Creation | ONE-HOUR DOCUMENTARIES
Great topics of the present in a contemporary Czech documentary.
Czech Television – Telexport
Kavčí hory, 140 00 Prague 4
tel: 26 11 37 047
fax: 26 12 11 354
e-mail: telexport@czech-tv.cz
About this series:
Any time these one-hour documentaries from the FEBIO workshops appeared on screen, they never went unnoticed. This did not always have to concern exclusive shots next to the one-time first lady “Seventeen months with Dagmar Havlová”, which ended with the dramatic hospitalisation of the president in Austria, but the purely personal confessions and dreams of several Czech women
For example the hour-long-show, “What women dream about” rightly became a frequently repeated hit and pointed the director, Olga Sommerová onto a literary path, as the fate of these and other heroines began to appear in book form. Another interesting point is that the director first offered her idea to Czech Television, where she was rejected and Febio then enforced the idea against the will of the head of the creative group... (not for the first time).
As far as Febio creation is concerned, the hour-long documentaries were always exceptional pieces and also the most watched Czech documentaries to be seen on television screens in the year of their creation.
No shows were found.
Frequency:
occasional
Brodcast:
1997, 1998, and 1999
Length:
58 minutes
First part:
“Real life in the chateau” (directed by: Ján Sebechlebský)
Last part:
“Mum, you understand it” (directed by: Dagmar Smržová)
Copyright:
Czech Television
Total parts:
6
Contact:Czech Television – Telexport
Kavčí hory, 140 00 Prague 4
tel: 26 11 37 047
fax: 26 12 11 354
e-mail: telexport@czech-tv.cz
About this series:
Any time these one-hour documentaries from the FEBIO workshops appeared on screen, they never went unnoticed. This did not always have to concern exclusive shots next to the one-time first lady “Seventeen months with Dagmar Havlová”, which ended with the dramatic hospitalisation of the president in Austria, but the purely personal confessions and dreams of several Czech women
For example the hour-long-show, “What women dream about” rightly became a frequently repeated hit and pointed the director, Olga Sommerová onto a literary path, as the fate of these and other heroines began to appear in book form. Another interesting point is that the director first offered her idea to Czech Television, where she was rejected and Febio then enforced the idea against the will of the head of the creative group... (not for the first time).
As far as Febio creation is concerned, the hour-long documentaries were always exceptional pieces and also the most watched Czech documentaries to be seen on television screens in the year of their creation.
No shows were found.