Albert Leonidowitsch Filosow

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Albert Leonidowitsch Filosow ( Russian Альберт Леонидович Филозов ; born June 25, 1937 in Sverdlovsk , RSFSR , USSR ; died April 11, 2016 in Moscow ) was a Soviet or Russian actor .

life and work

Filosow began his professional career as a warehouse worker. In 1955 he was accepted at the Moscow Art Theater School in Viktor Stanitsyn's course. After graduating in 1959, he worked at the Moscow Drama Theater. Engagements at the Yermolova Theater followed until Filosov was drafted into the army in 1961, where he served as a sapper . In 1963 the blonde mime returned to Stanislawski's drama theater. He appeared at the theater in Wassa Schelesnowa and in 1979 in the leading role in the first performance of Grown Daughter of a Young Man .

In the cinema, Filosov was subscribed to strange roles. The film critic Nina Tsyrkun wrote in 1986: "The fleeting character of the washed-out features, the distant gaze of whitish, almost transparent eyes - Albert Filozov's" mark "made him perfect for the role of an outsider." His internationally best-known role is that of the fascist mastermind Scherner in the large-scale production Tehran 43 (1981). In it he plays on two time levels - in 1943 and 1979 - the head of an assassination attempt on Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt, who hunted down everyone involved in the late 1970s. Other well-known films that have also been shown in Germany include the leading role in the Edgar Wallace film adaptation The Great Animal Tamer (1975), Lost and Found (1975), Deviation Zero (1976), in the Mary Poppins adaptation A babysitter falls vom Himmel (1984), the title role of Arthur in New Adventures of a Yankee at King Arthur's Court (1988) and the role of the Prince in the fairy tale film The Ice Fairy . With Lenin in Paris (1981) and the TV series Nicolo Paganini (1982), he used the genre of historical film . Filosow was involved in over 100 productions, in addition to feature films, he also appeared in several documentaries .

In addition, Filosow gave acting lessons at the Gerasimov Institute for Cinematography from 1991 to 1995 and also taught at the Russian Academy of Theater Arts .

He died at the age of 78 and was buried in the Wagankowoer cemetery .

Awards

Filosow was awarded the title of Honored Artist of the RSFSR (March 29, 1983) and People's Artist of Russia (August 29, 1994), the Order of Friendship ( November 18, 2004 ) and the Russian Acting Prize “Figaro” (2014).

Private life

Filosov was married three times. His first wife Lidija, with whom he got married in 1961 during his military service, was an anesthetist. In 1968 he married his second wife, Alla, who worked at the State Institute for Theater Arts . In the same year their son Andrei was born. In 1986 Filosow married the deputy film studio director Natalja Stozkaja in Kiev, with whom he had daughters Anastasija (* 1994) and Anna (* 1998).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Biography of Filosov on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on April 18, 2020
  2. a b Biography of Filosov on fb.ru (Russian), accessed on April 18, 2020
  3. Portrait of Filosov on russiancinema.ru (Russian), accessed on April 18, 2020
  4. Filosov's filmography on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on April 18, 2020
  5. Photo of Filosov's grave on moscow-tombs.ru , accessed on April 18, 2020