Vladimir Tarasyanz

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Vladimir Tarasyanz - actor and director

Vladimir Tarasjanz (* 1948 , according to other, but inaccurate sources, 1959, in Georgia , then Georgian SSR ) is a German actor , director and acting coach of Armenian origin.

Life

Tarasjanz initially studied literature from 1972 to 1976 at the Rostov State University (RGU) in Rostov-on-Don , Russia . In 1972 he founded the theater studio in Rostov-on-Don. From 1976 to 1981 he then studied directing at the Moscow Theater Academy (GITIS), class Maria Knebel. During his studies he directed at the Moscow Theater (SOWREMENNIK) and at the Moscow Youth Theater MTÜS. From 1982 to 1987 he worked as a lecturer in acting and directing at GITIS in Moscow. There he taught the students according to the Stanislavski method . At the end of the 1980s he came to Germany, where he worked as a director at the New Theater in Halle / Saale from 1988 to 1991 with several productions. He also worked as a drama teacher and director at the Poetic Theater of Leipzig University. In 1989/90 he hospited at the Berliner Ensemble and Deutsche Theater Berlin ; In 1994 an internship at the Actors Studio in New York City followed . From September 1991 to 1994 he was a lecturer in acting and directing at the Ulm Theater Academy. From 1994 to 1998 he was a guest lecturer in the Aufbaustudio Hamburg, the directing class of the University of Music and Theater Hamburg , and lecturer in acting for film directing at the Film Institute of the University of Hamburg. Since 1994 he has been a lecturer for scene and role studies and film at the School for Drama Hamburg . Between 2001 and 2014 Tarasjanz staged a total of 15 plays at the Monsum Theater Hamburg .

Since the mid-1990s, Tarasjanz can be seen regularly in German-language as well as international cinema and television productions. Due to his ethnic origin, he is often used in roles with an Eastern European background; but he also embodied characters from the Orient and North Africa . Due to his elegant appearance, Tarasjanz often portrays distinguished, but also shady characters in crime films and crime series.

In the movie Willenbrock (2005) he played the Russian Krylow from Moscow , the head of a gang of car smugglers and regular customers of the used car dealer Willenbrock ( Axel Prahl ). In the movie comedy Max Minsky and I (2007) he took on the role of the Hebrew teacher Wladimir Kasarov. In the movie Underdogs (2007) he was the prisoner Vladimir Kiriakov. He had a supporting role in Ninja Assassin (2009), a US martial arts film by the Wachowski brothers ; he played former KGB agent Aleksei Sabatin.

In addition to his cinema appearances, Tarasjanz was seen in numerous television films in leading and supporting roles. In Tatort: ​​Investigative (2007) he played Dr. König, the legal advisor to the well-known investor and supporter of charitable projects Alexander Radu ( Tonio Arango ), the main character of the crime thriller. He played the Georgian nightclub owner and pimp Viktor Kobalazde in the Wilsberg crime film Filmriss (first broadcast: January 2008) . In the ZDF Sunday film A Summer in Marrakech (first broadcast: May 2010) he played Rafiq Mernissi, the uncle of the Moroccan groom. In the same year, in December 2010, Tarasjanz was seen in another ZDF film; in the television series Kreuzfahrt ins Glück he played the Greek Jannis Tannidis, the great childhood sweetheart of the female main character Renate May ( Ursela Monn ). In October 2014, he played a leading role in the ZDF crime series A strong team ; he played Nicolai Rataev, a businessman and shopkeeper of Russian descent in Berlin who used to work for the Soviet secret service. In the ARD television film Das Programm , which premiered in January 20126, Tarasjanz played a supporting role as the prisoner-held criminal Philip Darankow. In the movie comedy Scouts of Peace (2017), Tarasjanz played the head of the Russian secret service, Dymov.

Tarasjanz also had episode roles in the television series Einsatz Hamburg Süd (1997), Sardsch (1997; as Fyodor Cherkassov, pimp in the Dresden red-light district), The Last Witness (2004; as Assen Ignatow, owner of a Russian-Ukrainian club), Lutter (2007; as businessman and lobbyist Agorov), Die Pfefferkörner (2008; as art thief Tomasz Reiter), Notruf Hafenkante (2009; as Russian café owner Sergej Sorokin), SOKO Leipzig (2009; alongside Cornelia Schmaus , as Russian Gregor Wassilijew and half-brother the murderess Renate) and Coast Guard (2014; as world chess champion Nikolai Semjonov). In December 2016 Tarasjanz was seen in the ZDF series Die Bergretter in a supporting role; he played the Polish groom Tomasz.

He was also seen in several episodes of the ORF / ZDF crime series SOKO Vienna in a recurring role, in which he played the Georgian mafia boss Mate Leonidse.

Tarasjanz lives in Hamburg .

Filmography (selection)

theatre

Director

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vladimir Tarasyanz . Agency profile ( Memento of the original from February 10, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved August 23, 2018. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ohene-dokyi-management.de
  2. Vladimir Tarasyanz . Entry at vollfilm.com. Retrieved August 23, 2018.
  3. Vladimir Tarasyanz . Profile at CAST FORWARD . Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  4. a b c Vladimir Tarasyanz . Profile and vita at Schauspielervideos.de. Last accessed on August 23, 2018.
  5. Vladimir Tarasjanz Vita; School for Drama Hamburg . Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  6. A Summer in Marrakech Plot / Production Details / Cast and Photo. Official website of the ZDF. Retrieved May 6, 2016
  7. A strong team: Late revenge ( Memento of the original from May 6, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ; Television review; in: Heilbronn voice . Retrieved May 6, 2016 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.stimme.de
  8. ^ ARD drama "Das Programm": Life in the witness protection program, television criticism; in: Tagesspiegel from January 4, 2016. Retrieved May 6, 2016