 and sent to Auschwitz, where she died in 1943. After the war, Forman and his two older brothers, Blahoslav and Pavel, were raised by his uncles and friends of the family. Despite the Communist takeover in the late 1940s, he was fortunate enough to live in a country that allowed for Western influence - movies, books, television - to peacefully exist, giving him the desire to enter into a creative field. Even before the war, Forman was exposed to the theater by his parents, leading him to desire a career as a playwright or director. By the time he was old enough to pursue his dreams, he applied to the Drama Institute at the University of Prague, but was summarily rejected. Instead, he attended Film Institute, where he spent the last few years of his enrollment directing documentaries for Czech television. Forman also collaborated on the script for Martin Fric's comedy, "Leave It to Me" (1963).

Following his graduation from Film Institute in 1955, Forman joined the staff of Laterna Magika, an experimental theatre that used a combination of still photography, film and live performance to produce non-verbal plays for the benefit of international audiences. A hit at the 1958 World's Fair in Brussels, Forman and his fellow collaborators were fired by the Czech government a few years later. Aided by the unlikely patronage of Nikita Khrushchev, who helped liberalize the arts in the Soviet Union, Forman directed his first film, "The Competition" (1963), a satirical comedy centered around competing musicians. With his next feature, "Black Peter" (1964), he introduced what would become a persistent theme in his work - namely conflict between generations within a family or family-like context. The coming-of-age drama focused on a shy teenager (Ladislav Jakim) who falls in love while struggling with a menial job and a difficult father. The film earned him considerable acclaim in his native Czechoslovakia while wining a Locarano Film Festival Golden Sail Award in Switzerland. Forman cemented his status as a rising international director of note with "Loves of a Blonde" (1965), a subversive romantic comedy about a young woman (Hana Brejchova) in a small Czech town who falls in love with a piano-playing soldier (Vladimir Pucholt) and moves with him to Prague over the objections of her disapproving parents. The film was honored with a Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival.

In early 1968, Czechoslovakia attempted to decentralize its politics and economics through various reforms, which became known as The Prague Spring. After eight months of change throughout the country, the Soviets sent thousands of troops and tanks and retook the country. At the time, Forman was in Paris, while his second wife, Vera Kresadlova, a popular singer and actress, as well as his twin sons, were still in Czechoslovakia. With Forman facing the threat of his livelihood being denied, he separated from his wife and family, moving to Greenwich Village in New York City. He applied for a green card to work as a director, but Immigration services initially refused on the grounds that the Directors Guild of America could not guarantee work. But with the lobbying help of such luminary directors as Mike Nichols and Sidney Lumet, the Directors Guild changed course while Immigration declared that he was allowed to work in the United States. His first American film was "Taking Off" (1971), a critical, but not commercial success that once again ruminated on the generation gap theme. In this dramatic comedy, two straight-laced parent (Lynn Carlin and Buck Henry) traverse the hippified East Village in search of their runaway daughter (Linnea Heacock), only to find themselves lured into the Bohemian lifestyle in an attempt to recapture their youth. Once again, he earned considerable international acclaim, including the Jury Prize at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.

After joining several other international directors to helm a segment of "Visions of Eight" (1973), a non-linear look at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, he directed "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975), an exploration of the irrepressible human spirit in the face of a repressive society that forces individuals to conform. Based on Ken Kesey's counter-culture novel, the subversive drama starred Jack Nicholson as Randle P. McMurphy, a convict with a history of violence who fakes his way into a mental institution in order to spend the rest of his prison term on easy street. But he gets more than he bargains for by running afoul of Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), the hospital's authoritative chief nurse who seeks to quell McMurphy's increasingly wayward behavior, which includes staging an escape to go on a boat ride and a disastrous night of booze and hookers that leads to the suicide of a stuttering, sexually repressed young man (Brad Dourif). Both a critical and box office hit, "Cuckoo's Nest" accomplished that rarest of feats when it became only the second film in history to sweep the top five Academy Awards, earning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Nicholson), Best Actress (Fletcher) and Best Adapted Screenplay (Bo Goldman and Lawrence Hauben).

Switching gears after his Oscar triumph, Forman explored the musical genre in "Hair" (1979), adapting the quintessential anti-establishment stage show which had first captured his imagination upon his arrival to America in the late 1960s. Though he wanted to direct "Hair" at that time, the rights to the material were unavailable. By the time the film was made, however, it had become a period piece, while the loose, revue-like structure posed problems. Working with screenwriter Michael Weller, Forman reinterpreted the material, fashioning yet another tale of young people seeking something more than the conventions dealt to them by society. The tribal aspects of the hippie lifestyle provided a familial context against which the main action played out. Forman staged several brilliant set pieces, particularly the "be-in" in Central Park and Cheryl Barnes' heartbreaking solo "Easy to Be Hard." Abetted by the exquisite camerawork of Miroslav Ondricek and Twyla Tharp's energetic choreography, "Hair" remained one of the best screen adaptations of a stage musical. But despite strong reviews, the film was a failure at the box office, perhaps a result of the passage of time wherein other films had significantly dealt with the 1960s and the Vietnam experience more effectively. Also during this time, Forman became an American citizen and moved to academia, teaching at Columbia University and eventually becoming co-director of its film program.

