After a short illness on April 13 Milos Forman died in the US. The Czech and American filmmaker and screenwriter was 86 years old.
The director Milos Forman died
The life path of Milos Forman ended in the United States, where he legally migrated from Czechoslovakia after the events of 1968. He was a two-time Oscar winner for Best Director, three Golden Globes and BAFTA in the same category. Foreman in 2013 was awarded the Guild of Directors of America Award for the achievements of all life.
Miloš Forman (Miloš Forman) was born in Chaslava (Czechoslovakia) on February 18, 1932. He was brought up in an orphanage in Podebrady, as his parents died during the war. Foreman graduated from the Academy of Film and Television in Prague, and in 1963 debuted as a director with the picture "Competition". In the same year he filmed his first film "Black Peter" (Černý Petr), which received many awards. In 1967, Foreman shot one of the most famous Czech films, telling about Czech society, called "The Firemen's Ball" (Hoří, má panenko). The film was nominated for an Oscar.
After the events of 1968 he migrated to the USA, where he continued his work. The films "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest", "Amadeus", "The People Against Larry Flynt", "The Man on the Moon", "Ragtime" and others brought Milos Forman world fame.

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