Vili Matula


Vili Matula or Vilim Matula is a Croatian actor, director, civil activist and politician. He is widely known as one of the most prominent Croatian actors of all time, as well as new representative in Croatian Parliament for green-left coalition We can!.
He is known for starring in films and television series including Croatian and Yugoslav cult classics S.P.U.K., Tranquilizer Gun, Is It Clear, My Friend?, Infection, 100 Minutes of Glory and Long Dark Night. He has also appeared in major international productions including , Schindler's List and Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead. He is a drama champion in the Kerempuh Satirical Theatre in Zagreb.

Early life

He finished elementary and high school in Zagreb. He was a member of the College of The Zagreb Youth Theatre. In 1978, Matula started his own theatre group "Domaći", two years before enrolling in the Academy of Dramatic Art. After graduating in 1985, he became a member of the Comedy Theatre . From 1987 to 1997, he was employed at the drama ensemble of the Zagreb Youth Theatre or ZKM. In 1997 he became an independent artist.
In 1988 he co-founded Zagreb’s Acting Studio intended for developing acting skills by applying different techniques and methods. In 1993 he attended the Summer Acting Programme at the Royal National Theatre in London. In 1995 he attended Genadi Bogdanov’s seminars on Meyerhold's Biomechanics.

Career

During his student years from 1980 to 1985, he starred in over thirty plays and appeared several times on the screen, including the memorable supporting role as Nindja in S.P.U.K.. He also made minor roles in Vojnici and Dvije karte za grad.
In 2000 he initiated Boal's Forum Theatre in response to an invitation by theatrologist and feminist critic Nataša Govedić. The experience gained at the Forum Theatre is shared with war victims, refugees, ethnic minorities and other minorities as well as LGBT+ citizens. In 2001 he started his collaboration with Damir Bartol Indoš and The House of Extreme Music Theatre – Kugla.
In 2008, he appeared in the Metastases play adaptation, for which he won Marul and a Croatian Theatre Award. For the supporting role, he was nominated for an Apollo Prize at the Belgrade Culture Festival.
On film, Matula is perhaps best known for his roles in Tranquilizer Gun, Is It Clear, My Friend?, Infection, 100 Minutes of Glory, Long Dark Night and Šuma summarum. For his role in the Matanić-directed 100 Minutes of Glory, Matula was named Best Supporting Actor at the Pula Film Festival, winning the Golden Arena. The Golden Arena is considered the Yugoslav equivalent to the American Academy Award.
He has also appeared in major international productions including the Emmy-winning , starring Richard Chamberlain, the critically and commercially acclaimed Spielberg historical drama Schindler's List and the 1990 Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead, starring Gary Oldman and Tim Roth. The latter seen Matula portray the complex Horatio and alongside Matula, several Croatian actors appeared as the tragedians. Those include Mladen Vasary, Željko Vukmirica, Livio Badurina and Sven Medvešek.
His television repertoire includes guest roles on Zakon!, Naša mala klinika and :hr:Žutokljunac|Žutokljunac. He has also filmed and produced several television specials and shorts for the Motovun Film Festival.
Matula has recorded several hundred radio dramas. His spoken word discography includes reciting August Šenoa, Ivan Goran Kovačić, Ante Kovačić, Vladimir Nazor and Miroslav Krleža. He has also provided vocals for the Punk Cabaret album by Stanislav Kovačić, on three songs. In animation, he has voiced several characters on the Croatian-American venture The Elm-Chanted Forest. In Croatian dubs, he voiced Chum in the Croatian dub of Finding Nemo and Sterling in Cars 3.
Matula is one of the most awarded Croatian actors in history. For his role as Rapački in 100 Minutes of Glory, he won the Golden Arena for Best Supporting Actor. Among other accolades, he has also won two Croatian Theatre Awards, two Orlando Awards, three Marul Awards and five Golden Laughter Awards.

Filmography

Film roles

In chronological order :

In youth

Matula has been involved in politics in different forms since his late teens. He was a member of the League of Communists of Croatia, as well as delegate in the 11th and final convention of the Central Committee of the League of Communist of Croatia, which resulted in the first democratic elections in 1989 the Socialist Republic of Croatia, then part of SFR Yugoslavia.

In adulthood

Matula has since taken part in several civil initiatives, numerous demonstrations and always active in the fight against gentrification and the seizing of public spaces in Zagreb including local movement of Right to the city called PravoNaGRAD, but also a vocal critic of structural problems in society like coruption and neo-fascism. He's one of the founders of the Actor's union, of which he was also a president.
Matula is a member of the coordinating committee of Zagreb is OURS! the progressive citizen platform that registered as a green-municipalist party. In the Zagreb municipal elections in 2017, Matula as a candidate for party entered the borough council of Donji grad in Central Zagreb as its vice president. His reports included council suppression, corruptive and manipulative behavior of city authorities.
In 2019 he became a founding member of the citizen platform We can! that formed a green-left coalition for the 2020 parliamentary election where is presented as one of the candidates. He got elected in Croatian Parliament together with 6 other members of the Coalition in a rather hard section of Croatia.

Calling out by right-wing

Politically active as actor, unionist and activist, Matula is well known for his support for centre-left/green politics, including civil and LGBT rights, as well as periodically being called out in populist-right-wing portal Narod.HR
or in responses of conservative Vecernji.HR, for being against WW2 pro-fascist official Enver Čolaković, to be awarded a street name as part of populist coalition trade-offs in Zagreb Assembly.