Anna Prucnal
- Actress
- Writer
- Music Department
Anna Prucnal was born on December 17, 1940 in Warsaw, Poland. She is a Polish actress in both cinema and theatre, as well as a singer. After her father, a surgeon, was killed by the Nazis during World War II, Anna and her sister were raised by their mother, who was of noble descent and related to the 18th-century King of Poland Stanislaw Leszczynski. After studying piano and lyrical song, Anna Prucnal went on an acting career at the Studencki Teatr Satyrykow, in Warsaw. Prucnal first appeared in a movie at the age of twenty-two in the film "Sun and Shadow", directed by great Bulgarian film director Rangel Vulchanov. In 1970, Prucnal moved to France and embarked upon a theatrical career, appearing in a number of plays by Bertolt Brecht. She worked with many important directors including Jorge Lavelli, Georges Wilson, Roger Planchon, Jean-Louis Barrault, Marc'O, Petrika Ionesco, Lucian Pintilie and Jacques Lassalle. She also appeared in several notable films, the most notorious of which was Dusan Makavejev's "Sweet Movie", which Polish authorities deemed to be pornographic and anticommunist. As a result, Anna was banned from using her Polish passport, effectively exiling her from her homeland. During the 1970th , Anna developed her career as a singer. Her album "Dream of West, Dream of East" was popular, initially in France, then Belgium, worldwide and, finally, in Warsaw in 1989... to celebrate the bicentenary of the French Revolution, and representing a homecoming of sorts for Anna. Prucnal has continued to release records (such as "Monsieur Brecht" in 2006), and act in movies ("Wimbledon Stage" in 2001) and TV, as well as appearing on stage in the acclaimed play "The Vagina Monologues" in 2005. In 2002, Prucnal published her autobiography (not yet translated in English) entitled "Moi qui suis née à Varsovie" ("I, who was born in Warsaw"), co-authored with Jean Mailland.