He studied at the local secondary school in Radom. He was expelled for possessing books by Adam Mickiewicz and Juliusz Słowacki. Following an inspection of his lodgings by school authorities, during which several volumes of banned literature were found, he was barred from attending all public schools and continued his studies at a private school in Radom. After graduating, he held various jobs; working as a farmhand and on the railroad in Radom. Shortly thereafter he became involved in theatre, becoming an actor in Karol Hoffman's amateur troupe in Radom, where he debuted as Edwin in Aleksander Fredro's Odludki i poeta / The Hermits and the Poet (1894). He then joined Ludwik Czystogórski's traveling troupe and in 1895 became a member of Czesław Janowski's Chestochowa-based troupe, where he appeared in forty-two roles, including Karl Moor in Friedrich Schiller's The Robbers (1895), the Lieutenant in Fredro's Damy i huzary / Ladies and Hussars (1895) and Laertes in Shakespeare's Hamlet (1896). A year later he moved to Warsaw, where he performed with the city's garden theatres. In 1897 he transferred to the Polish Theatre in Poznań, he was given large parts in plays from the Romantic repertoire. In the dramas of Słowacki he played Zbigniew in Mazepa (1897), Kirkor in Balladyna (1897) and Szczęsny in Horsztynski (1898), and also appeared in the plays of Shakespeare, Schiller and Fredro, and in dramas by Young Poland authors such as Jan Kasprowicz and Jan August Kisielewski. In a number of these productions, his partners on stage included the illustrious actresses Stanisława Wysocka and Wanda Siemaszkowa. When his ten-month contract expired, he left Częstochowa and returned to Warsaw's garden theatres. Worked briefly in Kraków, and at the turn of 1898 and 1899 traveled to Russia for several guest appearances with Józef Poplawski's troupe. In 1899 Edmund Rygier, director of the Poznań stage, rehired him. Adwentowicz did not remain in Poznań for long, however, and opted for Lviv instead, which proved a turning pointing in this roving actor's career.
In 1900 Tadeusz Pawlikowski hired Adwentowicz at the Municipal Theatre in Lviv, where he ultimately worked for almost twelve years. In Lviv Pawlikowski created a theatre with an ambitious repertoire that emphasised contemporary western and Polish drama. Just as the Kraków theatre where Pawlikowski managed before, the Lviv theatre gained renown throughout the country for its modern approach to staging and acting.
While working with Tadeusz Pawlikowski, Adwentowicz admitted,
I matured to the point of accepting the great acting instructions and revelations through which the singular artistic and intellectual culture emanating from Tadeusz Pawlikowski so wonderfully and distinctly expanded the broadness of one's vision of art and the role one was playing (in: W. Natanson, Karol Adwentowicz, Warsaw, 1955).
Adwentowicz was often cast in contemporary plays of the time, particularly those of the Young Poland movement, playing Mlicki in Stanisław Przybyszewski's Dla szczęścia / For Happiness (1902) and Thaddeus in the same author's Snieg / Snow (1903), and around the same time portraying Relski in Kisielewski's Karykatury / Caricatures (1905). Other Polish playwrights whose works he performed included Włodzimierz Perzyński, {C}{C}and Stanisław Brzozowski. The plays from contemporary foreign repertoire in which he appeared included the dramas of Anton Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, Gerhart Hauptmann, Arthur Schnitzler, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Gabriele d'Anunzio and Hermann Sudermann. He performed in classics, the plays of Shakespeare, Schiller and taking on the title role in Johann Wolfgang Goethe's Faust (1904), a work staged rarely in Poland. Appearances in plays from the Polish Romantic and post-Romantic repertoire included the Poet in Stanisław Wyspiański's Wesele / The Wedding (1902) and Pułaski in Juliusz Słowacki's Ksiądz Marek / Father Mark (1905).
Adwentowicz played leading roles initially but soon gained fame as a realistic actor who looked very much at ease with the modernist European repertoire. According to his contemporaries, he skillfully conveyed his generation's anguish and anxiety. He used his voice subtly and stage silences effectively, was a master of mood and allusion, but simultaneously invested his characters with unusual mental strength. With great inner intensity he played nervous youths, rebels, psychologically complex figures, characters lost in the chaos of ambiguous emotions and experiencing real suffering.
"Despair, distress, horror were the things he expressed most naturally", noted Adam Grzymała-Siedlecki (Ku czci Karola Adwentowicza / In Memory of Karol Adwentowicz, Łódź-Warsaw, 1950).
He played heroes from the Polish Romantic repertoire and Shakespearean characters very suggestively, exquisitely employing poetic phraseology. Hamlet was one of his most famous roles in the dramas of the Bard from Stratford-on-Avon. Adwentowicz first played the part in Lviv in 1907 and made guest appearances in this role at many Polish theatres for years. His final performance as this character came in 1930 at a theatre in Łódź. Adwentowicz's Hamlet was not a neurotic youth, but someone with a lively intelligence, fully aware of his predicament, and simultaneously a passionate man truly tormented by the riddles of existence.
"(...) This was a Hamlet full of bile", wrote Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński. "He trembled with a focused, barely controlled passion under a mask of bitter and cutting irony" (in: W. Natanson, Karol Adwentowicz, Warsaw, 1955).
