Anatoly Vasilyev (actor)

Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vasilyev (Russian: Анато́лий Алекса́ндрович Васи́льев; born in 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) 6 November 1946 (age 77)
NationalityRussian
Alma materMoscow Art Theatre School
OccupationActor

Biography edit

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 edit

  • 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 edit

  • 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 edit

External links edit