Barbara Kwiatkowska-Lass

(Redirected from Barbara Lass)

Barbara Kwiatkowska-Lass (1 June 1940 – 6 March 1995) was a Polish actress.

Barbara Kwiatkowska-Lass
Born
Barbara Kwiatkowska

(1940-06-01)1 June 1940
Patrowo, Wartheland
Died6 March 1995(1995-03-06) (aged 54)
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Resting placeRakowicki Cemetery, Kraków, Poland
Other namesBarbara Lass
Barbara Kwiatkowska
Barbara Kwiatkowski
OccupationActress
Years active1958–1995
Spouses
(m. 1959; div. 1962)
(m. 1963; div. 1980)
(m. 1980)
ChildrenKatharina Böhm
The grave of Barbara Lass in Poland

Early life and career

Barbara Kwiatkowska was born in Patrowo, a village near Gostynin in central Poland, then under German-occupied Poland, which the Nazis had renamed Gasten in 1939 through 1941 (at time of her birth). Then changed to Walrode from June 1941 until the end of the war. Although she received ballet and dance education, she eventually took up an acting career. After her debut role in Tadeusz Chmielewski's comedy Ewa chce spać (1957) she gained wider popularity in Poland. The role had been offered to her after she took the first place in a contest organized by a popular Polish cinema magazine.

In 1959 she left Poland for the West and soon starred in a few major films like La millième fenêtre (with Jean-Louis Trintignant) and The Joy of Living (with Alain Delon). She played roles in several Italian, French and German films such as Krzysztof Zanussi's Bluebeard [pl] (1984) and in Sting in the Flesh [de] (1981).

Personal life

She married film director Roman Polanski in 1959; they divorced in 1962.[1] The following year she met Karlheinz Böhm in Tokyo on the set of the film Rififi in Tokyo (1963); the couple later married, their daughter is actress Katharina Böhm. Kwiatkowska-Lass divorced Böhm in 1980, and married Polish jazz musician Leszek Żądło, with whom she lived until her death.[citation needed]

Politics

Kwiatkowska was opposed to the Communist regime in Poland and cooperated with the United States-controlled Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which transmitted anti-communist propaganda, information and programmes free from censorship to Poland.[2]

Death

On 6 March 1995, Kwiatkowska-Lass collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage, aged 54, in Munich.[3] She was interred in Kraków's Rakowicki Cemetery.

Filmography

Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1958Ewa chce spaćEwa BoneckaCredited as Barbara Kwiatkowska
1958Żołnierz królowej MadagaskaruSabinka Lemiecka
1958Pan Anatol szuka milionaIwona Slowikowska
1959When Angels FallShort, Alternative title: Gdy spadają anioły
Credited as Barbara Kwiatkowska
1960Tysiąc talarówKasia Wydech
1960Zezowate szcześcieJola Wrona-WronskaAlternative title: Bad Luck
Credited as Barbara Kwiatkowska
1960La 1000eme fenêtreAnia
1961Ostroznie, Yeti!Bride
1961Che gioia vivereFranca FossatiAlternative title: The Joy of Living
1961LycanthropusPriscillaAlternative title: Werewolf in a Girls' Dormitory
1962L'Amour à vingt ansBasiaAlternative title: Love at Twenty
(segment "Warszawa")
1963Vice and VirtuePrisoner
1963Rififi in TokyoFrançoise MerigneAlternative title: Rififi in Tokyo
1965Serenade für zwei SpioneTamaraAlternative title: Serenade for Two Spies
1967JowitaAgnieszka "Jowita"Credited as Barbara Kwiatkowska
1970Der Pfarrer von St. PauliDagmarAlternative title: The Priest of St. Pauli
1974Effi BriestPolnische Köchin
1974Jak to sie robiHoliday-MakerAlternative title: How It's Done
1981Sting in the Flesh [de]Ines
1986Rosa LuxemburgRosa's mother
1986Das Schweigen des DichtersJanina
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1970Hauser's MemoryAngelikaTV movie
1972Doppelspiel in ParisRenée Borni, seine GeliebteTV movie
1984Bluebeard [pl]RosalindeTV movie
1990WahnsinnseheHertaTV movie
1991Moskau - PetuschkiFürstinTV movie, (final film role)

References

External links