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Ljubica Adžović (born c. 1924–1930, Yugoslavia – died 23 May 2006, Montenegro) was a Yugoslav and Montenegrin fortune teller of Romani descent, best known for her performances in Emir Kusturica's films Time of the Gypsies (1989) and Black Cat, White Cat (1998).

Early life

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Ljubica Adžović was the daughter of Pašo Adžović and Rukija Adžović (née Selimović), a Roma couple that arrived in Montenegro from Bosnia[1][2]. Pašo and Rukija led a nomadic lifestyle, and depending on the season and financial situation, they would relocate, setting up their tents across the country's coast[1]. Ljubica was born during one of these relocations, in a meadow in Zupci (Bar)[1].

Her exact birth date is unknown. On the web and in film encyclopedia, Adžović is said to have born in 1924, in Skopje, North Macedonia (then Yugoslavia)[1][3][4]. However, in a 1987 article about the filming of Time of the Gypsies, the newspaper Yugopapir reported that Adžović –a "native of Bar"– was 60 at the time[5], which implies that she might have born between 1926 and 1927. In a 2018 interview with writer Željko Milović, Adžović's daughter Nada stated instead that her mother was born in Zupci (Bar) in 1930, emphasizing that the birth place and date "Skopje, 1924" were false information, which circulated from the time of the production of Black Cat, White Cat, since most Roma actors came from Skopje[1].

Family life

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Throughout her life, Adžović married twice and had nine children[1]. Her first husband was Hakija, with whom she had one daughter, Nada. Her second husband was Spaho, with whom she had seven sons –Čedo, Šućo, Džemo, Grujo, Danilo, Veis, Đango, and one daughter –Jadranka. "Money and children are never too much. If you can have them, have ten. They'll be fed, don't worry", she would say[1].

Until the late '80s, Ljubica Adžović made a living by begging and fortune telling on the beaches during summer, and in the city centers around Bar during the other months of the year[1][5].

Her story gained public visibility in January 1987, when she was interviewed by journalist Jovan Plamenac for the newspaper Barske Novine[1]. In his article, which focused on the Roma families that settled in Zagrađe after the 1979 Montenegro earthquake, Adžović spoke openly about herself and her family. "I can't stand begging anymore. Everything is so expensive. I'm ashamed now when I have to ask someone: give me some potatoes, give me this, give me that. It's embarrassing for me now [...] I was in Italy, and there they pretend to beblind, crippled, paralyzed, just to beg [...] I didn't want to do that. I stayed with my uncle for three or four days, then I came back to my Yugoslavia. Here, I go to a door. I knock, and they say, Ljubica, is that you? Yes, it's me. Come in. They immediately make me coffee, give me potatoes, sugar, they help me". Adžović continued, explaining the idiosyncrasies of Roma life, their beliefs, celebrations, and the relationships between children and adults. She described how in their family they love to eat kastradina (salted and dried mutton) with chicken; how men do tinning and mend kettles, while the daughters-in-law beg and clean. The article ended stating that, even though Adžović was illiterate, her words and personality radiated a "unique life philosophy"[1].

Acting Career

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The publication of Ljubica Adžović's January 1987 interview on Barske Novine caught the attention of Emir Kusturica's film crew, who were seeking non-professional actors for his film Time of the Gypsies[1][6]. Later that summer, the film crew traveled to locate her, ultimately finding Adžović in a vineyard in Suvi Potok, near Sutomore[5]. This encounter marked the beginning of her unexpected acting career.

In an interview during the filming of Time of the Gypsies, Adžović reflected on the sudden change in her life: "He [Emir Kusturica] liked me, and overnight, I became an actress. I'm illiterate, but that's not a problem –I learn the text by heart. I might even make some money, because I am a poor woman. I feed nine children with social assistance of only three million and eight hundred thousand dinars. You ask where we live? In a wooden house, smaller than the one used in the film. That's why the children say, 'Go play, mother, earn some dinars so we can fix the roof over our heads'"[5].

In Time of the Gypsies (1989), Ljubica Adžović played Khatidža, the grandmother who raises the main character Perhan (Davor Dujmović).

