IN MEMORIAM: SPIRIT OF THE REBEL
Milos Forman, a Czech-born filmmaker who left his homeland in the 1960s and, in exile, became a two-time Oscar winner as the director of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Amadeus, died April 14 at a hospital in Danbury, Connecticut. He was 86.
His agent, Dennis Aspland, announced the death in a statement. The cause was not disclosed.
Forman made several acclaimed films in the 1960s in his native Czechoslovakia before settling in the United States after the 1968 Soviet crackdown ended the brief period of cultural flowering known as Prague Spring.
Milos Forman, Oscar-winning Czech director of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Amadeus, died on April 14. His films, while vastly different, often showed a rebel seeking to be free
Over the next four decades, he made fewer than 10 films, each vastly different from the others. But throughout most of Forman’s films — including Cuckoo’s Nest, Amadeus, The People vs. Larry Flynt and Goya’s Ghosts — there was an abiding spirit of the rebel seeking to be free.