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1-50 of 145
- Aribert Mog was born on 3 August 1904 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Der Etappenhase (1937), Fährmann Maria (1936) and Der Sprung ins Nichts (1932). He died on 2 October 1941 in near Nova Trojanova, Soviet Union [now Russia].
- Director
- Actor
- Writer
Grigori Kromanov was born on 8 March 1926 in Tallinn, Estonia. He was a director and actor, known for Dead Mountaineer's Hotel (1979), Diamonds for the Dictatorship of the Proletariat (1975) and The Last Relic (1969). He was married to Irena Veisaite. He died on 18 July 1984 in Lahe, Estonian SSR, Soviet Union [now Estonia].- Stasys Petraitis was born on 26 October 1905 in Yekaterinoslav, Ukraine. He was an actor, known for Oshibka Onore de Balzaka (1969), Northern Crusades (1972) and Ausra prie Nemuno (1953). He died on 16 February 1976 in the Soviet Union.
- Vergiliy Renin was born in 1898. He was an actor, known for The Fall of Berlin (1950), Loss of Feeling (1935) and War and Peace (1965). He died on 8 November 1965 in Soviet Union [now Russia].
- Director
Vladimir Erofeyev was born in 1898. Vladimir was a director, known for Pamir (1928). Vladimir died on 14 July 1940 in Dagestan, Soviet Union [now Russia].- Production Manager
- Actor
- Producer
Gleb Kuznetsov was born on 10 February 1903 in the Russian Empire. He was a production manager and actor, known for Ivan's Childhood (1962), Cossacks of the Kuban (1950) and The Day the Earth Froze (1959). He died on 29 September 1966 in Soviet Union [now Russia].- Production Manager
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Semon Babanov was born on 25 August 1898 in Alexandrovsk, Russian Empire (now Zaporizhia, Ukraine). Semon was a production manager and writer, known for Negr iz Sheridana (1933), Ya lyublyu (1936) and Aleksandr Parkhomenko (1942). Semon died on 17 June 1969 in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union [now Kyiv, Ukraine].- Zinaida Reich was born on June 21 (July 3), 1894 in Odessa in the Near Mills, the Russian Empire, in the family of a railway engineer of German origin Nikolai Andreyevich Reich (1862-1942, birth name is August Reich, a native of Silesia) and Anna Ivanovna Viktorova ( 1867-1945). Zinaida's father was a Social Democrat, a member of the RSDLP since 1897, and her daughter adhered to her father's views. In 1907, due to his father's participation in revolutionary events, the family was expelled from Odessa and settled in Bendery, where his father got a job as a locksmith in the railway workshops. Zinaida entered the gymnasium for girls of Vera Gerasimenko, but after graduating from only 8 classes, she was expelled for political reasons. She entered the Higher Women's Courses in Kiev, and since 1913 she became a member of the Party of Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs). Anna Ivanovna with difficulty managed to obtain a certificate of secondary education for her daughter. After that, Zinaida left for Petrograd, and her parents moved to the city of Orel to her mother's elder sister, Varvara Ivanovna Danziger. In Petrograd, Zinaida Reich entered the Higher Women's Historical, Literary and Legal Courses of N. P. Raev, where, in addition to studying the main disciplines, she took sculpture lessons and studied foreign languages. Continuing her studies at the courses, she worked as a typist secretary in the editorial office of the Social Revolutionary newspaper Delo Naroda, where she met her future husband, Sergei Yesenin, who was published in this newspaper at the age of twenty-two. July 30, 1917 Zinaida Reich married Sergei Yesenin during their trip to the homeland of Alexei Ganin, a close friend of Yesenin. The wedding took place in the ancient stone church of Kirik and Julitta of the village of Tolstikovo, Vologda district. Witnesses from the groom were: Spassky volost, the village of Ivanovo peasant Pavel Khitrov and Ustyansk volost, the village of Ustya peasant Sergei Mikhailovich Baraev; on the part of the bride: the Arkhangelsk volost, the village of Konshino, peasant Alexei Alekseevich Ganin and the city of Vologda, merchant son Dmitry Dmitrievich Devyatkov. The wedding sacrament was performed: priest Victor Pevgov with the psalmist Alexei Kratirov. "They came out a hundred, get married. Zinaida, "Nikolay