Yevgeny Mironov (actor)
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Yevgeny Mironov | |
---|---|
Born | Yevgeny Vitalevich Mironov 29 November 1966 |
Nationality | Russian |
Alma mater | Theatre of Nations |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1987–present |
Awards | Nika Award (1995, 2006, 2011) Golden Eagle Award (2004, 2012, 2018) TEFI (2003) Kinotavr (1992) Golden Mask (2010, 2012) |
Yevgeny Vitalevich Mironov (Russian: Евгений Витальевич Миронов; born 29 November 1966) is a Soviet and Russian film and stage actor. Merited Artist of the Russian Federation (1996), People's Artist of Russia (2004), State Prize of the Russian Federation laureate - 1995, 2010. Yevgeny Mironov lives and works in Moscow, Russia.[1][2]
Early life[]
Yevgeny Mironov was born in Saratov, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union. The family lived in a small military town then called Tatis. Yevgeny's father was a professional chauffeur, his mother changed jobs – from saleswoman to a Christmas ornaments manufacturer. The Mironovs, avid amateur performers, were artistic and creative people in their everyday life.
Mironov as a child took acting classes, joined an amateur dance group and graduated from music school as an accordion player. He and his younger sister Oksana put on puppet shows for which they made their own puppets, wrote scripts and then performed in front of relatives. In school, Yevgeny put on and acted in plays and musicals, often of his own creation. Oksana Mironova, now a ballet dancer, studied at the Saratov School of Choreography and later at the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet. After graduating, she was invited to join the State Academic Theater of Classical Ballet, where she danced for 10 years. At present, she is teaching in her own ballet studio associated with the Russian State Social University.
Career[]
In 1982, Mironov left his school in Tatischevo-5 to enter the , one of the few such establishments that accepted 14-year-olds, which he graduated in 1986. Offered a job with the Saratov Children's Theater, he chose instead to continue to study acting at the prestigious Moscow Art Theatre under his famous Saratov compatriot, actor and director Oleg Tabakov.
In Moscow Mironov succeeded in getting an interview with Tabakov, but the acting class was already in its second year. Tabakov gave Mironov a probation period, after the successful completion of which he was accepted to the as a sophomore. After graduating in 1990, he became, and remains, a resident actor at the Oleg Tabakov Theater. In that capacity he has played a variety of notable parts, including the title role in the hit "The Passions of Bumbarash" (directed by Vladimir Mashkov), which opened in 1993 and is still playing to full houses.
Mironov's film career began in 1988 with the Alexander Kaidanovsky film The Kerosene Salesman's Wife. After appearing in a few low-budget films, Mironov gained national recognition and critical acclaim for his lead performance in Valery Todorovsky's beloved coming-of-age drama, Love (1991), for which he received several national and international film awards and was voted Best Actor of 1992 by Russian film critics. His next success was in Pyotr Todorovsky's comedy-drama Encore Again!, which solidified Mironov's popularity. He went on to play leads in Denis Yevstigneyev's Limita and Mama, and to receive a Best Supporting Actor award at the 1995 Sozvezdie International Film Festival for a special appearance in Nikita Mikhalkovs Oscar-winning Burnt by the Sun. In 1994, he delivered a sterling performance in Vladimir Khotinenko's controversial drama The Moslem, then considered his best work to date. Also notable among his early film efforts is the character of Khlestakov in Sergei Gazarov's screen adaptation of Gogol's The Government Inspector.
Mironov's characters include sinister mama's boy in Nikolai Lebedev's Snake Spring, a lovelorn sponger in His Wife's Diary and a naive Soviet cook in Dreaming of Space (both directed by Alexei Uchitel), the deceptively simple intelligence officer in Mikhail Ptashuk's August of 44, the man-turned-bug in Valery Fokin's adaptation of Kafka's "The Metamorphosis", a war-deranged soldier in Andrei Konchalovsky's House of Fools, an arrogant surgeon in Yegor Konchalovsky's "Escape", a talented loser in Konstantin Khudyakov's "On Upper Maslovka", and a millionaire psycho killer in Andrei Kavun's The Hunt for Piranha. 2003 saw Mironov's portrayal of Prince Myshkin in Vladimir Bortko's historymaking TV adaptation of Dostoyevsky's The Idiot, followed by leads in two other acclaimed TV productions – as the young Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in an adaptation of his autobiographical "In the First Circle" by Gleb Panfilov (2006), and as twin brothers in Yuri Moroz's action-adventure miniseries "The Apostle".
