THE BUDAPEST HERALD published multi-award-winning film and theater director, Klaudia Kovács’ piece about her experience with and long-term impact of foster care. The article’s introduction was written by Hollywood correspondent and accomplished journalist, Virag Vida: “As we mark National Foster Care Month in the USA, it is both an honor and a responsibility to spotlight voices that rise from lived experience—voices that don’t just tell stories, but are the story. One such voice belongs to award-winning Hungarian-American director Klaudia Kovács, whose life and work continue to bridge continents, cultures, and generations. In this deeply personal piece, she reflects on growing up in foster care, peeling back the layers of her childhood with rare honesty and sensitivity.” To read the article, go to: Unfostered Dreams: Klaudia Kovács's Journey from Foster Care to Hollywood Filmmaking
female film director
Multi-Award Winning Film Director, Klaudia Kovács, Hired by UCLA's Osher Institute to Teach about Own Film, Oscar contender, TORN FROM THE FLAG /
Multi-award-winning film director, Klaudia Kovács, was hired by UCLA Extension, Osher Institute to teach about her own film, TORN FROM THE FLAG as part of the Winter Course, 2025.
“In this course, film director, Klaudia Kovács, presents her Oscar contender and multi-award-winning, international documentary, Torn from the Flag (2007), about the decline of communism and the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The following notables appear in the documentary: Mikhail Gorbachev, Ronald Reagan, Henry Kissinger, and Otto von Habsburg. The movie was made in collaboration with Mark Kramer, the director of Harvard University’s Cold War Studies Project; William Taubman, Pulitzer Prize-winning Political Scientist and Khrushchev expert; Vilmos Zsigmond, Academy Award winning cinematographer; and Laszlo Kovacs, cinematography legend. After the screening, students take part in a discussion on the history and culture of Eastern Europe, the sociopolitical dynamics of the 20th century, and the filmmaking process itself.”
The course is open to the public. Register here: Torn from the Flag: A Film about the 1956 Hungarian Revolution Course - UCLA Extension