Judith Solé is a former model, actor, and screenwriter. Solé was born in then-Czechoslovakia during World War II and managed to live through the Holocaust. After the war, at the age of four, she and her family moved to Israel. She later went on to study literature and theatre.
Solé is mostly remembered for her time with the Lool comedy satire ensemble, and her acting roles in three of Uri Zohar’s films: Three Days and a Child (1967), Take Off (1969), and Save the Lifeguard (1977). She also appeared in Boaz Davidson’s 1970 film, Shablul (‘snail’), playing the late [legendary singer-actor] Arik Einstein’s wife who is going to rabbinical court with him to seek a divorce.
Highlights of her other film credits include Tevye and his 7 Daughters (‘tuvia vesheva benotav’) (Menahem Golan, 1968), The Wooden Gun (Ilan Moshenson, 1979), Photo Roman (Tal Ron, 1987), and On the Edge (Amnon Rubinstein, 1994).
In 1986 Solé co-wrote the script for the film Gloves, along with her husband – filmmaker and restauranteur Rafi Adar, who also directed the film.