Nikolai Yeremenko Sr.

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Nikolai Yeremenko Sr.
Alexey Kuzmich Portrait of national actor of USSR Nikolai Eremenko 1996.JPG
Born
Nikolai Nikolaevich Yeremenko

June 16, 1926
Novosibirsk, RSFSR, USSR
DiedJune 30, 2000(2000-06-30) (aged 74)
OccupationStage and film actor
Years active1948-2000
Spouse(s)Galina Orlova (born 1928)

Nikolai Nikolaevich Yeremenko Sr. (Belarusian: Мікалай Мікалаевіч Яроменка (старэйшы); (Russian: Никола́й Никола́евич Ерёменко-ста́рший) was a Belarusian Soviet film and theater actor. People's Artist of the USSR (1989).

Member of the Great Patriotic War. He managed to survive in a Nazi concentration camp.[1][2]

After graduating in 1948, the studio theater of the Yakub Kolas Belarusian Drama Theater in Vitebsk, he became a theater actor (1948-1959). Since 1959 - an actor of Yanka Kupala National Academic Theatre.

He began acting in films in 1960.

His son was also an actor, Nikolai Yeremenko Jr. (1949-2001).

Partial filmography[]

  • Vperedi - krutoy povorot (1960) - Nikolay Radevich
  • Lyudi i zveri (1962) - Alexej Ivanovic Pavlov
  • Moskva - Genuya (1964) - Rusanov
  • Pogonya (1965) - Anatoli Ivanovich - ranger
  • Dni lyotnye (1966) - Nikolay Nikolayevich
  • Ryadom s vami (1967) - Passerby
  • Zapomnim etot den (1968) - Grigoriy Yasen
  • Ivan Makarovich (1968) - Ivan's Father
  • Desyataya dolya puti (1969) - Bukhteyev
  • Schastlivyy chelovek (1970) - Minor Role
  • Krusheniye imperii (1971) - Sergey Dmitriyevich Vaulin
  • Liberation III: Direction of the Main Blow (1971) - Josip Broz Tito
  • Mirovoy paren (1971) - Kalinkovich
  • More v ogne (1972) - Zhidilov
  • Hot Snow (1972) - leytenant Volodya Drozdovsky
  • Karpukhin (1973) - Prosecutor Vladimir Ovsyannikov
  • Plamya (1974) - chlen Stavki
  • Molodost s nami (1978) - Pavel Petrovich Kolosov
  • Raspisaniye na poslezavtra (1979) - Grandpa Bagration
  • Vkus khleba (1979)
  • Starye dolgi (1979) - Lyubetskiy
  • Petrovka, 38 (1980) - General militsii
  • Amnistiya (1981)
  • Otstupnik (1987) - Doron
  • Nevozvrashchenets (1991) - Viktor Andreyevich
  • Roman 'alla russa (1994)
  • Syn za ottsa... (1995)

References[]

External links[]

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