Reich received such a telegram in July 1917 and sent the money to his daughter in Vologda. At the end of August 1917, the young arrived in Orel with Alexei Ganin to celebrate a modest wedding, to get acquainted with the parents and relatives of Zinaida. In September, they returned to Petrograd. Returning to Petrograd, the couple lived separately for some time. At the beginning of 1918 Yesenin left Petrograd. In April 1918, Zinaida Yesenina, in anticipation of childbirth, went to Orel to her parents. There, on May 29, 1918, she gave birth to a daughter, who was named Tatyana. Caring for her daughter made her stay in Orel. In August, she began to work as an inspector of the People's Commissariat for Education, a month later became the head of the theater and cinematography section of the Oryol District Military Commissariat, and from June 1 to October 1, 1919 she was the head of the arts department in the provincial department of public education. Before the capture of the Eagle by the White Army of Denikin, Zinaida Yesenina, together with her daughter, went to her husband in Moscow. They lived for about three years, but a break soon followed, and Zinaida, taking her daughter, left for her parents. Having left her daughter with her parents in Orel, she returned to her husband, but soon they parted again. February 3, 1920 in the House of Mother and Child in Moscow, she gave birth to a son, Konstantin. The child immediately fell seriously ill, and Zinaida urgently drove him to Kislovodsk. Little Kostya was cured, but Zinaida herself fell ill. The break with Yesenin and her son's illness greatly affected her health. The treatment took place in a clinic for nervous patients. On February 19, 1921, a statement was received by the court of the city of Orel: "I ask you not to refuse at your disposal my divorce from my wife Zinaida Nikolaevna Yesenina-Reich. Our children Tatyana are three years old and their son Konstantin is one year old - I leave them for raising my ex-wife Zinaida Nikolaevna Reich, taking on their material support, which I subscribe to. Sergey Yesenin". On October 5, 1921, their marriage was officially dissolved. The funeral of Sergei Yesenin. Reich stands behind the coffin, raising a hand to his heart, to her right Vsevolod Meyerhold. Since March 1921, Reich taught in Orel the history of theater and costume at the theater courses. In the fall of 1921, she became a student at the Higher Director's Studios in Moscow, where she studied with Eisenstein and Yutkevich. Vsevolod Emilievich Meyerhold led this workshop, with whom Reich met while working in the out-of-school education department of the People's Commissariat for Education. In 1922, while still a student, Zinaida Reich married Meyerhold. In the summer of 1922, they, along with Meyerhold, took the children from Orel to Moscow - in the house on Novinsky Boulevard. Meyerhold adopted Tatyana and Konstantin, loved and cared for them like a father. Sergei Yesenin also came to their apartment to visit his children. Soon, Zinaida's parents also moved from Orel to their daughter in Moscow. Vsevolod Meyerhold against the background of a portrait of Zinaida Reich. 1930 year.
- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Grigori Giber was born in 1893 in Russia. He was a cinematographer, known for Vlastelin mira (1932), Beloe i chernoe (1919) and Bed and Sofa (1927). He died on 20 March 1951 in the Soviet Union.- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Nikolai Bolshakov graduated in 1937 from the cinematographic department of VGIK, and from that year he was an camera assistant to the operator of the Mosfilm film studio. His first independent work was the film "Heaven" (1940, Odessa). During the Patriotic War he was a military film correspondent, shot documentaries: "Caspians" (1944, was also a director, together with Grigory Alexandrov) and others. He participated in the filming of Joris Ivens' film "We Are For Peace" (1952, with a group of cameramen), and shot feature films at Mosfilm. In the 1970-1980s he shot stereoscopic films.- Vladimir Zazubrin was born on 6 June 1895 in Penza, Russian Empire [now Russia]. Vladimir was a writer, known for Izbushka na Bajkale (1926), Krasnyi gas (1924) and The Chekist (1992). Vladimir died on 28 September 1937 in Moscow, Soviet Union [now Russia].
