Director Miloš Forman made three major contributions to the Czechoslovak New Wave – Černý Petr (Black Peter) /1963/, Lásky jedné plavovlásky (Loves of a Blonde) and the tragicomedy Hoří, má panenko (Firemen’s Ball) /1967/. With screenwriting input from tried and tested collaborators – Ivan Passer and Jaroslav Papoušek – Forman built on his own chance meeting with a girl from Varnsdorf searching for her lover at a false address in Prague. The narrative’s protagonist, young worker Andula, has a job at a big provincial shoe factory and a one night stand – the young pianist Milda Vašata – does not attempt to deceive her. Little does he expect, however, that the naive girl, whom he has already forgotten, will follow him to Prague with a large suitcase. The parents of the devil-may-care young man waste no time in passing judgement on Andula’s “impossible” idea, so, like it or not, she is forced to return to the old life she was hoping to get away from… Loves of a Blonde is a bitter tale of a fateful disillusionment, though it retains the status of comedy thanks to its refined poetics of embarrassment. An important role is played by the cliché-filled dialogues that deaden the conversations of the older generation personified by Milda’s parents – his mercilessly attentive mother and diffident father. The depiction of a disaffected world is completed by the sensitive camera work of Miroslav Ondříček and a score drawing on vacuous festive brass band music, TV theme music and national anthems. Forman’s casual take on Czechoslovak reality is unsentimental but sympathetic and he bases a poignant individual story on a real situation – the shortage of men in a small town housing 2,000 young female workers. The title role is played convincingly by the younger sister of the popular actress Jana Brejchová – Hana. The male lead is filled by Vladimír Pucholt, while the seasoned Vladimír Menšík appears as a member of group of army reservists who makes a play for Andula. Debutant non-actors Josef Šebánek and Milada Ježková were cast as Milda’s parents. Loves of a Blonde also won acknowledgement abroad, where it was markedly more successful than Forman’s other Czech pictures thanks to its palatable love plot. The New Wave gem opened the 1966 New York Film Festival and earned Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Best Foreign Language Film. In 2000 the UK film magazine Empire ranked it among the 100 greatest foreign language films ever.
Like all her friends from the women's hostel blonde-haired Andula longs for love. Although her Tonda has bought her a ring, he is still far from a girl's dream man. The young women work at a large industrial plant employing some two thousand women, which means that the small town of Zruč nad Sázavou where the factory is located suffers from a complete shortage of men. Even the stationing of an army unit in the town fails to bring a solution since older reservists get posted to Zruč instead of young men. At a dance party, these "oldies" try to approach the girls but the results are awkward. Andula, however, is lucky. She meets Míla, the young piano player in the band, and spends the night with him. The boy goes back to Prague and one Saturday Andula turns up in Prague as well. Míla is not at home and his parents let the strange girl in with rudely obvious misgivings, although they finally let her stay in the kitchen for the night. When Míla returns, they don't mince words in their condemnation of Andula and Míla's behaviour. Andula listens to their argument from the next room and cries quietly. Back at the hostel, however, she tells her friend Jaruška how wonderful it was is Prague and how warmly Míla's parents greeted her.
The ninth part of the original negative and the original sound negative 190,7 metres has also survived in the National Film Archive Prague, from which the segment of the film altered for the distribution in the USA was copied.
