Anatoly Vasilyev (actor)

Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vasilyev (Russian: Анато́лий Алекса́ндрович Васи́льев; born 1946) is a Soviet and Russian film and theater actor, People's Artist of Russia (1994).[1]

Anatoly Vasilyev
Born
Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vasilyev

(1946-11-06) November 6, 1946 (age 78)
NationalityRussian
Alma materMoscow Art Theatre School
OccupationActor

Biography

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Anatoly Vasilyev was born November 6, 1946, in Nizhny Tagil. In 1969, Anatoly Vasilyev graduated from the Moscow Art Theatre School (course Vasily Markov). At the end of the school-studio has been accepted into the troupe Moscow Satire Theatre, where he served until 1973. In 1973 he moved to Russian Army Theatre. Since 1995 he has served as a Mossovet Theatre.[2]

He acted in over 50 films (Scream Loons, The Case of General Shubnikov, Mikhailo Lomonosov, Waiting for Love, Ladie's Tango, I Want to — Fall in Love and others). The most famous roles — Air Crew and TV series Svaty.

Personal life

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  • His first wife (1969–1983) — Tatyana Vasilyeva
    • Son of actor Philipp Vasilyev (1978) [3]
    • Grandchildren Ivan [3] and Grigory
  • His second wife (1991) — Vera Vasilyeva [4]
    • Daughter Varvara Vasileva (1992) [4][5]

Selected filmography

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  • 1978 — Ivantsov, Petrov, Sidorov as Vladik Yakovlev
  • 1978 — Steppe as Dymov
  • 1979 — Air Crew as Valentin Nenarokov, the co-pilot
  • 1980 — The Сase of General Shubnikov as Major-General Nikolay Shubnikov
  • 1981 — Waiting for Love as Slava, physician for the recruitment commission
  • 1983 — Ladies' Tango as Fyodor
  • 1986 — Boris Godunov as Pyotr Basmanov
  • 1986 — Mikhailo Lomonosov as Vasily Dorofeyevich, Lomonosov's father
  • 1997 — At the Dawn Misty Youth as Bashkirtsev
  • 2001 — Lyubov.ru as Kalinin
  • 2004 — Daddy as Ivan Kuzmich Chernyshov
  • 2007 — Tatiana's Day as Oleg Barinov
  • 2008 — Fathers and Sons as Nikolai Petrovich Kirsanov
  • 2008-10 — Svaty as Yury Anatolievich Kovalev
  • 2012 — The Military Prosecutor's Office as Sergey Smirnov
  • 2013 — Owl Creek as Valentin Petrovich Bakur, The Count

References

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