Adolfas Mekas (born on September 30th 1924 in Semeniskiai, Lithuania and died on May 31st 2011 in Poughkeepsie, New York) was a Lithuanian filmmaker, writer, director, editor, actor, educator and mentor. Adolfas Mekas collaborated with his brother Jonas Mekas to establish the seminal magazine Film Culture, and the Film-Maker’s Cooperative. He was associated with George Maciunas as well as the Fluxus art movement. His short films incorporate a comic and anarchic spirit, highlighted in his feature ‘Hallelujah the Hills’ (1963), which was featured at the Cannes Film Festival and is now classified as an American classic. Adolfas Mekas played a key role in the experimental film society, the ‘New American Cinema’ in the 1960s.
Acting
43
Male
1925-09-30
Semeniškiai, Lithuania
George Binkey
Sleepless Nights Stories
Going Home
Time & Fortune Vietnam Newsreel
An Interview with the Ambassador from Lapland
Windflowers
365 Day Project
Certain Women
As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
He Stands in a Desert Counting the Seconds of His Life
Guns of the Trees
Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania
Birth of a Nation
Underground New York
Journey to Lithuania
A Matter of Baobab
Diaries, Notes, and Sketches
Lost, Lost, Lost
The Genius
3 Friends Singing (...in the Desert)
Heretic
Antifilm #2
The Double-Barrelled Detective Story
Hallelujah the Hills
Compañeras and Compañeros
Skyscraper