Movies List
TV Show List
The Mysterious Castle in the Carpathians

as Baron Gorc z Gorců

1981
Mature Wine

as Weber

1981
Adela Has Not Had Supper Yet

as baron Rupert von Kratzmar

1978
How to Drown Dr. Mracek, the Lawyer

as hlavní český vodník Wassermann

1975
Six Bears and a Clown

as ředitel cirkusu II

1972
Svatby pana Voka

as Petr Vok z Rožmberka

1971
Lemonade Joe

as Horác Badman alias "Hogofogo"

1964
The Fabulous Baron Munchausen

as baron Prášil

1962
Man in Outer Space

as Josef, calouník

1962
Silvery Wind

as Gerlic

1956
The Proud Princess

as Kancléř

1952
Miloš Kopecký Miloš Kopecký

Birthday

1922-08-22

Place of Birth

Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]

Biography

Miloš Kopecký was a Czech actor, active mainly in the second half of the 20th century.  He was born into the family of craftsmen, Kopecký was involved with music and theater throughout his entire life.  Starting on stage in 1939, as a member of an amateur elocution group, Kopecký performed with numerous young artists during the German occupation of then Czechoslovakia.  Near the end of World War II, Kopecký’s mother was murdered at the Auschwitz concentration camp for her Jewish heritage, while Miloš was interned in the labor camp Bystřice u Benešova.  He would later credit these experiences as the cause for his struggle with Bipolar Disorder, then known as Manic-Depressive Disease.   Following the liberation, Kopecký began acting in the avant-garde studio Větrník in 1945, before joining the Vinohrady Theatre in 1965 at the behest of then-director František Pavlíček.  Kopecký  continued to make guest appearances at theaters throughout Prague, working with many notable actors of his era before appearing on film and television.  His first minor role was in the historic film Jan Roháč z Dubé (1947), but he quickly graduated to more important characters and gradually became one of the most popular actors in Czechoslovakia.   He may be best known today as Dr. Štrosmajer in the Czech television series Nemocnice na kraji města.  During his career he played mainly negative roles of traitors, lechers, and villain, which he famously depicted with elegance and esprit.   In the mid-1980s Kopecký acted in a politically biased documentary film about emigrants, and also presented very critical speech against current communist régimes in May, 1987, at the Fourth Congress of Dramatic Artists.  He was married five times, at one point to Czech actress Stella Zázvorková.
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