Stanislav Lyubshin
Encyclopedia
Stanislav Andreyevich Lyubshin is a Russia
Russia
Russia or , officially known as both Russia and the Russian Federation , is a country in northern Eurasia. It is a federal semi-presidential republic, comprising 83 federal subjects...

n actor
Actor
An actor is a person who acts in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio in that capacity...

, film director
Film director
A film director is a person who directs the actors and film crew in filmmaking. They control a film's artistic and dramatic nathan roach, while guiding the technical crew and actors.-Responsibilities:...

, and People's Artist of the RSFSR (1981).

Life

Stanislav Lyubshin is a notable Russian actor best known for his leading role as Dyadya Vova in Soviet comedy Kin-Dza-Dza (1989).

He was born Stanislav Andreevich Lyubshin on April 6, 1933, in the village of Vladykino, a suburb of Moscow, Russia, Soviet Union. His father, Andrei Lyubshin, was an agricultural engineer, his mother was a milkmaid. Young Lyubshin was fond of theatre, he was encouraged by his parents and joined the drama class at his school. From 1955-1959 he studied acting at Shchepkin School of Maly Theatre in Moscow, graduating in 1959 as an actor.

Lyubshin made his film debut in 1959, while a student, in There Will Be No Leave Today (1959), by directors Andrey Tarkovskiy and Aleksandr Gordon. He shot to fame in the Soviet Union with the leading role as Weiss/Belov, a Russian spy in the Nazi Germany, in the popular film Shchit i mech (1968) by director Vladimir Basov. During the 1960s and 1970s, Lyubshin was among the most popular actors of the Soviet cinema.

From 1959 - 1964 Lyubshin was member of the troupe at "Sovremennik" Theatre in Moscow. There he was stage partner of Oleg Tabakov, Oleg Yefremov, Evgeni Evstigneev, Galina Volchek, Viktor Sergachev, Oleg Tabakov, Oleg Dal, Igor Kvasha, Valentin Gaft, and other notable actors. From 1964 - 1967 he was member of the Taganka Theatre company in Moscow. There his stage partners were such renown actors as Vladimir Vysotsky, Valeriy Zolotukhin, Leonid Filatov, Alla Demidova, Venyamin Smekhov Ivan Bortnik, Zhanna Bolotova, Natalya Sayko, Nikolai Gubenko, and others.

Since 1981 Lyubshin has been permanent member with the Moscow Art Theatre (MKhAT named after A. Chekhov). There his stage partners were such renown Russian actors as Mark Prudkin, Angelina Stepanova, Anastasiya Georgiyevskaya, Vasili Toporkov, Mikhail Bolduman, Pavel Massalsky, and the next generation of MKhAT actors - Oleg Tabakov, Kira Golovko, Iya Savvina, Alla Pokrovskaya, Anastasiya Voznesenskaya, Irina Miroshnichenko, Andrey Myagkov, Vladimir Kashpur, Viktor Sergachyov, Vyacheslav Nevinnyy, Yevgeni Kindinov, Sergei Sazontyev, Avangard Leontyev, Igor Vasilyev, Elena Panova, Dariya Moroz, Olga Litvinova, Natalya Rogozhkina, Yekaterina Semyonova, Olga Yakovleva, Igor Vernik, Mikhail Porechenkov, Konstantin Khabenskiy, Valeri Troshin, Mikhail Trukhin, Valeri Khlevinsky, and others. His best known stage appearances included his roles in the classic plays by Anton Chekhov, such as 'Vishnevy sad' (aka..The Cherry Orchard), 'Tri Sestry' (aka.. The Three Sisters) and 'Ivanov', among other plays.

Stanislav Lyubshin was designated People's Actor of Russia, and was decorated with the Order of Service to Fatherland. He is living and working in Moscow, Russia.

Filmography

  • There Will Be No Leave Today (1959)
  • Tretya raketa (1963)
  • Esli ty prav... (1963)
  • Bolshaya ruda (1964)
  • Alpiyskaya ballada (1965)
  • Kakoe ono, more? (1966)
  • Mne dvadtsat let (1966)
  • Shchit i mech (1968)
  • Krasnaya ploshchad (1971)
  • Pervaya lyubov (1971)
  • Moya zhizn (1972)
  • Pechki-lavochki (1972)
  • Monolog (1973)
  • Wolf-Life and Illusion of a German Anarchist (1974)
  • Sentimentalnyy roman
    Sentimentalnyy roman
    Sentimentalnyy roman is a 1976 Soviet drama film directed by Igor Maslennikov. It was entered into the 27th Berlin International Film Festival.-Cast:* Yelena Proklova - Zoya the big* Yelena Koreneva - Zoya the little...

    (1977)
  • Slovo dlia zashchity (1977)
  • Pozovi menya v dal' svetluyu (1978)
  • Vstrecha (1979)
  • Tema (1979)
  • Step (1979)
  • Five Evenings (1979)
  • Ne strelyayte v belykh lebedey (1980)
  • My vesely, schastlivy, talantlivy! (1986)
  • The Theme
    The Theme
    The Theme is a 1979 Soviet film directed by Gleb Panfilov. It tells the story of an egotistical playwright who thinks of himself as an artist, but who allows the system to make him write conformist plays....

    (1987)
  • Zabavy molodykh (1987)
  • The Black Monk (1988)
  • Vechnyy muzh (1989)
  • Kanuvshee vremya (1989)
  • Kin-Dza-Dza (1989)
  • Shkura (1991)
  • Nelyubov (1991)
  • Uvidet Parizh i umeret (1992)
  • Dym (1992)
  • Bolshoy kapkan, ili solo dlya koshki pri polnoy lune (1992)
  • Tsar Ivan the Terrible (1993)
  • Mechty idiota (1993)
  • Terra incognita
    Terra Incognita (short story)
    "Terra Incognita" is a short story written in Russian by Vladimir Nabokov that was first published in the émigré journal Posledniya Novosti in Paris in 1931...

     (1994)
  • Tsarevich Aleksei (1996)
  • Kino pro kino (2002)
  • The Country Estate (2004)
  • Prodayotsya detektor lzhi (2005)
  • Rieltor (2005)
  • Antikiller D.K: Lyubov bez pamyati (2009)

External links

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