Current Affairs Vlasta Burian, the King of Comedians, died 40 years ago
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Vlasta Burian, photo: CTK
Success made Burian a very rich man - he owned a large villa with a swimming pool and tennis court, he used to buy expensive cars, and the Czechoslovak flag was raised in his garden when the artist was at home. But despite the fact that he was surrounded by beautiful film stars, Vlasta Burian married an ordinary girl
he had often heard laughing in the audience during his performances.
Later on, his wife Nina helped him a great deal in running his theatre.
Czech tycoons and noblemen were often guests at Burian's villa but during WWII, when the Czech lands were occupied by Germany as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Nazi cultural officials and ministers of the protectorate government were also seen in his house. So it came as no surprise that after the war, Burian was accused of collaborating with the Nazis.
Although his contemporaries tried to defend him, saying that without contacts with the Germans he would have never been allowed to appear in films, he was put on trial three times. The last one destroyed him - he spend several months in custody, was stripped of all of his property and what was worst, the Czechoslovak authorities banned him from performing. He died in poverty and disgrace on January 31st 1962.
But Vlasta Burian has never been forgotten. A kind of 'Burianomania' emerged in the late 1960s, and his films - he starred in more than 30 - are regularly shown on TV. Eight years ago a court ruled that Burian had not after all collaborated with the Nazis and in 1999 Burian was named "The Czech Comedian of the 20th Century" in a poll of TV viewers.