Forman followed "Hair" with the period drama "Ragtime" (1981), which marked the long-awaited screen return of veteran actor James Cagney, who was lured out of retirement after two decades by the director. Again collaborating with screenwriter Weller, Forman undertook the daunting task of adapting E. L. Doctorow's sprawling, multi-character novel into a concise narrative with a single protagonist. The director chose to concentrate on a few of the book's storylines, notably that of Coalhouse Walker, Jr. (Howard E. Rollins, Jr.), a proud black musician who faces the choice of humiliation or defiance during America's Gilded Age. While visually stunning and featuring several fine performances, including Cagney's turn as police commissioner, the resulting film was a financial failure. For his next project, the director undertook adapting Peter Shaffer's award-winning play, "Amadeus" (1984). The film played upon one of Forman's favorite themes, generational conflict: an older composer, Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), being jealous of the youthful upstart, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Tom Hulce). "Amadeus" was another visually stunning, well-acted piece and the American public responded. The seminal film earned eight Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Actor (F. Murray Abraham), Best Screenplay (Shaffer) and a second Best Director Award for Forman.

After a five year break, during which time he acted in two films - Mike Nichols' "Heartburn" (1986) and Henry Jaglom's "New Year's Day" (1989) - Forman returned to direct the third adaptation of Choderlos de Laclos' epistolary novel, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, "Valmont" (1989). Forman had first become interested in the material while an undergraduate studying with Milan Kundera. Despite a competing project, "Dangerous Liaisons" (1988), Stephen Frears' more famous adaptation, the director nonetheless pushed on. Casting more youthful actors - Annette Bening, Colin Firth, Meg Tilly - Forman helmed a less pungent version of the story that many immediately forgot. In fact, audiences instead embraced Frears' acerbic take and high powered cast, which included Glenn Close, John Malkovich and Michelle Pfeiffer. Returning to a state of semi-retirement, Forman became a published author, releasing his memoirs, "Turnaround: The Autobiography of Milos Forman in 1993. Meanwhile, much of his time during this period was dedicated to his duties at Columbia University while trying to develop an eventually unproduced film, "Hell Camp," based on his own original screenplay.

Forman finally returned to feature directing with "The People vs. Larry Flynt" (1996), a funny, decadent and human look at famed pornographer and First Amendment champion Larry Flynt (Woody Harrelson). Tracing Flynt's life from his days as a strip club owner to the publisher of Hustler magazine, Forman once again focused on themes of an unruly individual battling a repressive society; the latter of which was represented by anti-pornography crusaders Charles Keating (James Cromwell) and Jerry Falwell (Richard Paul). The film received the best critical reviews for Forman since "Amadeus," while the director earned his third Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Staying within the biography genre, Forman directed "Man on the Moon" (1999), a straight-forward look at bizarre comedian Andy Kaufman (Jim Carrey), whose performances bled over into real life, often leaving close friends and family confused as to whether or not he was in character - even up to and after his death from cancer in 1984. After receiving mixed reviews, the film suffered a loss at the box office. After spending an inordinately long amount of time away from the camera, Forman directed "Goya's Ghosts" (2007), a historical drama that focused on the life and times of Spanish painter, Francisco Goya (Stellan Skarsgard), a frequent target of the Inquisition in the form of Brother Lorenzo (Javier Bardem), who becomes infatuated with Goya's beautiful teenager muse (Natalie Portman).

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

A Walk Worthwhile (2010)
Director
Goya's Ghosts (2007)
Director
Man on the Moon (1999)
Director
The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996)
Director
Valmont (1989)
Director
Amadeus (1984)
Director
Ragtime (1981)
Director
Hair (1979)
Director
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975)
Director
Visions of Eight (1973)
Director
Black Peter (1964)
Director
Kdyby ty muziky nebyly (1963)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Generation 68 (2008)
Chelsea on the Rocks (2008)
Himself
Fog City Mavericks (2007)
Tell Them Who You Are (2004)
Himself
Francois Truffaut, An Autobiography (2004)
Himself
Keeping the Faith (2000)
Inside the Academy Awards (1997)
Why Havel? (1991)
Narration
L' Envers du decors: portrait de Pierre Guffroy (1991)
Himself
New Year's Day (1989)
Lazlo--The Landlord
Heartburn (1986)
50 Years of Action! (1986)
Himself
Chytilova vs. Forman (1983)
Himself
Before the Nickelodeon: The Early Cinema Of Edwin S. Porter (1982)
Voice
Meeting Milos Forman (1971)
Himself

