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Vitold Polonsky

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Occupation
  
Actor

Spouse
  
Vera Pashennaya

Role
  
Film actor


Name
  
Vitold Polonsky

Years active
  
1907–1919

Parents
  
Alfons Polonsky

Vitold Polonsky httpsfarm8staticflickrcom761116733266879e8

Born
  
1879
Moscow Russian Empire (now Russia)

Died
  
January 5, 1919, Odessa, Ukraine

Movies
  
Molchi, grust... molchi, Mad Love: The Films of Evgeni Bauer

Children
  
Veronika Polonskaya, Irina Polonskaya

Similar People
  
Yevgeni Bauer, Pyotr Chardynin, Vera Pashennaya, Mikhail Yanshin, Vladimir Mayakovsky

Vitold Alfonsovich Polonsky (Russian: Витольд Альфонсович Полонский; 1879 – 5 January 1919) was a Russian silent film actor.

Contents

Biography

Polonsky took drama courses in the Moscow theatre school, graduating in 1907.

He acted in the Maly Theatre (Moscow) until 1916. He was one of the most popular actors in pre-Revolutionary Russian cinema. His first role was that of Prince Andrey Bolkonsky in the 1915 film Natasha Rostova. He played several hero-lover roles including Boris in The Brothers Boris and Gleb; Boris in Irina Kirsanova; Evgeny in The Song of Tumultuous Love; Andrey Bargov in After Death; Vladislav Zaritsky in Shadows of Sin (all 1915); Prince Baratynsky in A Life for a Life (1916); Lanin in By The Fireplace (1917) and Prince Mirsky in Evening Sacrifice.

Polonsky was married twice. His first wife was the Maly Theatre actress Vera Nikolaevna Pashennaya (1887–1962), who became a National Artist of the USSR, a State Laureate and Lenin Prize winner. They had one daughter, Irina Polonskaya.

His second wife was Maly Theatre actress Olga Gladkova. They had one daughter, Veronika Polonskaya, who also became an actress.

In the summer of 1918, the film director Pyotr Chardynin and the Moscow cinema entrepreneur Dmitry Kharitonov requested the State Commissar for Education, Lunacharsky, to aid a group of cinema workers to travel to Odessa to film. They received a permit, and the group travelled to Odessa. Polonsky was part of the group along with Vera Kholodnaya and Ivan Mozzukhin. In November 1918, however, Odessa was occupied by the Entente forces. A few months later, in January 1919, Polonsky died from food poisoning.

Filmography

  • Molchi, grust... molchi (short) as Telepnev, a rich gentleman (1918)
  • Bal gospoden (1918)
  • Bog mesti (1918)
  • Pesn lyubvi nedopetaya (1918)
  • Umirayushchii lebed as Viktor Krasovsky (1917)
  • Idi za mnoi (1917)
  • U kamina as Lanin (1917)
  • Zhizn za zhizn as Prince Vladimir Bartinsky (1916)
  • Koroleva ekrana (1916)
  • Mirazhi (short) as Dymov Jr. (1916)
  • Schastye vechnoy nochi as Vadim (1915)
  • Obozhzhenniye krylya (1915)
  • Pesn torzhestvuyushchey lyubvi (1915)
  • Teni grekha (1915)
  • Natasha Rostova (1915)
  • Posle smerti as Andrei Bagrov (1915)
  • References

    Vitold Polonsky Wikipedia