Vakhtang Kikabidze

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Vakhtang Kikabidze
Vakhtang Kikabidze at Laima Rendez Vous Jurmala 2017.jpg
Member of the Parliament of Georgia
Assumed office
11 December 2020
Personal details
Born
Vakhtang Konstantinovich Kikabidze

(1938-07-19) July 19, 1938 (age 83)
Tbilisi, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union
Other political
affiliations
Strength is in Unity (2020-present)
AwardsGEO St-George Victory Order BAR.svg Order of Honor (Georgia) ribbon.svg GEO Vakhtang Gorgasal Order 3rank BAR.svg
Orden of Friendship.png
Merited artist of Ukraine.png Medal State Prize Soviet Union.png
Nickname(s)Buba
Years active1966–present

Vakhtang Konstantine dze Kikabidze (Georgian: ვახტანგ კიკაბიძე, Russian: Вахтанг Константинович Кикабидзе, romanizedtr, lit.'Vahtang Konstantinovich Kikabidze'; born July 19, 1938), also known as "Buba" (Georgian: ბუბა) is a Georgian (formerly Soviet) singer, actor, screenwriter, producer, composer and politician. He became famous as a lead singer of Orera, a Georgian estrada group that was registered as the first Vocal-Instrumental Ensemble in the Soviet Union in 1958.[1] He performed in a number of films, among them the main role of a helicopter pilot in the iconic Soviet film Mimino.

The son of Princess Manana Bagration-Davitashvili,[2] Kikabidze was born in Tbilisi. He is a People's Artist of Georgia, has been awarded the USSR State Prize and the Order of the King Vakhtang Gorgasali as well as of Nikolai Wondermonger and Knight Cross of St. Konstantin the Great. He was also acknowledged by a number of various music contests and film festivals in the Soviet Union, Georgia and worldwide.

In 1999, his star was embedded on the "Star Square" in Moscow. Apart from Mimino, Kikabidze also performed in a number of other films, including Don't be Sad (Ne Goryui), Melodies of Veriski Quarter (Melodii Verijskogo Kvartala), and Completely Lost (Sovsem propaschij). His last film, Fortune (Fortuna), was directed by the famous Georgian and Soviet film director Georgi Daneliya in 2000.

As a screenwriter and director, Kikabidze produced two feature films: Be Well, Dearest One (Bud' zdorov dorogoj), which received the top award at the International Comedy Festival in Gabrovo, Bulgaria, and Men and All Others (Muzhchiny i vse ostal'nye).

During the August 2008 Russian-Georgian war, Kikabidze rejected Russia's Order of Friendship bestowed upon him in July 2008[3] and cancelled the concert dedicated to his 70th birthday which was to be held at the Kremlin as a protest against Russia's actions.[4][5]

During a visit to Batumi, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky congratulated Kikabidze on his 83rd birthday, inviting him to Kiev for Ukrainian Independence Day.[6]

Vakhtang Kikabidze is married and has only one child, a son named Konstantin, and two grandchildren: Vakhtang (Vato) and Ioan. Vato married Ana Davitashvili on November 24, 2019 at Svetitskhoveli Cathedral. Vakhtang's wife, Irina, has a daughter named Marina, from a previous marriage to her first husband Guram Sagaradze. Through her he has a grandson: Giorgi and a great-granddaughter, Alexandra. The Kikabidze family is from the Kartli region.

Filmography[]

Actor[]

  • "Ku! Kin-dza-dza" (Ku! Kin-dza-dza) – Russia, 2013
  • "Fortune" (Fortuna) – Russia, 2000
  • "Real Men and the Others" (Mamakatsebi) – Georgian SSR, 1985
  • "Olga and Konstantin" (Olga i Konstantin) – Russian SFSR, 1984
  • "TASS Is Authorized to Declare..." (TASS upolnomochen zayavit...) – Russian SFSR, 1984
  • "Morning Without Marks" (Utro bez otmetok) – Russian SFSR, 1983
  • "Cheers, My Dear!" (Itsotskhle genatsvale) – Georgian SSR, 1981
  • "Till Next Time, Friend..." (Shekhvedramde, megobaro...) – Georgian SSR, 1980
  • "Mimino" – Russian SFSR, 1977
  • "The Lost Expedition" (Propavshaya ekspeditsiya) – Russian SFSR, 1974
  • "Melodies of the Vere Quarter" (Veris ubnis melodiebi) – Georgian SSR, 1974
  • "Hopelessly Lost" (Sovsem propashchiy) – Russian SFSR, 1972
  • "I'm a Detective" (Me, gamomdziebeli) – Georgian SSR, 1971
  • "Don't Grieve" (Ar daidardo, Ne goryuy) – Georgian SSR/Russian SFSR, 1969
  • "Orera" (Orera, sruli svlit) – Georgian SSR, 1967
  • "Meeting in Mountains" (Shekhvedra mtashi) – Georgian SSR, 1966

Director and screenwriter[]

  • "Cheers, My Dear!" (Itsotskhle genatsvale) – Georgian SSR, 1981
  • "Real Men and the Others" (Mamakatsebi) – Georgian SSR, 1985

Discography[]

  • Pismo drugi. BUBA Records, 1999
  • Sekret Schastya. BUBA Records, 1999
  • Tango Lyubvi. OST-Records, 1999
  • Luchshie pesni. Noks Myuzik 2001
  • Grand Collection. Kvadro-Disk, 2002
  • Moi goda. Russkoie snabshenie 2003
  • Stariki-pasboiniki. Super Music 2004
  • Lyubownoye nastroyenie. Nikitin, 2005

Ancestry[]

References[]

  1. ^ Scott, Erik R. (2016), Familiar Strangers: The Georgian Diaspora and the Evolution of the Soviet Empire, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 144-152.
  2. ^ Kikabidze with mother Princess Manana Konstantinovna Bagration-Davitashvili
  3. ^ (in Russian) Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 19 июля 2008 г. № 1109 Archived 2009-04-13 at the Wayback Machine. Kremlin.ru
  4. ^ Red Square Defended against Georgians. Kommersant. 2008-08-14.
  5. ^ Chernov's Choice. The St. Petersburg Times. Issue #1452 (14), Friday, February 27, 2009
  6. ^ https://www.president.gov.ua/en/news/volodimir-zelenskij-privitav-vahtanga-kikabidze-z-dnem-narod-69629

External links[]

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