Later, in 1990 Adžović returned to her life in Bar and her original occupation as a fortune teller on the beaches of Sutomore[1]. Besides starring in a television commercial for Point cigarettes, the tobacco company of Titograd, Adžović declined to work with other film directors[1]. She reappeared to the big screen only 10 years later in Emir Kusturica's Black Cat, White Cat[1][3], where she played a similar role, this time as Šujka: the grandmother of main character Ida (Branka Katić)[1].

After her second movie, Adžović returned again to Bar, where she paraded through town in a white Mercedes, dressed in festive attire, and welcoming guests to her new house in Zagrađe, whose Bar Municipality had provided the land, water, and electricity[1]. In Bar, Adžović continued fortune telling every day for tourists and passersby between the beaches of Sutomore and Budva[1].

In a 1998 interview for Barske Novine, Adžović stated: "From this new film, I earned 5,000 marks and furnished a bathroom; it meant a lot to me. I also received a vacuum cleaner, a washing machine, and a television. Director Zoran Janković was incredibly generous; he paid for everything. But last time, from Time of the Gypsies, Mirza Pašić only gave me 600 dinars. And Kusto [Emir Kusturica] treated me like his own son. He gave me the script, and I understood it, I knew it, and for longer scenes, he'd break them into two parts. I finished my scenes right away, then went off to the side to smoke"[1].

Her performances as the Romani grandmother in Time of the Gypsies (1989) and Black Cat, White Cat (1998), established her as the most famous self-taught actress of former Yugoslavia[1].

After the Spotlight

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According to the newspaper Glas Javnosti, later in 1998 Adžović left Montenegro to live and work in Sweden[7]. In June 2001, however, Adžović was featured in the French press under the pseudonym Aïcha, seeking asylum in the Rhône region, citing death threats from the mafia as the reason for her flight[8][9]. According to her testimony to the French authorities, the mafia had extorted money from her and destroyed her home in Montenegro[8][10]. Adžović stated that she had traveled to Lyon via Italy and Albania, seeking refuge in France with the hope of securing "water, bread, and a house to live in peace"[8][10].

Her whereabouts outside of Montenegro are however unclear: in a 2018 interview with writer Željko Milović, Adžović's daughter Nada denied these "fabricated newspaper stories", claiming that her mother was "traveling in France and elsewhere in Europe to visit her sons and daughter"; while in Sweden, she "fell gravely ill" and "returned to Zagrađe through Germany and France"[1].

Death

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After returning to Montenegro in 2005, she passed away on May 23 2006, following a brief illness[11]. Upon her death, Kusturica expressed profound sadness, noting that working with her on Time of the Gypsies and Black Cat, White Cat were among the most thrilling experiences of his career[1]. He described Adžović as a unique talent, stating that every scene they filmed together was an invaluable experience for him as a director[1].

She was buried in the Belvedere cemetery of Stari Bar[1].

Filmography

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Year Title Role
1989 Time of the Gypsies Khatidža, the grandmoter of main character Perhan (Davor Dujmović)
1998 Black Cat, White Cat Šujka, the grandmother of main character Ida (Branka Katić)

Accolades and Recognition

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In an article for Politika, film co-screenwriter and translator Rajko Đurić described Adžović as a "unique phenomenon", recounting what it was to shoot with her: "In August 1987, the role of Hatidža [Khatidža] , Mother Tidža, had not yet been cast. Besides Ljubica, other contenders included her daughter-in-law Olga, Ljubica's acquaintance from Titograd, Silvana, and an elderly woman from Vranje. In the screen test, each had to say a line or two from the script. By chance, Ljubica was last. I remember she was given a line –a conversation with Ahmed (Bora Todorović)– which didn't make it to the final film edit but was kept forthe TV series [...]: 'After this bee, there will be honey; after you, there will be dung'. [...] After delivering the line brilliantly, Ljubica joked, 'I've passed'. She took off her large straw hat and added, 'The hat drinks, the hat pays! Roma, strong as thunder!' We all burst out laughing. Together with Kusturica, we realized that the test was over and the role would be given to Ljubica"[1].

