

OldĹich NovĂ˝ was a Czech film and theatre actor, director, composer, dramaturge and singer. He is considered one of the greatest actors of the Czech cinema in the first half of the 20th century.  At the encouragement of his uncle, MiloĹĄ NovĂ˝, a well-known actor of the National Theatre in Prague, OldĹich joined amateur theatre group "ĹemeslnickĂĄ beseda" and appeared in numerous plays before moving to Brno to direct in 1918.  Following his fifteen year stay, OldĹich  co-founded the "NovĂŠ divadlo" (The New Theatre) together with his wife Alice ValentovĂĄ-NovĂĄ.  There he explored new and modern expressions of theatre by combining spoken word with operetta stylings to develop the "musical comedy" genre. In 1937 he met and began collaborating with renowned pre-war director Mac FriÄ. Their first success came in 1939, with the comedy KristiĂĄn, the first of many popular comedies starring NovĂ˝. During the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, OldĹich NovĂ˝ became a target of the Nazi party, both for his celebrity, and his wifeâs Jewish ancestry.  In 1944, after refusing to divorce, the couple was imprisoned in the the German concentration camp in Osterode. Following the liberation, NovĂ˝ worked a dramaturge of Czechoslovakian film until the 1960s, when he began appearing on Czech television in the popular television series, "TakovĂĄ normĂĄlnĂ rodinka" (1967-1971). His last theatre role was a title character of the play "HodinovĂ˝ hoteliĂŠr" by Pavel LandovskĂ˝, directed by Evald Schorm. During this time, NovĂ˝ again collaborated with Mac FriÄ to create successful comedies, both conformist and parody, but these films are of minor note to his career. In his later years, NovĂ˝ lived a life of isolation to avoid his celebrity status, almost never leaving his home. Â
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1944