Writer (Feature Film)

Goya's Ghosts (2007)
Screenplay
Valmont (1989)
Screenwriter
Le Male du Siecle (1975)
From Story
Black Peter (1964)
Screenplay
Kdyby ty muziky nebyly (1963)
Adaptation
Kdyby ty muziky nebyly (1963)
Screenwriter

Producer (Feature Film)

A Short History of Decay (2014)
Executive Producer
Nomad (2006)
Executive Producer
Way Past Cool (2003)
Executive Producer
Dreams of Love (1992)
Executive Producer

Film Production - Main (Feature Film)

Dead Silence (1988)
Technical Advisor

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Chelsea on the Rocks (2008)
Other
Tell Them Who You Are (2004)
Other
Francois Truffaut, An Autobiography (2004)
Other
L' Envers du decors: portrait de Pierre Guffroy (1991)
Other
Voices From the Attic (1988)
Assistance
50 Years of Action! (1986)
Other

Cast (Special)

Milos Forman - An Outsider in Hollywood (2011)
A Decade Under the Influence (2003)
Himself
The Beatles Revolution (2000)
Interviewee
Hometown Heroes (1998)
Interviewee
Charlie Chaplin: A Tramp's Life (1998)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1998)
The Republic Pictures Story (1991)
American Tribute to Vaclav Havel and a Celebration of Democracy in Czechoslovakia (1990)
Havel's Audience With History (1990)
Milos Forman: Portrait (1989)
The Way We Wear (1988)
The Statue of Liberty (1985)
Voice

Misc. Crew (Special)

A Decade Under the Influence (2003)
Other

Life Events

1945

Became a film buff after the Occupation ended

1950

While a senior at Dejvice high school, organized a drama club and staged an avant-garde musical about Francois Villon which toured small halls near Prague

1950

Enrolled in newly founded Film Institute at the University of Prague (FAMU)

1954

Directed documentaries for Czech TV

1956

First onscreen appearance, Alfred Radok's "Old Man Motorcar"

1957

Wrote and was assistant director on Ivo Novak's film "Puppies"

1963

Made medium-length, 16mm semi-documentary directorial debut with "Konkurs/Competition"; first collaboration with Ivan Passar and cinematographer Miroslav Ondricek

1963

Feature film directing debut, "Cerny Petr/Black Peter"

1967

Made first trip to the U.S.; negotiated to make first U.S. feature; wanted to produce a film adaptation of the stage musical "Hair," but rights were not available

1968

Was in Paris at time of Russian occupation of Czechoslovakia in August and the fall of the Dubcek regime in September and stayed there until moving to New York in 1969

1971

Made first U.S. film "Taking Off"

1971

Subject of Mira Weingarten's documentary short, "Meeting Milos Forman"

1972

Was a contributing director for "Visions of Eight," a documentary covering Munich Olympics

1973

Was suffering from acute depression when approached by producers Saul Zaentz and Michael Douglas to direct film adaptation of Ken Kesey's novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

1975

Directed breakthrough U.S. feature "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"; won first Oscar as Best Director

1975

Named co-director of Columbia University film division

1977

Became a U.S. citizen (November 30)

1978

Made professor of Columbia University film division

1979

Helmed adaptation of stage musical "Hair"

1981

Directed "Ragtime"; convinced James Cagney to come out of retirement to play final screen role

1984

Reteamed with producer Saul Zaentz to direct the film adaptation of Peter Shaffer's "Amadeus"; returned to Czechoslovakia for the first time since 1968 to film on location; earned second Oscar as Best Director

1986

Made U.S. acting debut in small role in Mike Nichols' "Heartburn"

1989

Was subject of a segment of the PBS series "American Masters"

1989

Last film released for seven years, "Valmont"

1989

Acted in Henry Jaglom's "New Year's Day"

1993

Began pre-production on "Disclosure"; withdrew from film in fall of 1993 and eventually replaced by Barry Levinson

1996

Returned to feature directing with "The People vs. Larry Flynt," based on the life of the publisher of Hustler magazine

1999

Helmed "Man on the Moon," the biopic of comedian Andy Kaufman starring Jim Carrey

2000

Co-starred with Edward Norton in the actor's directorial debut "Keeping the Faith" as the wise friend to Norton's young, conflicted priest

2007

Executive produced "Nomad," a historical epic set in 18th-century Kazakhstan

2007

Helmed "Goya's Ghosts," a film about Spanish grand master Francisco de Goya starring Javier Bardem and Natalie Portman

