Oleg Tabakov
Oleg Pavlovich Tabakov was a Soviet and Russian actor and the Artistic Director of the Moscow Art Theatre.
Biography
Tabakov was born in Saratov into a family of doctors. His paternal great-grandfather, Ivan Ivanovich Utin, came from serfs and was raised in a wealthy peasant family under the Tabakov surname. His grandfather, Kondratiy Tabakov, worked as a locksmith in Saratov where he built himself a house and married a local commoner Anna Konstantinovna Matveeva. Oleg's father, Pavel Kondratievich Tabakov, worked at the :ru:Российский НИПЧИ «Микроб» Роспотребнадзора|State Regional Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology "Microbe" in Saratov.His maternal grandfather, Andrei Frantzevich Piontkovsky, was a Polish nobleman who owned lands in the Podolia Governorate and married a local villager, Olga Terentievna of Ukrainian origin. Oleg's mother, Maria Andreevna Berezovskaya, was a radiologist. She had a daughter Mirra from the previous marriage to Gugo Goldstern, a high-ranking Soviet functionary and intelligence officer killed in the line of duty.
During the Great Patriotic War, Oleg's father volunteered for the frontline and served aboard a hospital train while his mother was evacuated to Ural along with children where she also worked in a military hospital. After the war, the parents separated.
Theatre career
Tabakov studied at the Moscow Art Theatre School. Upon graduating, he became one of the founding fathers of the Sovremennik Theatre. He administrated the Sovremennik until 1982, when he moved to the Moscow Art Theatre, where he has played Molière and Salieri for over 20 years. In 1986, Tabakov persuaded his students to form the Tabakov Studio attached to the Moscow Art Theatre. Several notable Russian actors, including Yevgeny Mironov, Sergey Bezrukov, Vladimir Mashkov, Andrey Smolyakov and Alexandre Marine, studied at the studio. Tabakov also worked in numerous foreign countries, spreading his theatre's ideals abroad.Film career
Tabakov's movie career paralleled the theatrical. He was featured in Grigori Chukhrai's Clear Skies, Sergei Bondarchuk's War and Peace, TV series Seventeen Moments of Spring and D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers, the Academy Award-winning Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears, Nikita Mikhalkov's Oblomov and Dark Eyes, and the mock red western A Man from the Boulevard des Capuchines, among others.Voice-over work
Tabakov has lent his distinctive, purr-like voice to a number of animated characters, including the talking cat Matroskin in Three from Prostokvashino and its sequels. After the Matroskin role, he dubbed the character of Garfield into Russian in the feature film Garfield.Political activism
During the 2012 Russian presidential election, Tabakov was registered as a "Trusted Representative" of Vladimir Putin.In March 2014, he signed a letter in support of the position of the President of Russia Vladimir Putin on Russia's military intervention in Ukraine. In September 2014, Tabakov claimed that Crimea has no relation to Ukraine and upbraided Ukrainians for discussing it: "But all happened fairly. If our Ukrainian brothers were smarter, they would not discuss that topic. They had to say: "Forgive us for God's sake! We had encroached the gravy train." Because Crimea has no relation to dependent, nor independent Ukraine." Crimea is, since March 2014, under dispute by Russia and Ukraine.
Honours and awards
- USSR State Prize
- State Prize of the Russian Federation
- Order of Merit for the Fatherland;
- *1st class – for outstanding contributions to the development of domestic theatrical art and many years of creative activity
- *2nd class – for outstanding contribution to the development of theatrical art, and many years of creative activity
- *3rd class – for many years of fruitful work in the field of theatrical art, and in connection with the 100th anniversary of the Moscow Art Theatre
- *4th class
- Order of Friendship of Peoples – for his great personal contribution to the development of theatrical art, and training qualified personnel for theatre and film
- Order of the Red Banner of Labour
- Order of the Badge of Honour
- People's Artist of the RSFSR
- People's Artist of the USSR
- Honorary Member of the Russian Academy of Arts
- Golden Mask Award
- Seagull Theatre Prize
- Crystal Turandot award
- Presidential Award for Literature and the Arts
- Moscow Komsomol Prize
- Moscow Mayor's Award for Literature and the Arts
- Diploma of the Moscow City Duma
- Medal "For Valiant Labour"
- Honorary Citizen of the Saratov Oblast
- Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana, 3rd class What a Mess!
Selected filmography
- Sasha Enters Life as Sasha
- Case of Motley as Igor Peresvetov
- The Variegateds Case
- The Buzzy Day as Oleg
- Clear Skies as Sergey
- The Alive and the Dead as Krutikov
- The Bridge Is Built as Sergei Zaytsev
- War and Peace as Nikolai Rostov
- Shine, Shine, My Star as Iskremas/Cuckoo
- The Secret of the Iron Door
- Property of the Republic as Makar Ovchinnikov
- Seventeen Instants of Spring as Walter Schellenberg
- Mark Twain Says No as Mark Twain
- An Unfinished Piece for Mechanical Piano as Shcherbuk
- Lone Wolf
- D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers as King Louis XIII
- Three from Prostokvashino as Matroskin the Cat
- Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears as Vladimir, Katerina's lover
- Oblomov as Ilya Ilyich Oblomov
- Good Bye, Mary Poppins as Miss Andrew
- After the Rain, on Thursday as Koschei the Immortal
- Dark Eyes
- A Man from the Boulevard des Capuchines as Harry
- Shirli-Myrli as Sukhodrishchev
- Three Stories
- Quadrille
- Yesenin as General Simagin
- The State Counsellor as Prince Dolgoroukoy
- Relatives
- Ilya Muromets and Solovey Razboynik as Vasilevs
- Buratino's Return as Mr. Baskara