Gleb Alexandrovich Strischenow

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Gleb Alexandrowitsch Strischenow ( Russian Глеб Александрович Стриженов ; born July 21, 1923 in Voronezh ; died October 4, 1985 in Moscow ) was a Russian actor.

The older brother of the actor Oleg Strischenow began his career at the Kirov theater. He made his film debut in 1957 in the supporting role of Michin in Vladimir Petrov's film The Duel . Since 1962 he has been a member of the National Film Actor Theater in Moscow. He made his first film with the directing duo Alexander Alow and Wladimir Naumow in 1965 with Böse Anekdote . He was also cast internationally: as Colonel in Miklós Jancsó's Sterne an den Mützen (1966) and in films from the GDR: 1969 in Günter Reisch's Unterwegs zu Lenin and Joachim Hasler's My Hour Zero , in which he played Lieutenant Netrebin alongside Manfred Krug . Other well-known roles were Kalenic in Chauffeure in Ketten (1975), the Marquis de la Mole at the side of Natalja Belochwostikowa as Mathilde de la Mole in Sergei Gerassimows Stendhal film adaptation Red and Black (1976), and Jakubow in Eldar Ryazanov's The Garage (1980) and the Baron in Nikita Michalkow's Days from the Life of Ilya Oblomov (1980). His internationally best-known role is that of the lawyer Gérard Simon, again at the side of Natalja Belochwostikowa, in Alow and Naumov's Tehran 43 (1981).

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