- Director
- Actor
- Writer
Aleksandr Panteleyev was born on 14 July 1872 in Novocherkassk, Don Host Oblast, Imperial Russia. He was a director and actor, known for Congestion (1918), Za vlast Sovetov! (1923) and Palachi (1925). He died in October 1948 in Leningrad, Soviet Union.- Sound Department
Boris Khutoryansky was born on 22 March 1911. He is known for Dikaya sobaka Dingo (1962), Dvenadtsataya noch (1955) and Menya eto ne kasaetsya (1976). He died on 11 January 1981 in Leningrad, Soviet Union.- Actress
- Writer
Alexandra Kollontai was born on 31 March 1872 in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire. She was an actress and writer, known for Red Love (1982) and Revolutionens kvinnor (2006). She was married to Pavel Dybenko and Vladimir Ludvigovich Kollontai. She died on 9 March 1952 in Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union.- Franco Brambilla was born on 25 April 1922 in Rome, Lazio, Italy. He was an actor, known for Aldebaran (1935), L'ebbrezza del cielo (1940) and Vecchia guardia (1935). He died on 17 December 1942 in the Soviet Union.
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Aleksandr Prokofyev was born on 2 December 1900 in Kobona, Sankt Peterburgskaya guberniya, Russian Empire [now Kirovskiy municipal rayon, Leningradskaya oblast, Russia]. Aleksandr is known for Red Army Days (1935) and Dragotsennye zyorna (1948). Aleksandr died on 18 September 1971 in Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union [now Saint Petersburg, Russia].- Tatiana Demitriukova was born in 1904 in St. Petersburg, Russian Empire. Tatiana was an editor, known for Natalka Poltavka (1936). Tatiana died in 1965 in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union.
- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Valentina Tyshkovets was born on 26 January 1915 in Kiev, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire [now Kyiv, Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine]. Valentina was a cinematographer, known for Tsygan (1967), Ukrainian Festival (1962) and Sumka, polnaya serdets (1964). Valentina died on 20 February 1977 in the Soviet Union.- Tamari Tvaliashvili was born on 4 April 1906 in the Russian Empire. She was an actress, known for Sinatle chvens panjrebshi (1969), Mshvidobiani dgeebi (1974) and Mimino (1977). She died in 1985 in the Soviet Union.
- Director
- Writer
Fyodor Kiselev was born on 29 December 1905 in Moscow, Russian Empire [now Russia]. Fyodor was a director and writer, known for Moskva: Stolitsa SSR (1947), Sovyetskaya Latviya (1951) and Chay Ali Chahvadze (1935). Fyodor died on 23 December 1972 in Moscow, Soviet Union [now Russia].- Aleksandra Gribunina was born on 11 September 1866 in Russian Empire [now Russia]. She was an actress, known for Proklyatye milliony (1917), Dekabristy (1927) and Snova na zemle (1921). She died on 28 January 1942 in Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union [now Saint Petersburg, Russia].
- Sofya Mei was born on 17 November 1902 in the Russian Empire. He was an actor, known for V bolshom gorode (1928). He died on 7 March 1977 in the Soviet Union.
- Animation Department
- Music Department
- Writer
Lev Pozdneyev was born on 8 January 1909 in the Russian Empire. Lev was a writer, known for Chudesnitsa - A Miracle Maker (1957), A Forest Tale (1956) and In the Deep of the Forest (1954). Lev died in 1970 in the Soviet Union.- Bruno Schmidtsdorf was born on 8 June 1908 in Eberswalde, Germany. He was an actor, known for The Struggle (1936), Korolyevskiye matrosy (1934) and Treasure of the Wrecked Vessel (1935). He died on 28 February 1938 in the Soviet Union.
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Director
Soviet filmmaker Karl Alfredovich Gakkel worked as leading director at the film studios "Lenfilm" in Leningrad, "Kazakhfilm" in Alma-Aty and at the Film Studio. A. Dovzhenko in Kiev. Previously he worked as second director at the Mosfilm film studio in Moscow. - Gakkel was arrested in Stalin's purges by the NKVD Security Police on April 1, 1938. He was sentenced to Death by a NKVD Special Troika under Art. 58-6-10 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR. The verdict was however not fulfilled, by the decision of the UNKVD of Leningrad Gakkel was released on June 11, 1939. - He was married to Lyudmila F. Shmuglyakova (September 18, 1922 - September 13, 2005) - editor at the Mosfilm film studio. Karl Gakkel was buried at the Armenian cemetery in Mocow.