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Current AffairsHarry Potter film may be made elsewhere as actor's parents worry about Prague's seedy side

22-06-2005 15:14 | Ian Willoughby

There was great excitement when it was announced that the fifth in the blockbuster Harry Potter film series - the Order of the Phoenix - was going to be filmed here in Prague. But there have been reports this week that the parents of Daniel Radcliffe, who plays the main role, don't want him to film in the Czech capital. The reason: the city's reputation as a seedy centre of the international sex industry. More

MagazineMagazine

08-01-2005 | Daniela Lazarová

The very first on-line birth in the Czech Republic! Toasting the New Year with the Water Sprites - why do some Czechs pour fire water into their river on New Year's Eve? And, how much respect do Czechs have for their Parliament deputies? Roughly as much as they do for their cleaner. Find out more in Magazine with Daniela Lazarova.  More

Letter from PragueThe changing face of Wenceslas Square

27-11-2004 | Daniela Lazarová

Wenceslas Square Wenceslas Square -a place visited by millions of tourists every year - has been captured on thousands of postcards over the years, pictures which document its transformation. At the start of the twentieth century people could still ski down the square in winter. For the less athletic, there were horse drawn carriages and in the 50s you could hop on one of the open trams riding up and down the square so slowly it was possible to hang on to the bottom step and feel the wind in your face. It was the construction of the Prague metro in the late 70s which radically changed the face of Wenceslas Square. With underground transport there was no more need for trams and the last tram wove its way down the square in 1980.  More

Current AffairsHistoric building reopens on Prague's Wenceslas Square

23-09-2004 | Coilin O'Connor

The Melantrich building on Prague's Wenceslas Square will forever be associated with one of the most significant periods in Czech history. Leading figures in the Velvet Revolution, such as Vaclav Havel and Alexander Dubcek, addressed delirious crowds from one of its balconies in November 1989 on a day that will be remembered by Czechs for generations to come.  More

Current AffairsSaint Wenceslas: A 'tail' of restoration

26-08-2004 | Martin Mikule

Statue of Saint Wenceslas under restoration, photo: CTK If you've been to the Prague's Wenceslas Square recently, you might have noticed that something is missing, namely, the statue of Saint Wenceslas himself, for whom the square is named. Well don't worry, it hasn't really disappeared, it is only hidden behind a mass of scaffolding for some time. The statue is just undergoing a crucial restoration to be able to survive the wiles of the freaky weather as well as the hustle of the busy square, in the very core of Prague. More

MagazineMagazine

31-07-2004 | Daniela Lazarová

Photo: CTK Metro-sexuals in Prague - men who are ready to undergo the torture of chest and back waxing! Swooning over an actor? Buy his old T-shirt in the Celebrity Shop and the Dinosaur Park in Pilsen gets a new flying reptile. Find out more in Magazine with Daniela Lazarova.  More

Letter from PraguePrague's sidewalks - no place for a farm girl in high heels!

31-07-2004 | Heather Bowne

Not only does summer bring smog and sweaty trams to Prague, it also sees the return of women in open-toed high-heels tettering across cobblestones.  More

Current AffairsGrand sculptures take root on Wenceslas Square

26-05-2004 | Brian Kenety

Richard Ketko and his sculpture 'Mission completed', photo: CTK Prague's busy Wenceslas Square is now host to the international festival "Sculpture Grande 2004", which opened this week under the very loose theme of European integration. Brian Kenety went along to the vernissage at the Gallery Art Factory and has this report.  More

SpotlightThe continuing allure of Wenceslas Square

14-01-2004 | Jan Velinger

The statue of Saint Wenceslas In this week's Spotlight we take you to one of Prague's most remarkable locations, Wenceslas Square, that expansive boulevard that features some of the city's most significant architecture as well as the most famous of all Czech monuments: a monument to the country's patron saint Wenceslas on horseback, that witnessed all the turmoil of modern Czech history: from the birth of the Czechoslovak state, to the Soviet-led invasion, to the fall of communism in 1989. A square that is also not without controversy: with far too many casinos and prostitutes in the late evenings to remain, well, fully respectable. History and its outcome for Wenceslas Square - that looked at in the programme today.  More

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