Oleg Yankovsky
Oleg Ivanovich Yankovsky was a Soviet and Russian actor who had excelled in psychologically sophisticated roles of modern intellectuals. In 1991, he became, together with Sofia Pilyavskaya, the last person to be named a People's Artist of the USSR.
Biography
Early life
Oleg Ivanovich Yankovsky was born on 23 February 1944 in Jezkazgan, Kazakh SSR. His family was of noble Russian, Belarusian and Polish ancestry. His father, Ivan Pavlovich, was Life-Guards Semenovsky regiment's Stabskapitän. Yankovsky's father was arrested during the purges in the Red Army after the Tukhachevsky case and was deported with his family to Kazakhstan, where he died in the camps of the Gulag system.After the death of Stalin, the Yankovsky family was able to leave Central Asia for Saratov. Oleg's eldest brother, Rostislav, after graduating from the Saratov Theater School, went to Minsk to play at the Russian Theater. He took 14-year-old Oleg with him due to financial concerns, as in the family there was only one breadwinner – middle brother Nikolay. In Minsk, youngest Yankovsky made his debut on the stage – it was necessary to substitute the sick performer of the episodic role of the boy in the play The Drummer.
Career
After leaving school, Yankovsky returned to Saratov, where in 1965 he graduated from the Saratov Theater School. After graduation, he was accepted into the troupe of the Saratov Drama Theater, where for eight years of work he played a number of leading roles. After success in the role of Prince Myshkin in the play The Idiot in 1973, he was invited to the Lenkom Theatre.Yankovsky's film career was launched when he was cast in two movies The Shield and the Sword by director Vladimir Basov about World War II and Two Comrades Were Serving by Yevgeni Karelov about Russian Civil War.
During his prolific screen career, Yankovsky appeared in many film adaptations of Russian classics, notably A Hunting Accident and The Kreutzer Sonata. A leading actor of Mark Zakharov's Lenkom Theatre since 1975, he starred in the TV versions of the theatre's productions, An Ordinary Miracle and The Very Same Munchhausen being the most notable. For his role in Roman Balayan's Flights in Dreams and Reality, Yankovsky was awarded the USSR State Prize. He has been better known abroad for his parts in Tarkovsky's movies Mirror and Nostalghia.
In the early 1990s, Yankovsky also played quite different roles in Georgiy Daneliya’s tragic comedy Passport and in Karen Shakhnazarov’s historical and psychological drama The Assassin of the Tsar. In 1991, he was the President of the Jury at the 17th Moscow International Film Festival.
Starting in 1993, Yankovsky ran the Kinotavr Film Festival in Sochi. He continued to receive awards for his work with several Nika Awards from the Russian Film Academy for his directorial debut Come Look at Me and Valery Todorovsky's Lyubovnik. He appeared as Count Pahlen in Poor Poor Paul and as Komarovsky in a TV adaptation of Doctor Zhivago, directed by Oleg Menshikov.
The last film Yankovsky appeared in was Tsar, which was released in 2009 and demonstrated at the Cannes Film Festival on 17 May 2009, just three days before his death. Yankovsky played the sophisticated role of Metropolitan Philip in his last film.
Death
On 20 May 2009, Yankovsky died from pancreatic cancer in Moscow, aged 65. A civil funeral took place at Lenkom theater. His burial was held on 22 May 2009 at Novodevichy Cemetery in the presence of his close relatives only.Personal life
- Wife – Lyudmila Zorina, actress, Honored Artist of Russia.
- Son – Filipp, actor and film director.
- Daughter-in-law – Oksana Fandera, actress.
- Grandchildren – Ivan, actor; Elizaveta.
- Brothers – Rostislav Yankovsky, actor, People's Artist of the USSR; Nikolai Ivanovich Yankovsky, deputy director of the Saratov Puppet Theater "Teremok".
- Nephew – Igor Yankovsky, actor.
Filmography
- O lyubvi as Andrei
- The Shield and the Sword as Heinrich Schwarzkopf
- Two Comrades Were Serving as Andrei Nekrasov
- Wait for me, Anna as Sergei Novikov
- Those who have kept the fire as Semen
- I am Francysk Skaryna as Francysk Skaryna
- About love as Andrew, a friend of Nicholas
- Atonement as Alexis Platov
- Operation "Holtsauge" as Frank Ritter
- Racers as Nikolai Sergachev
- Wrath as Leonte Chebotaru
- Under a stone sky as Jasjika, soldat
- Unexpected joy as Alexei Kanin
- Police sergeant as Criminal nicknamed Prince
- Mirror as the father
- Bonus as Lev Solomahin
- The Captivating Star of Happiness as Kondraty Ryleyev
- Theater - this is my home as Dmitri A. Gorev, provincial tragedian
- Trust as Georgy Pyatakov
- Other people's letters as Zhenya Priakhin
- Sentimental Romance as Ilya Gorodetsky
- Seventy-two degrees below zero as navigator Sergey Popov
- Retired colonel as Alexei, son of colonel
- Word for protection as Ruslan Shevernev
- Long criminal case as attorney Vladimir Vorontsov
- Sweet Woman as Tikhon Sokolov
- Wrong Connection as Leonid Aleksandrovich Sakulin
- A Hunting Accident as Sergey Kamyshev
- An Ordinary Miracle as The Wizard
- Turnabout as Victor Vedeneev
- The Very Same Munchhausen as Baron Munchausen
- Open book as Raevski
- We are the undersigned as Gennady Semenov
- The Belkin Tales. The Shot as Count
- The Hound of the Baskervilles as Jack Stapleton
- Hat as Dmitri Denisov
- Love by Request as Igor Bragin
- The House That Swift Built as Jonathan Swift
- Flights in Dreams and Reality as Sergey Makarov
- Nostalghia as Andrei Gorchakov
- Kiss as staff captain Michael Ryabovitch
- Two hussar as Count Fyodor Turbin
- Keep me, my talisman as Alexey
- The Kreutzer Sonata as Vasily Pozdnyshev
- Tracker as Vorobyov
- To Kill a Dragon as Dragon
- My 20th Century as Z
- Mado, Hold for Pick Up as director Jean-Marie
- Passport as Boris
- The Assassin of the Tsar as Dr.Smirnov / Tsar Nicholas II
- Dreams of Russia as Erik Laxmann
- Dark as Terrorist
- Me Ivan, You Abraham as Prince
- Terra incognita as Odi Atragon
- Mute Witness as Larsen
- ...Pervaya lyubov
- The Government Inspector as Judge Lyapkin-Tyapkin
- The Fatal Eggs as Vladimir Ipat'evich Persikov
- Muzhchina dlya molodoy zhenshchiny
- Milyy drug davno zabytykh let...