Adwentowicz's portrayals of the dramatic characters of Henrik Ibsen and later August Strindberg also proved immensely successful. He appeared in Ibsen's plays in Lviv, portraying John Rosmer in Rosmersholm (1906) and Solness in The Master Builder (1907). That same year in Lviv he stepped out on stage in a role that would ultimately gain him the greatest esteem - Oswald in The Ghosts. A year later he gave a stirring performance as the Captain in Strindberg's The Father (1908) during guest appearances at the Variety Theatre in Warsaw. While still a member of the troupe of the Municipal Theatre in Lviv, he reverted to being a traveling actor. In 1908 he made guest appearances in Kraków, Warsaw and Lublin. In 1910 he traveled to Vienna with his Lviv-based company. In 1912 Ludwik Solski brought the actor to the Słowacki Theatre in Kraków. With the exception of a handful of guest appearances elsewhere, Adwentowicz remained at the Słowacki continuously until 1914, when he took a brief break from his acting career, enlisting with the Polish Legions and serving with the 1st Ułan Division. He was injured and treated in Vienna, where he performed at the city's Polish Theatre before traveling for additional appearances in Zagred and Brno. Discharged from the army in 1915, he returned to Poland.
He worked a lot between 1915 and 1929, though he held no permanent jobs throughout this time. Once again a wandering actor, Adwentowicz toured many Polish cities, performing in Lviv, Kraków, Lublin, Vilnius, Bydgoszcz, Katowice, Poznań, and at many theatres in Warsaw. During this time he developed a number of new characters. Leon Schiller enlisted Adwentowicz for many of the plays he directed, casting him as Czarowic in Stefan Żeromski's Róża / The Rose (Bogusławski Theatre, 1926), Count Henry in Zygmunt Krasiński's Nie-Boska komedia / The Undivine Comedy (Bogusławski Theatre, 1926) and Lucifer in Słowacki's Samuel Zborowski (Polish Theatre, 1927). He continued to play his landmark roles, including that of Captain Edgar in August Strindberg's Dance of Death, Ibsen's Peer Gynt, and the title character in Słowacki's drama Father Mark.
Karol Adwentowicz also managed theatres and was politically active throughout much of his life. In 1900 he joined the Polish Social Democratic Party, which later collaborated closely with the Polish Socialist Party, and in 1903 the actor founded an amateur workers' theatre in Lviv. When Poland regained its independence in 1920, Adwentowicz became manager of a cooperative theatre that toured the Powiśle and Masuria regions. He was appointed director of a repertory theatre in the late 1920s, managing the Municipal Theatre in Łódź during the 1929/1930 season. He invited Schiller to work at the theatre, giving him the freedom to pursue his political theatre program known as Zeittheater. Working together, Adwentowicz and Schiller created a leftist stage that conservatives repeatedly attacked. In 1932, Adwentowicz relocated to Warsaw where he founded his own Chamber Theatre that he led until the outbreak of World War II. In the interim, during the 1933/1934 season, he was co-director of the Athenaeum Theatre in Warsaw. Adwentowicz put in one of his most interesting performances of this period as the Doctor in a 1934 production of Tadeusz Rittner's W malym domku / In a small House. The same year, Adwentowicz celebrated the thirty-fifth anniversary of his stage career by performing another of his landmark roles: the Voivode in Słowacki's Mazepa at the National Theatre in Warsaw.
During World War II Adwentowicz worked at the Znachor / The Medicine Man Café in Warsaw, which was popular with actors. The Gestapo arrested him in 1942, imprisoning him at the Pawiak, a detention center for political prisoners. He was released eight months later, in April 1943. He began cooperating with the underground Clandestine Theatre Council. When the Warsaw Uprising ended, Adwentowicz broke through to Kraków lodgings and then traveled on to Katowice, where he and Wilam Horzyca founded the Wyspiański Theatre where Adwentowicz was briefly the director (1945). He then served as director of the Popular Theatre in Kraków (1945-1946) before becoming artistic director of the Jaracz Theatre in Olsztyn in 1946. From 1948 to 1950, he stood at the helm of the Popular Theatre in Łódź. In 1948 he became a member of the Polish United Workers' Party. From 1950 until his death, he was strictly affiliated with the Polish Theatre in Warsaw. He continued to appear on stage throughout the postwar period. At the Popular Theatre in Łódź he was cast in several productions directed by Irena Grywińska, playing the Director in Szaniawski's Dwa Teatry / Two Theatres (1949) and Professor Sonnenbruch in Leon Kruczkowski's Niemcy / Germans (1950). His last great performance in a Shakespeare play was as Prospero in The Tempest as directed by Schiller (Polish Army Theatre in Lódź, 1947). He also played Horsztyński in the drama of the same title by Słowacki as directed by Edmund Wierciński (Polish Theatre in Warsaw, 1953). Ibsen's Ghosts was his last theatre project. Adwentowicz staged this play in 1957 at the People's Theatre in Warsaw, casting himself as Pastor Manders in what would be his final appearance on stage.
Awards and distinctions:
1947 - Shakespeare Festival Czytelnik Publishing Award for the role of Prospero in Shakespeare's The Tempest as staged by the Polish Army Theatre in Łódź,
1950 - State Award, 1st class, for lifetime achievement as a theatre artist,
1953 - Golden Cross of Merit,
1955 - State Award, 1st class, for lifetime achievement as a theatre artist.
Author: Monika Mokrzycka-Pokora, October 2006.