2009

Co-directed musical film "A Walk Worthwhile" with son Petr Forman

2011

Appeared in French film "Beloved," starring Catherine Deneuve

Videos

Movie Clip

One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975) -- (Movie Clip) They Think You've Been Faking It A portion of the salty initial interview at the hospital between Dr. Spivey (Dean R. Brooks) and McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), including some recognition that he’s not mentally ill at all, in Milos Forman’s film from Ken Kesey’s novel, One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, 1975.
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Mr. McMurphy's Here Joining director Milos Forman’s opening, Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher) arriving (on location at the Oregon State Mental Hospital in Salem), introducing patients (William Duell, Vincent Schiavelli, Will Sampson) then Jack Nicholson as McMurphy, in One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, 1975.
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Getting Things Off Your Chest McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) joins group session on the psych ward, Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher) leading, Brad Dourif, Danny DeVito, William Redfield, Christopher Lloyd and Sydney Lassick as “Cheswick” among the inmates, in Milos Forman’s One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, 1975.
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Put The Ball In The Hole McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), who’s faking mental illness, tries to get the Chief (Will Sampson) into basketball, recruiting Bancini (Josip Elic), dismissing orderly Washington (Nathan George), Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher) observing, in Milos Forman’s One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, 1975.
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975) -- (Movie Clip) You All Crazy? With assist from the Chief (Will Sampson), McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) grabs a bus and leads fellow mental patients (Danny DeVito, Brad Dourif, William Redfield, Vincent Schiavelli et al) on a breakout, picking up Candy (Marya Small), in Milos Forman’s One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, 1975.
Amadeus (1984) -- (Movie Clip) Proper German Virtues In his first meeting with the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph (Jeffrey Jones) and court composer Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), Mozart (Tom Hulce) pitches an opera, then shreds the welcoming tune Salieri wrote for him, in Milos Forman's Amadeus, 1984.
Amadeus (1984) -- (Movie Clip) Open, I Confess! Director Milos Forman's chilling opening, two servants (Vincent Schiavelli, Brian Pettifer) panic upon finding their master, the composer Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), in extremis, in Amadeus, 1984, from Peter Shaffer's play and screenplay.
Amadeus (1984) -- (Movie Clip) You're A Fiend! Composer Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), hiding after being caught indulging his sweet tooth, does not at first realize that the cad (Tom Hulce) pursuing Constanze (Elizabeth Berridge) is his new rival composer Mozart, during an occasion at court in Vienna, in Milos Forman's Amadeus, 1984.
Conquest (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Born Of A Snowdrift Polish Countess Waleska (Greta Garbo) seeing off her soldier brother (Leif Erickson) when the esteemed French emperor (Charles Boyer as Napoleon Bonaparte) rides through en route to Petersburg, their first meeting in MGM's Conquest, 1937.
Hair (1979) -- (Movie Clip) Age Of Aquarius Claude (John Savage) arriving on the bus from Oklahoma, Berger (Treat Williams) and friends (Don Dacus, Annie Golden, Dorsey Wright) burning draft cards in Central Park, Ren Woods' terrific vocal for the hit song, Twyla Tharp dancers, opening Milos Forman's production of Hair, 1979.

Trailer

Family

Rudolf Forman
Father
Professor of education. Jewish; arrested by Nazis in 1940; died in Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944.
Anna Forman
Mother
Protestant; arrested by Nazis in 1940 for suspicion of being Jewish or having Jewish blood; died in Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943.
Blahoslav Forman
Brother
Born 1917; died of exposure after being injured during a mountain hike in May 1962.
Pavel Forman
Brother
Artist. Born c. 1919; settled in Australia in 1968.
Petr Forman
Son
Twin of Matej; born on August 24, 1964; mother, Vera Kresadlova; raised in Czechoslovakia.
Matej Forman
Son
Twin of Petr; born on August 24, 1964; mother, Vera Kresadlova; raised in Czechoslovakia.
Andrew Forman
Son
Twin of James; born in October 1998; mother, Martina Zborilova; named for Andy Kaufman.
James Forman
Son
Twin of Andrew; born in October 1998; mother, Martina Zborilova; named for Jim Carrey.

Companions

Jana Brejchova
Wife
Actor. Born c. 1940; first wife; married from 1951 to 1956; appeared in Ivo Novak's "Stenata/Puppies" (1957).
Vera Kresadlova
Wife
Singer, actor. Married in 1964; separated c. 1968; mother of Forman's twin sons; appeared in Forman's first short film, "Konkurs/Competition" (1961); Forman filed for divorce in L.A. in February 1999.
Beverly D'Angelo
Companion
Actor. Met during the filming of "Hair" (1979); no longer together.
Martina Zborilova
Wife
Mother of Forman's twin sons born in October 1998; married in Connecticut on November 27, 1999.

Bibliography

"Turnaround"
Milos Forman and Jan Novak, Random House (1993)
"Milos Forman: A Bio-Bibliography"
Thomas J Slater, Greenwood Press (1987)