| WHERE ARE THEY
NOW? >
Ladislav Špaček: The afterlife of an
image-maker
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
 |
 |
|
Photo: David Holas
|
Until 1989 Ladislav Špaček (54),
an expert on Czech history and literature, worked as a teacher.
His knowledge of languages, his cultivated appearance and velvet
voice helped him become a media personality. After 1990 he was
in every household, on television - first as anchorman for the
news program "Events, Commentary" on Czech TV, and
he later became the president's spokesman. What is he doing now? "I'm
enjoying my new-found privacy," he says.
WHEN IN 1992 Václav Havel offered him a job as his spokesman,
he jumped right on it, betting the farm. Following his resignation
that summer Havel was a private citizen, and there was no certainty
that he would be re-elected. Špaček thus found himself in a whirlwind
of a hectic decade, when his time was scheduled to the minute and
his job description was unique. "I always had to look great
and react perfectly. I couldn't afford to be sick, and there was
no such thing as a weekend for me," he recalls. As a reward
he associated with a man who fascinated him as a democrat and a
politician. The role of image-maker for the head of state suited
him to such a degree that journalists occasionally wondered how
Špaček could possibly know beyond a doubt what the president was
thinking. "I couldn't ask the president for his opinion twenty
times a day - I had to be ready to formulate it at any time," Špaček
explains. "I spend days on end with him; I knew the issues
that he was working on, but I also knew about all his aches and
pains," he adds.
He sees his time with Havel as the apex of his life, which is why
leaving Prague Castle in February of this year was so painful for
him. "I was shattered. When on the next day I looked out the
window at the castle I was mortified," he acknowledges, adding
that he had to go on a two-week vacation in Thailand to pull himself
together. He refused many lucrative offers that he received after
leaving the castle, but followed his television colleagues to TV
Praha, a company that provides consultation on the principles of
communicating with the media. He recently became one of the four
co-owners, and the "castle" atmosphere has been enhanced
with the arrival of Ivo Mathé, the president's former chancellor.
Because he is so busy with his work he doesn't spend time with
Václav Havel, and he has no intention of writing his memoires. "Abusing
his trust would be a terrible indiscretion," he notes in closing. |