One of the first films of the newly founded Czechoslovak republic, It Was the first of May, was directed by the pioneer of Czech film direction, Thea Červenková, as a short romantic comedy based on her own theme and script. The simple plot is based on the dream of a young poet (played by the later director Svatopluk Innemann) in which his fiancée (Eva Levínská) runs off with a manipulative womanizer (Josef Šváb-Malostranský) shortly before their wedding. Filming took place in the spring of 1919 in Prague's exteriors, including places close the Seminary Garden and Kolowrat Palace.
A young man in love is waiting on a park bench for his beloved to arrive. She meets an old philanderer at the window of a goldsmith's who gives her the jewel she has admired in the window. The young man sees the old seducer courting his girl from behind some bushes in the park. Shortly afterwards the philanderer goes to visit her family. During coffee he gives mother and daughter more jewellery than they have ever seen in their lives. When the jilted lover sees them come out of church, in his despair, he jumps into the river. At that moment the young man wakes up - it was all a dream. The girl arrives. They kiss among the bushes and a little Cupid sniffs the sweet fragrance of the flowers.
mladík
dívka
dívčina matka
starý záletník
Byl první máj
Byl první máj
It Was the First of May
Byl první máj, byl lásky čas
It Was the First May, There Was the Time for Love
film
featuretheatrical distribution
comedy
Czechoslovakia
1919
1919
premiere 10 June 1919 (kino Koruna, Praha)
35mm
1:1,33
black & white
silent
Czech
without dialogue
without subtitles
Czech
Czech