November 4, 2008
Contact:
Ewa Domeredzka
Director
Polish Film Festival in America
773-486-9611/12
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
STEFAN
KUDELSKI RECEIVES THE WINGS AWARD
FROM THE POLISH FILM FESTIVAL IN AMERICA
Polish
Film Festival in America (PFFA), to be held in Chicago
from November 8th to 23rd this year, will honor
Stefan Kudelski eminent Swiss inventor
of Polish descent, with its prestigious Wings Award.
The award is presented to the artists and film professionals
of Polish descent for their outstanding contribution
to the art of film beyond Poland. This is the first
time the award is given to an individual who represents
technical aspects of filmmaking. The award recipients
are selected by the international PFFA Board of
Governors headed by Christopher Kamyszew, the festival's
founder and honorary chairman. Polish Film Festival
in America is the world's largest annual panorama
of Polish film outside of Poland; in its twenty
years the festival has shown nearly one thousand
films made by Polish filmmakers.
Stefan
Kudelski was born in Warsaw on February 27, 1929.
His family had an engineering background background,
and included, in particular, several technical college
professors. His father studied as an architect,
but his principle field of work was in the chemical
industry. His mother was an anthropologist.

Stefan Kudelski
In
1939, the Kudelski family fled in front of the Germans,
and via Hungary they reached France, where Stefan
Kudelski continued his education. His father, being
an officer in active service, organized a resistance
network, which fell in 1943, but the family managed
to escape to Switzerland. Both his father and his
mother were honored for their activities during
this period with the French Croix de Guerre.
Established
in Geneva, young Stefan continued his studies at
the Ecole Florimont. He became interested in electronics
before he had finished his secondary school there.
He built up a small laboratory at home and worked
on the problems of generating extra high tensions
by means of high frequency oscillators, with a view
to electrostatic dust extraction from the air. In
1948 he started studying at the Ecole Polytechnique
in Lausanne, in the Physical Engineering faculty.
About
this time, the first magnetic recorders were put
on the market. Stefan Kudelski realized the potential
of using the memory incorporated in a magnetic tape
for the automatic control of machine tools. In 1950
his first commercial tape recorder was made. It
was called the Nagra. In 1953, the model was improved
by incorporating mechanical filters to smooth out
these variations in tape speed. This was the birth
of the Nagra II, which aroused substantial interest
of the movie industry. One of the first full length
feature films to use the Nagra during shooting was
"Black Orpheus." Kudelski examined several
systems for synchronizing the camera with the tape
recorder. The camera generates a signal which is
recorded on the same tape as the sound, thereby
reducing the power consumption enormously. From
1956, he researched into the possibility of a self-contained
tape recorder without a centrifugal speed governor.
This resulted in the Nagra III, which was launched
in 1958. The success of this model was enormous,
and enabled the Kudelski organization to develop
from a specialized laboratory to a true industrial
establishment.
Stefan
Kudelski's inventions were considered revolutionary
throughout the movie industry. Nagra allowed precise
synchronization for audio tape with film, providing
filmmakers with studio sound quality during on-location
filming. For his achievements Stefan Kudelski received
four Oscars: three Scientific or Technical Awards
in 1965, 1977, 1978 and Gordon E. Sawyer Award in
1990 from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences. Also he was given two Emmy Awards and
Gold Medals from L. Warner, Audio Engineering Society,
Lyra and Eurotechnica.
Stefan
Kudelski retired in 1991 and was succeeded by his
son, Andre Kudelski, as a Chairman and CEO of the
Kudelski Group.
He
has been always proud of his Polish heritage and
family roots.
The
Wings Award recipients in the past were: Andres
Bukowinski, Pawel Edelman, Agnieszka Holland, Slawomir
Idziak, Jan A.P. Kaczmarek, Janusz Kaminski, Krzysztof
Kieslowski, Wojciech Kilar, Jan Lenica, Roman Polanski,
Andrzej Seweryn. The last year Wings Award winner
Allan Starski, Oscar-winning art director, will
be honored on stage at this year's Opening Night
ceremony on November 8th at 7:00 pm. in AMC River
East 21 Movie Theater.