Arkady Mikhailovich Zinman

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Arkady Mikhailovich Zinman ( Russian Аркадий Михайлович Цинман , actually Aron Israilevich Zinman , Russian Арон Израилевич Цинман * 1. March 1909 in Riga , Russian Empire ; † 19th June 1985 in Moscow , RSFSR ) was a Soviet theater - and film - actor .

Life

Zinman was born in what is now Latvia, but due to the First World War , the family fled to Zhytomyr, Ukraine . As a teenager, Zinman's love for the theater developed. In 1929 he moved to Leningrad , where he attended the polytechnic and at the same time worked as a technician at the opera house . In 1931 Zinman moved to Moscow, where he entered the economic faculty of the Planow Academy and also worked as an electrician at the Bolshoi Theater . In 1932 he passed the exam at the technical college of the Moscow State Academic Theater , attended its drama school until 1936 and then performed at this house for a year. He then worked at the State Theater of the Buryatonic ASSR until 1938 , where he gave his first significant roles in Gogol's The Auditor with Lyapkin-Tjapkin and Semljanika . Until 1942 Zinman played at the Moscow Satirical Theater, which at that time appeared for members of the Red Army , and until 1945 at the Moscow Miniature Theater. As a result of his film career beginning in the mid-1940s, Zinman moved to the Moscow State Theater of Cinema Actors in 1946 , where he worked until 1976.

Zinman made his film debut in 1944 as a photo correspondent in Небо Москвы ( Nebo Moskwy ), but only his seventh film role in spring (1947) earned him a mention in the credits . Zinman was present to an international audience mainly through his roles in four works by Alexander Rou , but had a brief appearance in Alexander Ptuschko's award-winning fairy tale film The Stone Flower as early as 1946 . Zinman was also involved in the literary adaptations The Russian Question (1948) based on Konstantin Simonow , Die Grille (1955) based on Anton Chekhov and Anna Karenina (1967) based on Lev Tolstoy , as well as the monumental film The Unforgettable Year 1919 (1951). In addition to his work in front of the camera, which included only supporting roles , Zinman was heard as a voice actor in the Russian-language version of the Romanian film Doua lozuri (1957). His filmography includes almost 50 works, most recently the Soviet-Italian production Life is wonderful (1979).

Zinman had been a member of the CPSU since 1941 . He died in the summer of 1985 at the age of 76, his urn was buried in the Wagankowoer Friedhof , section 31.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c biography of Arkady Zinman on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on December 27, 2019
  2. Arkady Zinman's biography on a fan page (Russian), accessed on December 27, 2019
  3. Film data for Die Steinerne Blume on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on December 27, 2019
  4. Arkady Zinman's filmography on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on December 27, 2019
  5. Short biography of Arkadi Zinman on istoriya-kino.ru (Russian), accessed on December 27, 2019