Wojciech Pszoniak

Acting

Wojciech Pszoniak

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
May 02, 1942 (83 years old)
Death date
Oct 19, 2020

Wojciech Pszoniak

Known For

If You Saw His Heart
1h 26m
Movie 2017

If You Saw His Heart

Cast out of his insular community, a damaged and down...

Eccentrics, the Sunny Side of the Street
1h 52m
Movie 2016

Eccentrics, the Sunny Side of the Street

Carte Blanche
1h 46m
Movie 2015

Carte Blanche

The true story of a high-school history teacher who decides...

To Life
1h 44m
Movie 2014

To Life

Helen, Rose and Lili have survived the Holocaust and have...

Cassos
Movie 2012

Cassos

Mystification
2h 0m
Movie 2010

Mystification

Lazowski, an expelled university student, investigates the supposed suicide of...

Notturno
1h 39m
Movie 2006

Notturno

Depicts the final years of the life of 19th century...

Pour l'amour d'Élena
Movie 1997

Pour l'amour d'Élena

Our God's Brother
2h 3m
Movie 1997

Our God's Brother

In this adaptation of an historical play by Pope John...

Chicken Talk
0h 11m
Movie 1996

Chicken Talk

Joshua visits his grandfather, a survivor of Auschwitz, five days...

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Wojciech Pszoniak (born in 1942 in Lwów, currently Ukraine), is a Polish film and theater actor. Pszoniak gained international visibility following Andrzej Wajda's 1975 film The Promised Land, in which he played Moritz, one of the three main characters. The actor left Poland during the period of political unrest in 1980-1981, which saw the appearance of the Solidarity trade union and ended with the imposition of martial law on December 13, 1981. Pszoniak found roles in France, where he is currently living and working. Since the fall of communism in Eastern Europe in 1989, Pszoniak has appeared in Polish movies and plays. Internationally, he simplified his first name into Wojtek, which is the standard diminutive of the relatively formal Wojciech in the Polish language. Pszoniak often plays Jewish characters, although he is not of Jewish descent. In France, this is partially attributable to his role in The Promised Land, as well as his foreign accent. Pszoniak did not speak French when he emigrated to France, so he learned his theatrical lines phonetically; in movies like Danton, where he played Robespierre, his voice was dubbed. An anecdote about his language skills relates that when he finally started speaking French, one director told him that he preferred his old accent. Description above from the Wikipedia article Wojciech Pszoniak, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia​