Gene Gutowski


Witold Bardach, better known as Gene Gutowski, was a Polish-American film producer who produced many of Roman Polanski's films, including Repulsion, Cul-de-Sac, The Fearless Vampire Killers, and The Pianist.

Biography

Early life

Gutowski was born as Witold Bardach in Lwow in 1925, the son of Juliusz Bardach and Anna Bardach née Garfunkel. From 1933 until the beginning of the war in 1939, the Bardach family lived in Rawa Ruska; then, moved to Lwow, where under Soviet occupation Witold began his studies as sculptor at the Institute of Fine Arts under Prof. Marian Wnuk. In 1941 the Germans occupied Lwow and a year later his entire family, who had lived there for generations, was killed.
Bardach escaped to Warsaw where he first worked for a photographer and later as an employee of the Junkers factory at Okecie Airport, secretly removing Luftwaffe radio-transmitters for delivery to the underground Home Army. In order to escape from the Gestapo at 18 years old, he took on the name “Eugene Gutowski” and left Warsaw for Riga, Latvia where he became the head of a construction company working for the Organization Todt. He was later evacuated to Germany at the end of 1944. At the end of the war in May 1945, again escaping from the advancing Soviet army, Gutowski joined the Counterintelligence Corps. He worked as a special agent until March 1947 when he married the U.S. State Department employee, Zillah Rhoades, and moved with her to New York City. They had two children, Arch. Ing. Andrew Gutowski born in New York on July 17th 1951 and Captain Alexander Waugh Gutowski born in Charlottesville, Virginia on November 7th 1952. Captain Alexander Waugh Gutowski had one children Jordan Waugh born in Saskatchewan, Canada September 17th 1979.

Film career

After working for a few years as fashion illustrator, Gene Gutowski entered the film and TV industry, working as a production manager on a couple of episodes of the mid-1950s TV series I Spy which featured Raymond Massey in the lead role. He moved to London in 1960 to produce Station Six Sahara released in 1962. It was there that he joined forces with Roman Polanski in 1963. In a fruitful creative partnership they made Repulsion, Cul-de-sac and The Fearless Vampire Killers, until Polanski moved to Hollywood under contract to Paramount in 1967. In 1970 Gutowski wrote the script for and produced The Adventures of Gerard, directed by Jerzy Skolimowski, and then produced A Day at the Beach, another Polanski feature, and Romance of a Horsethief. Remaining close friends over the years, Gutowski and Polanski joined forces again to produce together The Pianist, which won multiple Oscars. Gutowski staged several plays, including Passion Flower Hotel, Death and the Maiden and .
In 2004, his Polish autobiography Od Holocaustu do Hollywood, was published. An English-language edition under the title With Balls and Chutzpah: A Story of Survival was issued in the U.S. in 2011. In 2014, his son, the Hollywood-based filmmaker/producer Adam Bardach, made a documentary biopic "Dancing Before the Enemy: How a Teenage Boy Fooled the Nazis and Lived ".

Filmography