Dara Rolins

[2] By her late teens, Rolins appeared in a number of made-for-TV films of varying quality, as well as managing to deliver a series of teen pop-orientated albums, such as Darinka (1986),[3] Čo o mne vieš (1988)[4] and soundtrack Téměř růžový příběh (1990),[5] all released by Supraphon.

Along with Karel Gott, she experienced a one-off success in the German-speaking region in 1986, peaking with their duet "Fang das Licht" ("Catch the Light") (the German version of their Czech duet "Zvonky štěstí") at number seven on the Austrian Singles Chart,[6] and number fifteen in Germany.

[8] The work distributed through a subsidiary of BMG, however, failed to attract the international market and she returned to homebase to resume her former course.

Sen lásky (1997),[9] which served as her initial comeback release featuring cover versions of various composers of classical era, produced a ZAI Awards-nomination within Slovak outputs.

Besides her recording achievements, Rolins posed topless in October 1999 for the Czech[18] and Slovak[19] issues of a men's magazine as a Playboy cover girl.

First, there was a 2009 revelation regarding her factual surname printed by Plus 7 dní; for over thirty years since her first public performance, she referred to herself exclusively under an adopted name.

[31] When she was four years old, Rolincová provisionally appeared in front of television cameras on the show Matelko, produced by STV.

On 8 October 2010 Rolins was officially accused by the Czech police of negligent manslaughter as the result of her traffic collision on Saturday 10 July 2010 in Prague.

[23] The singer, driving her Mercedes-Benz, had hit a motor scooter with a 63-year-old man named Jindřich Rotrekl,[24] who died of his injuries three hours after he was escorted into hospital.