Jana Ctverackova - Co Si Muzete Zahrat Anglicky -
While many Czech actors shy away from English-language roles due to accent or a lack of training, Čtveráčková has made it a defining pillar of her professional identity. This feature explores how a graduate of DAMU (Prague’s Academy of Performing Arts) became one of the most sought-after bilingual actors in the country, what “playing in English” actually entails for her, and why this skill has reshaped her career trajectory. Jana Čtveráčková’s relationship with English began long before she stepped onto a professional stage. Unlike many of her peers who learned English through mandatory school lessons, Čtveráčková immersed herself in the language out of pure curiosity. Growing up in the post-Velvet Revolution 1990s, she devoured British and American films, often watching them without subtitles. “I loved the rhythm of English,” she once said in an interview with Český rozhlas . “It felt like a different way of thinking, not just a different set of words.”
Many bilingual actors translate their emotional cues from Czech. Čtveráčková refuses. She creates a separate emotional memory map for each English role. “When I play a sad scene in Czech, I think of a specific memory. When I play it in English, I find a different memory—one that happened while I was speaking English. Otherwise, the emotion rings false.” Jana Ctverackova - Co si muzete zahrat anglicky
Before she even learns her lines, she spends two weeks working with a dialect coach to “lock” the sound of the character. She records herself reading a page of the script, then compares it to a native speaker’s recording. She marks every vowel shift and consonant drop. “If the ‘t’ in ‘water’ sounds like a Prague ‘t’, the audience will stop listening to the emotion and start listening to the accent,” she explains. While many Czech actors shy away from English-language
She is an actor for whom English is simply another stage—and she owns every inch of it. Jana Čtveráčková continues to perform in both Czech and English at venues including Dejvické divadlo and international festivals. She is represented for English-language work by [agency name if known, otherwise remove]. Unlike many of her peers who learned English