Jiří Trnka (Czech pronunciation: [ˈjɪr̝iː ˈtr̩ŋka]) (24 February 1912, Plzeň - 30 December 1969, Prague) was a Czech puppet maker, illustrator, motion-picture animator and film director.[1] In addition to his extensive career as an illustrator, especially of children's books, he is best known for his work in animation with puppets, which began in 1946. Most of his movies were intended for adults, and many of them were adaptations of literary works of Czech authors or foreigners. Because of his influence in animation, he was called "the Walt Disney of Eastern Europe",[2] despite the great differences between their works.
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The Trnka family lived as middle class citizens in Pilsen, in western Bohemia. Although his father was a plumber and his mother a dressmaker, both remained very close to their peasant origins. As a child, young Jiří enjoyed sculpting puppets made of wood and put on stage small shows for friends.
He later attended classes at a vocational school in his hometown, where he met his teacher Josef Skupa, who eventually would become a leading public figure in the world of Czech puppeteers. Skupa was his mentor, entrusted Trnka with certain responsibilities, and managed to convince his family, who initially were initially reluctant, to allow him to enroll at the prestigious School of Applied Arts in Prague (today the Academy of Architecture, Art and Design in Prague), where he completed his apprenticeship between 1929 and 1935.
With the training received in the school of arts and his experience working in a printmaking workshop, Trnka soon began a successful career as an illustrator. He was hired by the Prague publishing house Melantrich, and his first illustrated work was Mr. Boska The tiger of Vítezslaw Šmejc, published in 1937.
Since then, Trnka illustrated numerous children's books. Throughout his life, he illustrated 130 works of literature, most of them for children. Especially famous are his illustrations for the tales of the Brothers Grimm, as well as collections of folktales from Czech authors such as Jirí Horák and Jan Pálenícek. Also related to his native folklore are his illustrations for Bajaj by Vladimír Holan, published in 1955, that would also be the starting point for his future in animation. In addition to the above, Trnka illustrated, among many other books, the tales of Andersen and Perrault, the fables of La Fontaine, The Thousand and One Nights, several works of Shakespeare and Lewis Caroll's Alice in Wonderland. In honor of his entire career as an illustrator, he was awarded in 1968 the Hans Christian Andersen Award by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY).
In some cases, his job as an illustrator gave him ideas for making animated films, as happened with Bajaj and A Midsummer Night's Dream.
After graduating from the Prague School of Arts and Crafts, Trnka created a puppet theater in 1936. This group was dissolved when World War II began, and he instead designed stage sets and illustrated books for children throughout the war. Several years later, at the end of World War II, he founded with Eduard Hofman and Jiří Brdečka a real study animation, called bratří v Triku. He began his activity in the study of animation by making some short films: Zasadil Dedek Repu (Grandfather planted a beet, 1945); Zvířátka to petrovští (Animals and Bandits, 1946), awarded at the Cannes Film Festival just one year after he began working in films,[1] Perak SS (The Springer and the SS men, 1946), an anti-Nazi film, and Darek (The Gift, 1946), a satire on the values of middle class close in a style echoing surrealism. Despite his early success, Trnka did not feel comfortable with traditional animation, which in his opinion required too many intermediaries that prevented him from freely expressing his creativity. In the fall of 1946 he first considered puppet animation films, and began to experiment with the help of Bretislav Pojar.[1]
The result was his first feature film Špalíček ("The Czech years", 1947), based on a book illustrated by Mikoláš Aleš. The film consists of six short films, which put on stage the legends and customs of his country: Carnival (Masopust), spring (Jaro), the legend of St. Procopius (Legenda or svatem Prokopu), the procession (Pout), party in the village (Posviceni) and Bethlehem (Betlem). The film attracted the international attention to Czech animation and was awarded at many festivals, including the Venice Film Festival.
Since 1948, the studios of Trnka began receiving subsidies from the government. The next film they produced was Cisaruv Slavik ("The Emperor's Nightingale", 1949), based on a story by Hans Christian Andersen. Unlike the previous, it is a real feature film with one single storyline. The movie also includes real actors (two kids, Helena Patrocková and Jaromir Sobota), although only in the prologue that precedes the story itself. The puppets and sets are significantly different from the previous film, given the setting in an idealized imperial China. Cisaruv Slavik also won numerous awards at international festivals across Europe and America.
Throughout 1949, Trnka also made three short films with animated puppets: Roman s basou ("Story of a Bass," or "Novel with Bass"), adapted from a story by Anton Chekhov; Certuv mlýn ("The Mill Devil "), and Arie prerie ("Song of the Prairie"), a western parody loosely based on The Diligence by John Ford.
The following year he produced his third feature Trnka animation with puppets, Bajaj ("The Prince Bayaya", 1950), based on two stories by writer Bozena Nemcova. Set in a fantastic medieval time, it is the story of a farmer who succeeds in becoming a knight, defeats a dragon, and wins the love of a princess.
