Oja Kodar

Oja Kodar (OY-ah ko-DAHR;[1] born 1941) is a Croatian actress, screenwriter and director, best known as Orson Welles' partner during the last years of his life.

Personal

Born Olga Palinkaš in Zagreb to a Hungarian father and a Croatian mother, Kodar was the partner and lover of Orson Welles during the final years of his life. They met in Zagreb in 1961, when Welles was in town filming The Trial. Forty-six-year-old Welles, at the time married to his third wife Paola Mori, took a liking to the twenty-year-old "dark, beautiful and exotic-looking" Palinkaš.[2][3] Soon after they began their relationship, Welles gave her a stage name Oja Kodar, which is a mixture of the name 'Oja' given by her sister Nina and the Croatian expression 'ko-dar' (as a present).[4]

The Italian press broke news of Welles's affair with Kodar in March 1970,[5] though Mori was apparently unaware of it until 1984.[6]

In his final years, Welles divided his time between a Las Vegas home he shared with Mori and a Hollywood house with Kodar. Mori died 10 months after her husband and the estate was settled by Kodar and Beatrice Welles, Mori and Welles's daughter, on November 7, 1986.[7]

Cinematic career

Most of Kodar's cinematic career revolved around Welles's projects, many of which were never completed.

In 1966, five years after they met, the couple went back to the Yugoslav coast where Welles began shooting The Deep based on Charles Williams' novel Dead Calm with Kodar playing one of the main roles. Welles envisioned the film as a commercial project, designed to do well at the box-office; however, the production ran into financial and technical difficulties and was not completed. Decades later, Kodar blamed it on an unwillingness by jealous co-star Jeanne Moreau to dub her lines,[8] while editor Mauro Bonanni claimed Welles abandoned The Deep when he realized the novice Kodar was ill-suited for the lead role.[9]

Welles began shooting The Other Side of the Wind in 1970. Kodar says she co-wrote the screenplay with Welles, though it dates back to the early 1960s as a project Welles first conceived with Keith Baxter and Anthony Perkins in key roles.[10] With a plot revolving around an aging film director's 70th birthday party, the film was conceptualized as a cynical portrait of the 1970s Hollywood – parodying the end of the studio system, and the experimental new filmmakers of the New Hollywood, as well as mocking various European directors. The shooting, featuring Kodar in a sex scene with Bob Random in a station wagon, dragged on for years and never got completed.

Kodar (uncredited) co-wrote and appeared as herself in Welles's free-form documentary, F for Fake (1973), which initially received negative reviews, but grew in stature in the years since due to its groundbreaking editing techniques.

In 1980, Kodar collaborated on a script for Welles's film The Dreamers based on Karen Blixen's stories. Test scenes with Kodar in the main role were shot in 1982, but Welles never obtained backing for the film. The Munich Film Museum has edited the black and white and color footage into a short film.[11]

Three months after Welles's died in October 1985, Kodar sold her book rights to Dead Calm for $180,000 to Australian producer George Miller for a 1989 film of the same name; however, the deal nearly went sour until producers informed Kodar they would hold her liable for damages.[12]

Kodar made her debut as a feature film director, with the release of Jaded (1989). The film was produced by Kodar and Gary Graver (one of the cameramen on F for Fake), who doubled as the director of photography. The film starred Randall Brady, Elizabeth Brooks, Scott Kaske, Jillian Kesner, Kelli Maroney, and Kodar. Portions of the film were shot in an artist's loft in downtown Los Angeles.[13]

Kodar supervised Jess Franco's assemblage of unedited footage of Welles's Don Quixote, which was released in 1992 to overwhelmingly poor reviews.

Kodar second feature film as director was the war drama Vrijeme za... (1993) whose plot is placed during the 1991–1995 war in Croatia. The film was co-produced by the state-owned Croatian production house Jadran Film and the Italian state television channel Rai Tre, along with the Italian production house Ellepi Films.[14]

She later co-directed and co-wrote the German-French documentary Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995). For this film, she supervised a compilation of unused footage shot by Welles over the final 20 years of his career. Kodar is interviewed in Los Angeles and in Orvilliers, France where they shared a house. This documentary is included on The Criterion Collection DVD release of F For Fake. The documentary goes into details about the three unfinished films on which Kodar and Welles worked together. The Other Side of the Wind was largely completed and according to media reports in April 2007 speculated on a release in 2008.[15] The other films were never completed for reasons explained in the documentary.

In April 2015, Josh Karp's book Orson Welles's Last Movie: The Making of The Other Side of the Wind painted an unflattering portrait of Kodar as numerous individuals (investors, attorneys, executives and others) who have been involved with the unfinished film since 1999 all told a variation on the same tale in which Kodar derailed attempts to complete the film by: reneging on agreements; pitting investors against each other; secretly shopping for better deals and shifting her allegiances at critical junctures. Kodar's actions prompted an attorney for the Boushehri family, a co-owner of the film, to write in a 2007 memo: "We have been waiting for many years for her to agree to a deal... My own personal feeling is that she is incapable of making a deal with anyone... Our client has never been the problem. Kodar has been."[16]

A plan to complete The Other Side of the Wind by producers Filip Jan Rymsza and Frank Marshall was agreed to by Kodar in October 2014,[17] but later fell apart as Kodar and producers renegotiated conditions of the deal.[18]

Speaking at Chapman University in Orange, California on September 11, 2015, directors Peter Bogdanovich and Henry Jaglom and author Joseph McBride – all onscreen participants in The Other Side of the Wind – confirmed that Kodar had at various points derailed attempts to complete the movie.[19]

References

  1. As pronounced by Orson Welles in F for Fake
  2. Thomson, David Razing Kane;Los Angeles magazine, April 1996
  3. The Trial Rotten Tomatoes
  4. Drössler, Stefan, The Unknown Orson Welles, p. 39
  5. "Interview with 'Don Quixote' editor Mauro Bonanni". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  6. "Once Moor with Feeling : People.com". www.people.com. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  7. Case No. P20544, November 7, 1986; Clark County District Court, Nevada
  8. AdoroCinema. "Exclusivo: Oja Kodar revela segredos de Orson Welles em Mostra do centenário do diretor". AdoroCinema. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  9. "Intervista a Mauro Bonanni - Il Chisciotte di Welles | Quinlan.it". Quinlan. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  10. "'Follow El Rey!' – Spanish Welles symposium traces his footsteps...". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  11. "4 nights of 'Unknown Orson Welles' a hit at MoMA". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  12. "Dark voyages: 'The Deep' and 'Dead Calm'". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  13. "Jaded" on IMDb.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0239070
  14. Vrijeme Za...;Variety, February 13, 1994
  15. Howard Swains "Deal Near on a Lost Welles", The New York Sun, April 2, 2007
  16. "Is Oja Kodar holding up 'The Other Side of the Wind'?". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  17. Carvajal, Doreen (October 28, 2014). "Orson Welles's Last Film May Finally Be Released". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  18. ""Houston, We Have A Problem...and Her Name Is Oja Kodar" - Hollywood Elsewhere". www.hollywood-elsewhere.com. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  19. "'The Other Side of the Wind' delay raised at prestigious Welles panel". Wellesnet | Orson Welles Web Resource. Retrieved February 26, 2016.

External links

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