Andula
klavírista Míla Vašata
záložák Vacovský
záložák Maňas
záložák Burda
Mildova matka
Mildův otec
Marie
Jana
Jaruška
Zdena
dívka s kytarou
major
mistr Pokorný
Tonda
vychovatelka
záložák
záložák
záložák
záložák
záložák
houslista
účetní
ředitel
Bohunka
slečna
slečna
hudebník
Vladimír Mácha (vedoucí výpravy), Rudolf Beneš (rekvizitář)
Jaroslav Solnička, Otakar Jiříček
Pavla Marková (klapka), Jaromír Komárek (fotograf)
Johann Sebastian Bach (Dobře temperovaný klavír /Das Wohltemperierte Klavier/)
Orchestr Karla Vlacha (Music Conducted by Karel Vlach), Orchestr Ferdinanda Havlíka (Music Conducted by Ferdinand Havlík), Orchestr Karla Vacka ml. (Music Conducted by Karel Vacek ml.), Dechová hudba Supraphon (Music Conducted by Jindřich Bauer), Taneční orchestr Československého rozhlasu (Music Conducted by Josef Votruba), Orchestr ZK Sázavan Zruč nad Sázavou (Music Conducted by František Jelínek)
Song Composer lidová americká píseň
Writer of Lyrics Jindřich Brabec
Singer Hana PazeltováVokální soubor Lubomíra Pánka
Song Composer Barry De Vorzon
Singer sbor
Song Composer Karel Vacek
Writer of Lyrics Karel Vacek
Singer Stanislav Procházkasbor
Song Composer Táňa Zelinková
Writer of Lyrics Táňa Zelinková
Singer Táňa Zelinkováženský sbor
Song Composer Ervín Toman
Writer of Lyrics Jan Mareš
Singer mužský sbor
Song Composer František Škroup
Song Composer Vasilij Solovjev-Sedoj
Singer sbor
Lásky jedné plavovlásky
Lásky jedné plavovlásky
Loves of a Blonde
Přihořívá / Láska jako prám
film
featuretheatrical distribution
comedy, bitter comedy
Czechoslovakia
1965
1965
literary Screenplay approved 13 May 1964
technical Screenplay approved 16 November 1964
start of filming 14 January 1965
end of filming 14 April 1965
the first film copy approved 11 June 1965
projection approval 10 September 1965
withdrawal from distribution 30 September 1993
festival premiere 08/1965 (26. mezinárodní filmový festival Benátky, Itálie)
premiere 12 November 1965 /unsuitable for youths/ (celostátní)
preview 12 November 1965 (kino Sevastopol /2 týdny/, Praha)
premiere 26 November 1965 /unsuitable for youths/ (kina Jalta /8 týdnů/, Kotva /3 týdny/, Odboj /1 týden od 17. 12./, Flora /1 týden od 25. 12./, Oko /1 týden od 31. 12./ a Revoluce /1 týden od 7. 1. 1966/, Praha)
renewed premiere 5 June 2019 /suitable for all ages without limit/ (kino Ponrepo, Praha)
Ústřední půjčovna filmů (původní 1965), Národní filmový archiv (obnovená 2019)
Tvůrčí skupina Šebor – Bor, Vladimír Bor (vedoucí dramaturg tvůrčí skupiny), Jiří Šebor (vedoucí výroby tvůrčí skupiny)
feature film
77 min
2 195 meters
16mm, 35mm, DCP 2-D, BRD
1:1,37
black & white
sound
mono
Czech
Czech
without subtitles
Czech
Event: Anketa filmových kritiků o nejlepší česko-slovenský hraný film století
1998
Praha / Czech Republic
Event: Cena Československé federace filmových klubů
1969
Praha / Czechoslovakia
Miloš Forman
Event: Anketa periodika The New York Times o deset nejlepších filmů roku 1966
1967
New York City / United States of America
Event: Nejlepší filmy promítané v belgických kinech 1966
1967
Brusel / Belgium
Event: 18. ročník Cen Bambi 1966
1967
Mnichov / Federal Republic of Germany
Event: 24. ročník Výročních cen Sdružení zahraničního tisku v Hollywoodu Zlaté glóby 1966
1967
Los Angeles / United States of America
Event: 39. ročník Ceny americké Akademie filmových věd a umění Oscar 1966
1967
Hollywood, Los Angeles / United States of America
Event: Anketa periodika New York Post o deset nejlepších filmů roku 1966
1967
New York City / United States of America
Event: Velká mezinárodní cena Francouzské filmové akademie za rok 1965
1966
Paříž / France
Miloš Forman
Festival: Mezinárodní filmový festival Sydney
1966
Sydney / Australia
Festival: 15. mezinárodní filmový festival Melbourne
1966
Melbourne / Australia
Event: Československá nominace na Cenu americké Akademie filmových věd a umění Oscar 1966
1966
Praha / Czechoslovakia
Event: Velká mezinárodní cena Francouzské filmové akademie za rok 1965
1966
Paříž / France
tvůrčí skupina Šebor – Bor
Festival: 26. mezinárodní filmový festival Benátky
1965
Benátky / Italy