Agnieszka Holland

Frequent screenwriter for Andrzej Wajda whose own films as a director have focused on the lives of the marginal and the doomed. Holland studied filmmaking in Czechoslovakia under Milos Forman and Ivan Passer, returning to Poland in 1972 after police harassment had culminated in a jail sentence. She made her co-directing debut in 1977 with "Screen Tests" and wrote her first screenplay for Wajda, "Without Anaesthesia", in 1978. Two years later her solo feature directing debut, "Provincial Actors", won the FIPRESCI prize at Cannes. After the imposition of martial law in 1981 Holland emigrated to Paris, where she still lives.

Holland's last Polish feature, "A Woman Alone" (1981), chronicles the grim plight of an unmarried mother employed as a letter-carrier. The 1985 West German film "Bitter Harvest", Holland's real breakthrough on the international film scene, reverted to a wartime theme, detailing the relations between a mildly prosperous farmer and the Jewish refugee woman he discovers and shelters. Although her English-language debut film, "To Kill a Priest" (1988) was considered a career setback, Holland rebounded magnificently with the powerful, acclaimed study of a Jew who masquerades as a Nazi at the height of the Holocaust, "Europa, Europa" (1991). She followed up with another well-received art house item, "Olivier Olivier" (1992), an intriguing story of a child who claims to be a boy who disappeared six years earlier. Holland again explored the world of youth with her first mainstream Hollywood film, an adaptation of the children's classic "The Secret Garden" (1993). Holland followed with another period drama, "Washington Square" (1997) based on the Henry James novel. Formerly married to Czech director Laco Adamik, with whom she has a daughter.

  • Born:
    November 28, 1948 in Warsaw, Poland
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Screenwriter
Family
  • Daughter: Katarzyna Adamik. born in 1972
  • Father: Henrik Holland. died from a fall from a window after police interrogation in 1961; Jewish
  • Mother: Irena Holland. Catholic
Education
  • FAMU, Prague, Czechoslovakia
Milestones
  • 1971 Returned to Poland
  • 1977 Feature co-directing debut, Screen Tests
  • 1980 Solo feature directing debut, Provincial Actors
  • 1981 Immigrated to France
  • 1988 Directed first English-language film, To Kill a Priest
  • 1991 Received critical plaudits for helming Europa, Europa ; received Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay
  • 1993 Directed first Hollywood film, The Secret Garden
  • 1997 Directed Washington Square, an exploration of the struggle between familial and romantic love with Jennifer Jason Leigh and Albert Finney
  • 1999 Directed The Third Miracle with Ed Harris
  • 2001 Directed the HBO movie, Shot in the Heart, based on Mikal Gilmore s novel of the same name, which chronicles the last weeks of Gary Gilmore s life on death row in Utah
  • 2004 Directed episodes of the CBS drama, Cold Case
  • 2006 Directed Copying Beethoven, with Ed Harris as Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Raised in Poland
  • Was enrolled at FAMU during the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968

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