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Jiřina Švorcová (May 25, 1928 – August 8, 2011) was a Czech actress and pro-Communist activist.
Her acting career lasted more than forty years, but she largely retired after the 1989 Velvet Revolution and devoted herself to advocacy of the Communist Party.
Švorcová worked in television, theater and film during the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic.
She spent more than forty years at the Vinohrady Theatre in Prague.
Her best known work came during the 1970s in the Czechoslovak television series, Žena za pultem or A Woman Behind the Counter.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The film is essentially a feature-length commercial for an exhibition to mark the 40th anniversary of the nationalisation of the Czechoslovak film industry, to be held at the Prague U Hybernu venue. The protagonists of the piece are comedians Oldrich Kaiser and Jirí Lábus, who are set to accept an award from Japanese television representatives at the exhibition. At the same time, five gangsters plot to seize a revolutionary invention devised by professor Suzuki - a super holograph, which enables any figure from television to be transported in the flesh into the real world, and vice-versa.
Cyril Dadák (Václav Postránecký), a TV reporter falls in love at first sight with a young engineer Milena (Jaroslava Obermaierová) while he makes a reportage in a chemical factory. Milena has been dating for several years with a test driver Pavel (Rudolf Jelínek), however when she meets Cyril she feels that he might be the Mr Right. She accepts Cyril's invitation for a date and she spends a night with him. In the morning she finds in her flat Pavel. She wants to explain to him everything but Pavel makes coffee with a smile and gives her back the keys from the flat.
A movie about Czechoslovak border guards trying to arrest the famous escapee called "King of the Sumava".