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Irena Solska

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irena Solska
Solska in 1929
Born
Karolina Flora Poświk

(1877-10-27)27 October 1877
Died8 March 1958(1958-03-08) (aged 80)
Occupation(s)Actress, stage director
Irena Solska by Leon Wyczółkowski (1899)

Karolina "Irena" Flora Solska (née Poświk; 27 October 1877 — 8 March 1958) was a Polish actress and stage director. She was a member of the Young Poland modernist artistic movement.

Solska made her debut under the name of Irena Górska, playing the title role in a production of Friedrich Halm's Count René at the Victoria Theatre in Łódź.[1]

Solska often worked with writer Jerzy Żuławski, with whom she was in a relationship between 1904 and 1906. One of her most famous roles was that of Psyche in Eros and Psyche, based on Apuleius' Cupid and Psyche, which she performed for twenty years of her career and which Żuławski wrote especially for her.[2] He also wrote The Myrtle Wreath (Wianek mirtowy, 1903) and Ilola (1905) for her.[3]

Between 1920 and 1930 she wrote her autobiography; however that text was lost during World War II, and she returned to writing it after the war.[3]

During the German occupation of Poland, Solska was a member of Żegota ("Polish Council to Aid Jews").[4][5] While living in Warsaw during the war, Solska helped to rescue Jews by making her apartment available as a hiding place. According to Joanna Michlic, Solska was known for offering help when all other avenues for rescue had been exhausted.[6]

A portrait of Solska is present in a stained glass window of Fribourg Cathedral in Fribourg, Switzerland. In a scene by Polish painter Józef Mehoffer, Solska is portrayed as "Helvetia" thanking the Virgin Mary for the victory in the Battle of Morat (1476), in a piece titled Our Lady of Victory.[3]

Personal life

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According to her biographer, Nataliya Yakubova, Solska was afraid of inheriting a psychological disorder from her grandmother. Solska once attempted suicide, fearing she would be afflicted by madness.[3]

Solska was married to Ludwik Solski, also a Polish stage director. After divorcing him, she married Otton Grosser, a colonel in the Polish army and during World War II a member of the anti-Nazi resistance Home Army. Grosser was executed by Nazi Germany in February 1943.[7]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^ Mokrzycka-Pokora, Monika (November 2006). "Irena Solska". Culture.pl. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Phantasies of Restored Innocence: Traces of the Actress Irena Solska (1875–1958) in the Dramas of Jerzy Żuławski (1874–1915)". Central and Eastern European Online Library. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d Yakubova, Nataliya (2006). "Phantasies of Restored Innocence: Traces of the Actress Irena Solska (1875–1958) in the Dramas of Jerzy Żuławski (1874–1915)". Estetyka I Krytyka. 41: 191–206.
  4. ^ Poskuta-Włodek, Diana (2001). Trzy dekady z dziejów sceny: Teatr im. Juliusza Słowackiego w Krakowie w latach 1914-1945. Juliusz Slowacki Theater in Krakow. p. 295. ISBN 9788371884993.
  5. ^ Prekerowa, Teresa (1982). Konspiracyjna Rada Pomocy Żydom w Warszawie 1942-1945. PIW. p. 100. ISBN 9788306006223.
  6. ^ Michilic, Joanna (2011). ""I will never forget what you did for me during the war": Rescuer — rescuee relationships in the light of postwar correspondence in Poland, 1945–1949". Yad Vashem Studies. 39: 169–20.
  7. ^ Grabowski, Waldemar (1995). Delegatura Rządu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej na Kraj. PAX. p. 100. ISBN 9788321113920.
  8. ^ Uchwala Rady Panstwa z dnia 11 Pazdziernika 1955 (Resolution of State Council on the day of 11 October 1955), [1]
  9. ^ Uchwala Prezydium Krajowej Rady Narodowej z d dnia 15 Czerwca 1946 (Resolution of the President of National State Council on the day of 15 June 1946), [2]