
Semeniškiai, Lithuania
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.

as Self (archive footage)

as Self
2000

as Self
1968

as Self (archive footage)
1986

as Gregory
1961

as Self
1972

as Self
1976

as Card Player
1968

as Self
2011

as Self
2007

as Self
1997

as Self
1968

as Dr. Corbin
1993
as Hilda's Papa
2004
2019

as Self
2011

as Self
2007

as Hilda's Papa
2004

as Self
2000

as Self
1997

as Dr. Corbin
1993

as Self (archive footage)
1986

as Self
1976

as Himself
1972

as Self
1972

as Himself
1971

1969

as Self
1968

as Card Player
1968

1968

as Self
1968

1967

as Gregory
1961

Editor

Editor

Editor

Director

Editor

Screenplay
Editor

Director

Director

Production Coordinator

Editor

Director