Kusturica himself praised Adžović's emotional depth, noting that after few screen tests, she achieved the level of performance he envisioned for the role of grandmother in Time of the Gypsies[6]. Despite her lack of formal training, Adžović's inexperience in front of the camera lent a natural authenticity to her portrayals, enhancing the realism of her characters[6].

During the premiere of Time of the Gypsies at the May 1989 Cannes Film Festival, Adžović appeared alongside Kusturica and the entire cast, receiving prolonged applause on screen and in person[1]. On the terrace of the Majestic Hotel, the trumpeters played traditional Vranje dance music, and Adžović performed the Čoček, joined later in the dances by Grace Jones, Greta Scacchi, and Cecil de Louis[1].

Time of the Gypsies (1989) won Emir Kusturica the award for Best Director and a nomination for the Palme d'Or[6], while Black Cat, White Cat (1998) won Emir Kusturica the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival and the audience award in Tallinn, Estonia[1].

Controversies

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In 2006, shortly before her death, Ljubica Adžović was mistakenly implicated in a child trafficking case[1][7][12]. This accusation was the result of an error by the Tanjug news agency, which had confused her with another person of the same name[1][7]. The allegation was subsequently proven to be unfounded[1][7].

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Milović, Željko (2019). Ljudi iz grada bez vrati – (ne)zaboravljeni Barani XX vijeka [People from the Town without a Gate – (Un)Forgotten residents of Bar from XX Century] (in Montenegrin). Bar: Mediteran Multimedia. ISBN 978-9940-735-01-2.
  2. ^ Bošković, Diana (2024-05-04). "Diana Bošković: Apoteka". barinfo.me (in Montenegrin). Archived from the original on 2024-08-03. Retrieved 2024-08-03.
  3. ^ a b hellomagazin.rs, ed. (2016-04-02). "Ljubica Adžović: Gatara koja je osvojila Kan i srce Emira Kusturice" [Ljubica Adžović: The fortune-teller who won Cannes and the heart of Emir Kusturica] (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2016-04-05.
  4. ^ "Sjećate li se Ljubice Adžović: Baba Hatidža i Sujka, gatara i rođena glumica" [Do you remember Ljubica Adžović: Grandma Hatidža and Sujka, a fortune teller and a born actress]. radiosarajevo.ba (in Serbian). radiosarajevo.ba. Archived from the original on 2024-12-09.
  5. ^ a b c d Joksić, Dušan; Popović, B. (September 1987). "Počelo je snimanje filma "Dom za vešanje"" [Filming of the movie 'Dom za vešanje' has started] (in Serbian). Yugopapir. Archived from the original on 2024-02-23.
  6. ^ a b c d "Gypsy Magic". 1990-02-25. Archived from the original on 2024-06-23.
  7. ^ a b c d glas-javnosti.rs, ed. (2006-03-21). "Za trgovinu decom mediji optužili pogrešnu Ljubicu Adžović" [Media wrongly accused Ljubica Adžović of child trafficking] (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2022-07-05.
  8. ^ a b c Dhennin, Matthieu (2006-06-09). Le lexique subjectif d'Emir Kusturica [Emir Kusturica's subjective lexicon] (in French). L'Âge d'Homme. ISBN 978-2-8251-3658-4.
  9. ^ Vanderlick, Benjamin (2005). Reyniers, Alain; Hasdeu, Iulia; Rothéa, Xavier; Treps, Marie (eds.). "Une mondialisation par le bas et ban". Études Tsiganes (in French) (23/24). Revue Etudes Tsiganes (published 2005-10-01): 233–235.
  10. ^ a b Manić, Aleksandar (2001-06-19). glas-javnosti.rs (ed.). "Pretnje crnogorske mafije" [Threats of the Montenegrin mafia]. Glas Javnosti (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2023-03-24.
  11. ^ seecult.org, ed. (2006-05-26). "Preminula Ljubica Adzovic, junakinja Kusturicinih filmova" [Ljubica Adzovic, the heroine of Kusturica's films, passed away] (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  12. ^ 24ur.com, ed. (2006-03-19). "Igralka trgovala z otroki?" [Actress trafficked with children?]. 24ur.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 2024-06-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link)