Nikolai Grigoryevich Grinko
Nikolai Grinko ( Russian Николай Григорьевич Гринько , Ukrainian Микола Григорович Гринько / Mykola Hryhorowytsch Hrynko * 22. May 1920 in Kherson , Soviet Union , now Ukraine ; † 10. April 1989 in Kiev ) was a Soviet actor of Ukrainian descent.
Life
From 1946 to 1955 Grinko was employed at the Dramatic Theater in Zaporizhia . He made his film debut in 1956 in a film by Viktor Ivchenko . In the 1960s he worked several times with the directors Alexander Alow and Vladimir Naumow . Grinko became famous around the world as "Anton Chekhov" in Sergei Jutkewitsch's subject for a short story (1970) as a partner of Marina Vladys . Andrei Tarkowski engaged Nikolai Grinko for his films Andrej Rublev , Solaris , Der Spiegel and Stalker . In the popular children's film The Electronic Doppelganger ( Adventure of Electronics ; 1979) he played Professor Gromow. He had one of his last major roles in the international large-scale production Tehran 43 .
In 1988 Grinko received the award “ People's Artist of the Ukrainian SSR ”. He died in Kiev and was buried there in the Baikowe cemetery .
Filmography (selection)
- 1957: How steel was hardened ( Павел Корчагин )
- 1962: Ivan's childhood ( Иваново детство )
- 1964: Fire Horses ( Тіні забутих предків )
- 1966: Andrei Rublev ( Андрей Рублёв )
- 1966: War and Peace ( Война и мир )
- 1969: Subject for a short story ( Сюжет для небольшого рассказа )
- 1972: Solaris ( Солярис )
- 1975: The mirror ( Зеркало )
- 1977: War is not a counting game ( Аты-баты, шли солдаты ... )
- 1979: The electronic doppelganger ( Приключения Электроника )
- 1979: Stalker ( Сталкер )
- 1981: Peters Youth ( Юность Петра )
- 1981: Tehran 43 ( Тегеран-43 )
Web links
- Nikolai Grinko in theInternet Movie Database(English)
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Grinko, Nikolai Grigoryevich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Гринько, Николай Григорьевич (Russian spelling) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Ukrainian-Soviet actor |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 22, 1920 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Kherson , Ukrainian SSR |
DATE OF DEATH | April 10, 1989 |
Place of death | Kiev |