- Alissa as Kosicz
- Rayskoye yablochko as Zhora
- Paradise apple as George
- Chinese Service as Count Stroganov
- The Man Who Cried as Father
- Town Musicians of Bremen&Co as Old Troubadour
- Come Look at Me as Igor
- Patul lui Procust as George Ladima
- The Lover as Dmitry Charyshev
- Poor, Poor Pavel as Count Pahlen
- Doctor Zhivago as Komarovsky
- Guilty Without Fault as Gregory Muroff
- Stilyagi as Fred's father
- Birds of Paradise as Nicholas
- Tsar as Metropolitan Philip Kolychev
- Anna Karenina as Alexei Karenin
Honours and awards
- 1977 – Honoured Artist of the RSFSR
- 1984 – People's Artist of the RSFSR
- 1987 – USSR State Prize – for his role in "Flights in dream and reality"
- 1989 – Vasilyev Brothers State Prize of the RSFSR – for role in "The Kreutzer Sonata"
- 1991 – People's Artist of the USSR
- 28 December 1995 – Order "For Merit to the Fatherland", 4th class – for services to the state, many years of fruitful work in the arts and culture
- 1996 – State Prize of the Russian Federation - the main role in Anton Chekhov's play "The Seagull" at the Moscow State Theatre, "Lenk"
- 2002 – State Prize of the Russian Federation - the main role in the play "Jester Balakirev" of the Moscow State Theatre, "Lenk"
- 11 August 2007 – Order "For Merit to the Fatherland", 3rd class – for his great contribution to the development of theatrical art, and many years of fruitful activity
- 23 February 2009 – Order "For Merit to the Fatherland", 2nd class – for outstanding contributions to the development of domestic theatrical and cinematic arts
- 1977 – Lenin Komsomol Prize – "for talented contemporary incarnation of the images in the movie"
- 1983 – Best Actor of the Year – for starring in the film Love by Request
- 1983 – Winner of the category "Best actor" of the All-Union Film Festival
- 1988 – Prize for Best Actor at Valladolid International Film Festival
- 1989 – Award "for outstanding contributions to the profession" at the "Constellation" film festival for his role in "To Kill a Dragon"
- 1991 – Nika Award, three times; in the "Actor", for Best Actor in the film "Regicide" and for Best Actor in the film "Passport"
- 2001 – Award for Best Actor at the Sochi Open Russian Film Festival Kinotavr – for the film "Come Look at Me"
- 2001 – Prize of the Russian Cultural Foundation at ORFF Kinotavr in Sochi
- 2001 – Grand Prix "Gold" Listapad at the Minsk International Film Festival "Listapad" – for his role in "Come look at me"
- 2001 – First place in the competition "Vyborg Account" at the film festival "Window to Europe" in Vyborg – for the film "Come Look at Me"
- 2001 – Stanislavsky Theatre Prize – for the main role in the play "Jester Balakirev" of the Moscow State Theatre, "Lenk"
- 2002 – Nika Award – for Best Actor in the film "The Lover"
- 2002 – The award "Golden Aries" – for Best Actor in the film "The Lover"
- 2002 – Award for Best Actor at the ORFF "Kinotavr" in Sochi – for his role in "The Lover"
- 2002 – Award for Best Actor at the festival "Constellation" – for his role in the movie "The Lover"
- 2002 – Winner of "Idol" in the "Idol of the Year" – for the main role in the play "Jester Balakirev" of the Moscow State Theatre, "Lenk" and for his role in "Come look at me"
- 2003 – Golden Eagle Award – for Best Supporting Actor in the film "Poor, Poor Pavel"
- 2003 – Special Award from the Administration of Krasnodar Krai ORFF "Kinotavr" in Sochi
- 2005 – Theatre Prize "Hit of the Season" – for the play "Tout payé", or "Paid by all"
- 2006 – Golden Eagle Award – for Best Actor on Television
- 2006 – Prize of the Russian Television Academy TEFI – for best actor on television
- 2007 – Award "Triumph"
- 2008 – Public award – the Order of St. Alexander Nevsky, "For Fatherland and work"
- 2009 – Award "Triumph"
- 2009 – Stanislavsky Award
- 2009 – Prize "long-term President" Kinotavr – for outstanding contribution to Russian cinema"
- 2009 – Award for Best Actor at the festival "Constellation" – a starring role in "Anna Karenina" ]
- 2010 – Golden Eagle Special Prize for his contribution to the development of national cinema
- 2010 – Nika Award for 2009 – "Best Actor", for the combination of roles in the film "Anna Karenina" and "King"