Valeri Zolotukhin
Valeri Zolotukhin | |
---|---|
Валерий Золотухин | |
Born | Valeri Sergeevich Zolotukhin 21 June 1941 |
Died | 30 March 2013 Moscow, Russia | (aged 71)
Nationality | Russian |
Occupation(s) | Actor, singer, writer |
Years active | 1963—2013 |
Valeri Sergeevich Zolotukhin (Russian: Валерий Сергеевич Золотухин, 21 June 1941 – 30 March 2013) was a Soviet and Russian stage and cinema actor who performed at the Taganka Theatre which he also headed between 2011 and 2013. He was named People's Artist of the RSFSR in 1987.
Biography
Zolotukhin was born in the
In 1963 Zolothukhin graduated from the
In 1965 Zolothukhin appeared in his first movie Package based on the children's novel by L. Panteleyev, in the leading part of a goofy Red Army soldier. In 1966 the film won Grand Prix at the Zlatá Praha International Television Festival (Czechoslovakia).[6] But real fame came to Zolothukhin only in 1971 after the Bumbarash TV movie where he played a similar goofy soldier. The actor has been closely associated with the Bumbarash character ever since.[7]
In addition to acting Zolotukhin also performed as a singer, wrote stories and read them from stage. He remained at the Taganka Theatre after the 1993 split, when a number of actors headed by Nikolai Gubenko left it following Lyubimov's plans to privatize the theatre and move to the contract system.[8][9]
In 2007 he took part in the
In 2010 another internal conflict happened, also caused by Lyubimov's decision to move to a contract system. Finally he left the theatre, and the remaining actors chose Zolotukhin as the head of Taganka despite his health problems.[11][12] He still managed the theatre both as a managing and artistic director and, according to Gubenko, released five or six new plays.[13]
On 5 March 2013 it was reported that Zolotukhin had been taken to the intensive care unit due to unknown illness. RBK mentioned that he had already resigned from his post and basically hadn't been working since December 2012 following his first hospitalization.[14] He was later diagnosed with brain tumor.[15]
Valeri Zolotukhin died on 30 March aged 71. In accordance with his will, he was buried in his native village Bystry Istok at the Altai Krai, on the territory of the Russian Orthodox church which he had built.[16]
He was survived by his second wife, a violinist Tatiana Zolotukhina, his son from the first marriage to an actress Nina Shatskaya – Denis (b. 1969), an Orthodox priest, and Ivan (b. 2004) — his late son from an actress Irina Lindt. His only son from the second marriage, Sergei (b. 1979), committed suicide at the age of 27.[17]
Partial filmography
- Package (1965) — Petka Trofimov
- Intervention (1967) — Evgeny Xydias
- The Master of Taiga(1968) — Detective Vasili Snezhkin
- Late Flowers (1970) — knyaz Yegorushka
- The Flight (1970) — singer
- Beg (1971) — Pevets
- Hail, Mary! (1971) — Nestor Makhno
- The Twelve Chairs (1971) — vocal (voice)
- Salyut, Mariya! (1971) — Nestor Makhno
- Bumbarash (1972, TV Movie) — Bumbarash
- Ivan Vasilievich: Back to the Future (1973) — George Miloslavsky (singing voice, uncredited)
- Berega (1973)
- O tekh, kogo pomnyu i lyublyu (1974) — Yegor Vasilyev
- Kazhdyy den doktora Kalinnikovoy (1974) — Bybikov
- For the Rest of His Life (1975, TV Mini-Series) — uncle Sasha
- Edinstvennaya (1976) — Kolya Kasatkin
- How Czar Peter the Great Married Off His Moor (1976) — Filka
- Smeshnye lyudi! (1977)
- Zavyalovskiye chudiki (1978) — (segment "Versiya")
- Predvaritelnoe rassledovanie (1978)
- Little Tragedies (1980, TV Mini-Series) — Mozart
- Taynoe golosovanie (1980) — Ivan Fomich
- Yabloko na ladoni (1981)
- Detskiy mir (1982)
- Charodei (1982) — Ivan Kivrin
- Treasure Island (1982, TV Movie) — Ben Gunn
- Mother Mary (1982) — captive
- Sred bela dnya (1983)
- Demidovy (1984) — Panteley
- Dead Souls (1984, TV Mini-Series) — postmaster Ivan Andreevich / captain Kopeikin
- I vot prishyol Bumbo... (1984)
- Man with an Accordion (1985)
- Tri protsenta riska (1985)
- Chicherin (1986)
- Zakhochu - polyublyu (1990)
- Govoryashchaya obezyana (1991)
- Oy, rebyata, ta-ra-ra (1992) — (voice)
- Kak zhivyote, karasi? (1992) — Blagorodnyj karas
- Okhlamon (1993)
- The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin (1994) — Kilin
- Don't Play the Fool(1997) — Ivan Tarataikin
- Night Watch (2004) — Kostya's father
- Nochnoy bazar (2005)
- Adjutants of Love (2005, TV Series) — Alexander Suvorov
- The Master and Margarita (2005, TV Mini-Series) — Nikanor Bosoy
- Brezhnev (2005, TV Series) — Igor the gamekeeper
- Deadly Force 6 (2005, TV Series) — Yuri Danilov
- Ptitsy nebesnye (2005) — Feliks
- Not Born Beautiful (2005–2006, TV Series) — taxi driver
- Day Watch (2006) — Kostya's father
- 1612 (2007) — stylite
- Black Lightning (2009) — Pavel Perepyolkin the inventor
- Burnt by the Sun 2 (2010) — Pindurin the barge captain
- Iron Lord (2010) — Churila
- Pyat nevest (2011) — Dedasya
- Rzhevskiy protiv Napoleona (2012) — Suvorov
- Brigada: Naslednik (2012) — Swede
- Viy (2014) — Yavtukh (final film role)
References
- ISBN 5-699-17831-7
- ^ a b Valery Zolotukhin: "I spent three years lying, tied, unable to get up" interview to Dmitry Gordon, 2 April 2013 (in Russian)
- ISBN 978-5-4438-0386-9
- ISBN 5-699-01858-1
- ISBN 978-5-17-048779-0
- ^ Irina Ruchkina. Zlatá Praha festival — Culture without borders at Radio Prague, 14 September 2018 (in Russian)
- ^ Valery Zolotukhin. I'm Tired of Being Bumbarash documentary by Channel One Russia, 2011 (in Russian)
- ISBN 978-5-17-045464-8
- ^ Sergei Samoshin. Taganka Theatre decided to abolish Yuri Lyubimov article at Kommersant, 20 January 1992 (in Russian)
- ^ Central Election Commission named candidates who rejected their mandates in the 5th State Duma article by REGNUM News Agency, 13 December 2007 (in Russian)
- ^ John Freedman. New Artistic Direction at Experimental Theaters article at The Moscow Times, 8 September 2011
- ^ Maria Sedykh. The Taganka dead end article at Itogy magazine №14, 8 April 2013 (in Russian)
- ^ Zolotukhin could play anything as Nikolai Gubenko thinks by RIA Novosti, 30 March 2013 (in Russian)
- ^ Valery Zolotukhin went to intensive care unit article at RBK, 5 March 2013 (in Russian)
- ^ Zolotukhin has an inoperable brain tumor, he is in deep sedation article by NEWSru, 14 March 2013 (in Russian)
- ^ Valery Zolotukhin died by Interfax, 30 March 2013 (in Russian)
- ^ Valery Zolotukhin: "I didn't know about the affair between my wife and Leonid Filatov" interview to Dmitry Gordon, 2 April 2013 (in Russian)
External links
- Valeri Zolotukhin at IMDb