Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Boris Livanov

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Actor, Screenwriter

Role
  
Film actor

Years active
  
1924–1972

Parents
  
Nikolai Livanov

Relatives
  
Vasily Livanov (son)

Children
  
Vasily Livanov

Name
  
Boris Livanov


Boris Livanov amnesiapavelberscomBorisLivanovjpg

Full Name
  
Boris Nikolayevich Livanov

Born
  
May 8, 1904 (
1904-05-08
)
Moscow, Russia

Died
  
September 22, 1972, Moscow, Russia

Grandchildren
  
Boris Livanov, Anastasya Livanova, Nikolay Livanov

Movies
  
October: Ten Days That Sho, Minin and Pozharsky, The Deserter, The Ships Storm Bastions, The Battle of Stalingrad

Similar People
  
Vasily Livanov, Eduard Tisse, Vsevolod Pudovkin, Mikhail Romm, Vladimir Petrov

2012 Dubrovsky new-made movie 1936 Дубровский


Boris Nikolayevich Livanov (Russian: Бори́с Никола́евич Лива́нов; 8 May [O.S. 25 April] 1904—22 September 1972) was a Soviet theater and film actor and a theatre director. People's Artist of the USSR (1948). He was a member of the Moscow Art Theatre from 1924 through 1972.

Contents

Boris Livanov mediatheatreruphoto66270jpg

Biography

Livanov was born in Moscow into a family of the well-known Russian actor Nikolai Alexandrovich Livanov (1874—1949), a Volga Cossack from Simbirsk who moved to Moscow and performed under a pseudonym of Izvolsky.

When Boris was 16, he ran away from home and joined the Red Army to fight Basmachi in Turkestan, but soon returned to Moscow and enrolled in the 4th Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre to study acting. He graduated in 1924 and became a member of the theatrical troupe. He performed in both dramatic and comedy roles; his expressive acting and wide range of emotions soon turned him into one of the leading and most respected actors. Among his notable roles were Nozdryov from Dead Souls, Chatsky from Woe from Wit, Count Almaviva from The Marriage of Figaro, Vassily Solyony from Three Sisters and others.

Livanov first appeared in cinema in 1924 as Morozko in the fairy tale adaptation of the same name. In 1927 he performed his first serious roles in two historical-revolution films: Kastus Kalinovskiy and October: Ten Days That Shook the World. During the 1930s he played Dubrovsky in the film version of Alexander Pushkin's novel Dubrovsky and Dmitry Pozharsky in the Minin and Pozharsky historical epic (he was awarded his first Stalin Prize for this role), although his most famous performance of that time was Mikhail Bocharov in the Baltic Deputy biographical movie based on the life of Kliment Timiryazev (portrayed by Nikolay Cherkasov).

With the start of the Great Patriotic War Livanov informed the administration of the theater that he was going to join the Red Army and head to war, but was told that the actors of the leading Moscow theaters couldn't be mobilized by Joseph Stalin's orders. During the Battle of Moscow his family was evacuated, yet he chose to stay in the city and perform for the soldiers at the front line.

After the war he continued his theater and movie career. He was named People's Artist of the USSR in 1948. In 1953 Livanov staged his first play Mikhailo Lomonosov as a theatre director, where he also performed the main part of Mikhail Lomonosov. In two years it was adapted into a movie by Alexandr Ivanov. Among his other works were stage adaptations of The Brothers Karamazov novel (also played Dmitri Karamazov's part), Maxim Gorky's Yegor Bulychov and Others, The Seagull by Anton Chekhov and other plays.

Livanov was married to Eugenia Kazimirovna Livanova (nee Prawdzic-Filipowicz) who belonged to an old szlachta family. Their son Vasily Livanov also became a popular Russian actor, screenwriter, director of live action and animated movies. He is most famous for his portrait of Sherlock Holmes in the Soviet mini-series.

Boris Livanov was also known for drawing caricatures on everything that surrounded him. According to his son, he was so good at it that the famous trio Kukryniksy asked him to join them as the fourth artist. He left thousands of caricatures after his death. Some of them were included with the autobiographical book written by Vasily Livanov in 2013.

Livanov died in Moscow on September 22, 1972. He was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery.

Awards

  • People's Artist of the USSR (1948)
  • Order of the Badge of Honour (1938)
  • Order of Lenin (1964)
  • USSR State Prize (1970) for the stage work
  • I Class Stalin Prize (1941) for the Minin and Pozharsky movie
  • I Class Stalin Prize (1942) for the Kremlin Сhimes stage play
  • II Class Stalin Prize (1947) for the Cruiser Varyag movie
  • I Class Stalin Prize (1949) for the Green Street stage play
  • I Class Stalin Prize (1950) for the Alien Shadow stage play
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1970
    Kremlyovskie kuranty as
    Anton Ivanovich Zabelin
    1969
    Yegor Bulychyov i drugiye as
    Yegor Bulychov
    1969
    Stepen riska as
    Sedov
    1967
    A teper sudi... as
    Bogutovsky
    1967
    Kremlyovskie kuranty (TV Movie) as
    Anton Ivanovich Zabelin
    1966
    Gibel eskadry as
    admiral Granatov
    1961
    The Sound of Life as
    Uncle Maxim Yatsenko
    1960
    Myortvye dushi
    1959
    Nakanune as
    Nikolaj Stakhov (as B. Livanov)
    1958
    Esimese järgu kapten as
    Nikolay Lezvin - kapitan 1 ranga
    1958
    Poem of the Sea as
    general Ignat Fyodorchenko (as B. Livanov)
    1958
    Oleko Dundich
    1955
    Mikhaylo Lomonosov as
    Mikhaylo Lomonosov
    1953
    Admiral Ushakov as
    Prince Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin
    1950
    The Fall of Berlin as
    Gen. Rokossovsky
    1949
    The Victors and the Vanquished as
    Gen. Konstantin Konstantinovich Rokossovsky
    1947
    Svet nad Rossiyei as
    Mayakovkiy (uncredited)
    1947
    Kreyser 'Varyag' as
    Rudnev, Commander of the Cruiser the 'Varangian'
    1946
    The Great Glinka as
    Czar Nicholas I
    1945
    The Lost Letter (Short) as
    Cossack of the Zaporizhian Sich (voice, as B. Livanov)
    1945
    Bez viny vinovatye as
    Grigoriy Lvovich Murov (as B. N. Livanov)
    1944
    Sindbad the Sailor (Short)(voice)
    1939
    Minin i Pozharskiy as
    Knyaz Pozharsky
    1938
    Men of the Sea as
    Commissar Vikhoriev
    1937
    Baltic Deputy as
    Misha Bocharov (as B. Livanov)
    1936
    Dubrovsky as
    Vladimir Dubrovsky
    1935
    Peter Vinogradof as
    Pyotr Vinogradov (as B.N. Livanov)
    1933
    Enemies of Progress as
    Ataman Annenkov
    1933
    Deserter as
    Karl Renn
    1929
    Zolotoy klyuv as
    Major Tuchkov
    1928
    Kastus Kalinovskiy as
    Mr. Starzhinsky
    1927
    October (Ten Days that Shook the World) as
    Terestsenko
    1924
    Chetyre i pyat as
    Dmitriy Gay
    1924
    Morozko (Short)
    Writer
    1929
    The Break-Up (screenplay) / (story)
    Archive Footage
    2005
    Kak ukhodili kumiry (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Boris Livanov (2005) - Self

    References

    Boris Livanov Wikipedia