Milena Dravić
Born
5 October 1940 (85)
Place of Birth
Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
Also known as
Milena Dravic Djordjevic, Milena Dravik
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Milena Dravić (1940–2018) was a Serbian actress. Born in Belgrade, Dravić was involved with the performing arts from the age of four: first with dance and later classical ballet. In 1959, while in high school, director František Čap saw her on the cover of a youth magazine in a ballet dancers group photo and decided on the spot to approach her about being in his film Vrata ostaju otvorena. After appearing in few more films she decided to pursue acting full...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Milena Dravić (1940–2018) was a Serbian actress. Born in Belgrade, Dravić was involved with the performing arts from the age of four: first with dance and later classical ballet. In 1959, while in high school, director František Čap saw her on the cover of a youth magazine in a ballet dancers group photo and decided on the spot to approach her about being in his film Vrata ostaju otvorena. After appearing in few more films she decided to pursue acting full-time and successfully enrolled in Belgrade's Dramatic Arts Academy. Her big break came in 1962 when she won the Golden Arena for Best Actress award (which was the Yugoslav equivalent of Academy Award) for her role in Branko Bauer's film Prekobrojna. This was the moment that sent her on the way to becoming Yugoslavia's first and arguably the biggest female movie star. Milena Dravić continued with long and prolific career during which she showed great talent and versatility. She was equally memorable and believable as the tragic heroine in state-sponsored World War II epics, eccentric protagonist of experimental arthouse films like WR: Mysteries of the Organism and romantic comedies. She especially excelled in the latter during 1970s and 1980s. She won the Cannes Best Supporting Actress Award in 1980 for Special Treatment. For her roles and contributions to domestic cinematography, she received the prestigious "Pavle Vujisić" award in August 1994. Milena Dravić was married three times. Her third husband was the prominent Serbian actor Dragan Nikolić, with whom she had co-hosted the popular 1970s television program Obraz uz obraz. She died on 14 October 2018, after a long battle with illness.
Filmography (40)
Oleg: The Oleg Vidov Story
2021
The Makavejev Case or Trial in a Movie Theater
2018
Maria's Episode
2014
St. George Shoots the Dragon
2009
Love and Other Crimes
2008
Thy Neighbors
2008
Agi and Ema
2007
Lost and Found
2005
Loving Glances
2003
Bare Ground
2003
Pula Confidential
2003
Zamfir's Zona
2002
Boomerang
2001
Normal People
2001
Sky Hook
2000
Cabaret Balkan
1998
Three Summer Days
1997
Love and Marriage
1997
Duel for Three
1996
Third Time Lucky
1995
Nobody's Perfect
1994
The Tear and Her Sisters
1993
The Policeman from Cock's Hill
1992
Sekula Innocent Accused
1992
Sekula Is Getting Married Again
1991
Strange Night
1990
Battle of Kosovo
1989
The Best
1989
The Cabinet Minister's Wife
1989
The Dark Side of the Sun
1988
Spy In High Heels
1988
Thirty Horses
1988
Blackbird
1988
It Happened on This Very Day
1987
Pretty Women Walking Through the City
1986
Revenge
1986
Part-Time Divorce
1986
Sighting of the Holy Mother in the Village of Grabovica
1985
The Istrian Way
1985
Anticasanova
1985