Fokin was born in Moscow in 1946. After graduating from the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute in 1968, where he staged his first performance, Fokin began directing at Moscow's Sovremennik Theatre where he worked for 15 years. During the 1970s and 1980s, Fokin made a name for himself in the Russian theatrical world by directing plays at this theatre and the Yermolova Theatre. In 1971, he directed Valentin and Valentina, a play written the same year by Mikhail Roshchin. In 1973, he directed the plays An Incident with a Paginator and Twenty Minutes with an Angel at Sovremennik. Fokin also worked as a professor at the GITIS from 1975–1979 and at the Higher State Theatre School in Krakow from 1993-1994. In 1985, Fokin took over the Moscow Theatre. His 1985 play, Speak!, was the first play in Russia to forecast that the Soviet Union would diminish and that Russia would enter a new political period, marked by Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika political and economic reforms, introduced in June 1987. In 1989, Fokin was at the centre of an actor's dispute at the Yermolova Theatre, fuelled by negative reviews of his Dostoevsky play, The Idiot. He left the theatre and Russia and put on performances in Poland and Switzerland in 1990. Fokin is noted for his association with Vsevolod Meyerhold. In 1988, he became the chairman of the Commission on Meyerhold's Creative Legacy and in 1991 founded the Meyerhold Centre in Moscow, which became a state institution in 1999. and Valery Fokin. In 1994, Fokin produced the play, A Hotel Room in the Town of N, based on Nikolai Gogol's novel, Dead Souls in Moscow. Then in 1995 he garnered critical acclaim for his theatrical production of Metamorphosis at the Satirikon Theatre. The play was based on Franz Kafka's 1915 novel, which Fokin also made into a feature film in 2002, screening at festivals in Tokyo, Moscow, Vyborg, and Karlovy Vary. In 1996, Fokin produced Three performances in the Manege in Moscow in March 1996 and Transformations in Saint-Petersburg from November–December 1996. Fokin is also a writer and contributor to the weekly Moscow newspaper, Kultura, which also employs a number of notable cultural figures and writers such as Fokin and Fazil Iskander.
Style
Fokin has directed plays by the likes of Nabokov, Vampilov, Rozov and Albee. He is noted for his use of dramatic metaphor and pathos in his productions. He often draws upon poignant real life historical events or references, reflecting a predominantly artistic view of the world and an often paradoxical truth. Fokin has directed plays in Poland, Hungary, Germany, Finland, Greece, Switzerland, Japan, France and the United States.