During the first half of the next decade, Trnka experiment with new techniques in his short animations. He returned to the cartoon or zlaté rybce ("The Golden Fish", 1951), and animated shadow puppets in mrazíci Dva (1953). In Veselý Circus ("The Gay Circus", 1951) he used a technique that involved stop-motion with two-dimensional paper cutouts. He neglected, however, the production of any animated feature-length puppet film. Apparently, for a time he had the idea of making a film about Don Quixote, but the project was not well received by the Czechoslovakian authorities. In 1953 premiered povesti Stare Ceske ("Old Czech Legends", 1953), his quarter-length movie. As Špalíček, his first feature, Staré povesti Ceské is structured in seven episodes that tell the legendary history of the Czech people. The film is adapted from a work by Alois Jirásek (1851-1930), then a popular author among the Czech youth, and has an obvious patriotic tone.
In the same vein to explore the classics of Czech literature, Trnka in 1955 faced the challenge of adapting to the screen a work immensely popular, the anti-war satire Svejk in Jaroslav Hasek (The Good Soldier). At the time, there already existed film adaptations of this work done with real actors but Trnka was the first to make an animated film about the character. For the construction of the puppets, Trnka was inspired by the illustrations for the original book made by Josef Lada, which in the popular imagination were closely associated with the characters of Hasek. The humorous film is divided into three episodes, which tell the grotesque adventures of Svejk during World War I. It is not considered one of his best work. In spite of this, it received several awards at international festivals.
In 1959 he made his last feature film: Sen noci svatojanske ("A Midsummer Night's Dream," 1959), adapted from one of the most famous works of William Shakespeare. Trnka had previously illustrated this book so he knew it well. In his adaptation, he put focus on, besides the images, the music of Václav Trojan, and strove to give the film an air of ballet, for which even hired as an adviser to a renowned dancer. The puppets used in the film were not constructed of wood, but a specially-made plastic, which allowed for a more detailed modeling of faces. Although it did not escape some criticism, Sen noci svatojanske was a resounding international success and is recognized as one of the masterpieces of Trnka.
Over the next decade, the filmmaker made only a few short films, which were progressively in a pessimistic tone. The first was Vasen ("The Passion", 1962), the story of a young man passionate about his motorcycle. He followed that same year with Kybernetická Babicka ("Cyber Grandma"), a satire on the increasing importance of technology in everyday life. Archandel Gabriel Pani Husa ("The Archangel Gabriel and Ms Goose", 1964), set in Venice medieval, adapts one of the stories of the Decameron by Boccaccio.
He considers his greatest work to be the short Ruka ("The Hand", 1965), his last film. In the words of Bendazzi, Ruka is "a kind of hymn to the creative freedom raging." In short, it is about a sculptor visited by a huge hand, which seeks the completion of a sculpture of itself. By rejecting the imposition, the artist is constantly pursued by the hand, ending with induced suicide and the hand officiating at his funeral. Ruka is considered a protest against the conditions imposed by the Czechoslovak communist state to artistic creation, and even some have seen in it an anticipation of the so-called Prague Spring. Although the film initially had no problems with censorship (which Trnka blamed on carelessness or simple ignorance), after his death copies were confiscated and banned from public display in Czechoslovakia for two decades.
Jiří Trnka died of a heart condition in 1969 when he was just 57 years old. His funeral was a large public event.
Throughout his career he experimented with different Trnka animation techniques, from traditional cartoons in his first shorts to animation with shadow puppets. However, his preferred method, and that which gave him worldwide fame, was stop-motion puppet work. His carved puppet characters were animated in complex sets with an expressive use of lighting. In this manner he was able to realize the dream of Czech baroque sculptors to set their sculptures in motion. Of puppet films Trnka said:[1]
Really Trnka was not involved so much with the animation itself, but primarily on the development of scripts and puppet making. His studio had a trained team of animators, among which especially Bretislav Pojar was credited as responsible for the animation of many of Trnka's films. Other prominent animators from Trnka's studios were Stanislav Latal Trnka, Jan Karpas, Sramek Bohuslav, Frantisek Zdenek Hrabar and Braun.
Although animated films with puppets had already been made before Trnka, he corresponds to the main thrust of this technique, later used in many parts of the world. Unlike what had been done before, Trnka chose not to alter the appearance of the dolls with artificial elements to denote their emotions but to keep it unchanged, getting his expression through changes in framing and lighting. According Pojar:
The scripts of the films were also Trnka's own work, who often used works of Czech authors (many of them related to popular folklore), as well as classics of world literature, such as Chekhov, Boccaccio, and Shakespeare.
In Trnka animated films the music also had an important role. In all his films and several of his short films, the composer of the music was Vaclav Trojan (1905-1983).
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