By the mid-1990s, Mironov also starred in international stage projects as German director Peter Stein's The Oresteia and Hamlet, Declan Donnellan's Boris Godunov, Valery Fokin's The Last Night of the Last Czar and The Karamazovs and Hell (for which he was awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation). In 2003 he appeared as Lopakhin in Eimuntas Nekrošius' production of The Cherry Orchard. Mironov actively collaborates with the Moscow Art Theatre, where he has appeared as Treplev (The Seagull, 2001-2006), George Pigden (No. 13/Out of Order, 2001), and Porfiry Golovlyov (The Golovlyovs, 2005). In 2006 he founded the Mironov Theater Company and produced Figaro. The Events of One Day, directed by the controversial Kirill Serebrennikov with Mironov as the lead. On December 18, 2006, Mironov became Artistic Director of Moscow's State Theatre of Nations, where today he plays in: Shukshin's Stories by Alvis Hermanis, Figaro. The Events of One Day by Kirill Serebrennikov, Caligula by Eimuntas Nekrošius, Miss Jilie by Thomas Ostermeier and Hamlet | Collage by Robert Lepage.
Selected filmography[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | Before Sunrise | lieutenant | |
1990 | Do It — One! | private Alexei Gavrilov | |
1991 | Lost in Siberia | Volodya Mironov | |
1991 | Love | Sasha | |
1992 | How's Life, Crucians? | Nikita | (ru) |
1992 | Encore, Once More Encore! | Vladimir Poletaev | |
1994 | Limita | Misha Vulah | (ru) |
1994 | Burnt by the Sun | lieutenant-tanker Kolya | |
1995 | A Moslem | Kolya Ivanov the Mussulman | |
1996 | Inspector | Ivan Khlestakov, an official from St. Petersburg | |
1999 | Mother | Pavel | |
2000 | His Wife's Diary | Leonid Gurov | |
2001 | In August of 1944 | captain Pavel Alekhin | |
2002 | House of Fools | Russian officer | |
2002 | Turning | Gregor Samsa / insect | |
2003 | I have an idea… | Anton | |
2004 | The Nutcracker and the Mouseking | Nutcracker, aka Prince (voice) | Cartoon (ru) |
2004 | On Upper Maslovka Street | Petya | |
2005 | Escape | Evgeniy Vetrov | |
2005 | Dreaming of Space | Victor 'Konyok' | |
2006 | Piranha | Prokhor | |
2008 | In Transit | Andrei | |
2010 | Space Dogs | Venya (voice) | Сartoon movie |
2010 | Burnt by the Sun 2 Exodus | senior lieutenant Izyumov | |
2011 | Burnt by the Sun 2 Citadel | senior lieutenant Izyumov | |
2011 | The Diamond Hunters | Boris Buretse | (ru) |
2014 | The Calculator | Ervin Kann | (ru) |
2015 | The Puppet Syndrome | Pyotr | (ru) |
2015 | The Norseman | Yevgeniy Kirillov | (ru) |
2016 | The Age of Pioneers | Alexei Leonov | |
2017 | Matilda | Director of the Imperial Theatres Ivan Karlovic | |
2020 | Cosmoball | White, trainer-mentor | |
2020 | Space Dogs: Return to Earth | Venya (rat), (voice) | |
2021 | Land of Legends | Baptist Jonah (Bishop of Perm) |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | Armchair | visitor bara | TV |
2003 | The Idiot | Prince Myshkin | TV series |
2005 | The First Circle | Gleb Nerzhin | miniseries |
2008 | Apostle | twins Petr Istomin and Pavel Istomin | TV Series |
2011 | Dostoevsky | Fyodor Dostoyevsky | TV Series |
2013 | Ashes | Senka Ash Thief | TV series |
List of theater and film awards[]
• Best Actor Award, Kinotaur National Film Festival ("Love", 1992)
• Best Actor Award, Sozvezdie International Film Festival ("Love", 1992)
• Best Actor, Film Critics’ Award ("Love", 1992)
• Grand Prix and Special Film Critics’ Award, Stars of Tomorrow International Film Festival in Geneva ("Love", 1992)
• Best Actor, Film Critics’ Award ("Encore Again!", 1994)
• Best Actor Award, Nika National Film Awards ("Limita", 1994)
• Best Supporting Actor Award, Sozvezdie International Film Festival ("Burnt by the Sun", 1995)
• Best Actor, Film Critics’ Award ("The Moslem", 1995)
• Order of the Spiritual Administration of the Russian Moslems ("The Moslem", 1995)
• Idol, a Business Circle Award (1996)
• International Stanislavsky Award for Best Performance of the Season by a Man ("The Last Night of the Last Czar", 1997)
• The Seagull Theatrical Award ("Boris Godunov", 2000)
• Best Supporting Actor Award, Baltic Pearl International Film Actor Festival ("His Wife’s Diary", 2000)
• Special Prize of The Gorky Literary Institute Scholarly Council and Terra Holdings, The National Literature and Film Festival ("His Wife’s Diary", 2001)
• Special Prize of The Gorky Literary Institute Scholarly Council and Terra Holdings, The National Literature and Film Festival ("August of ‘44", 2001)
• The Triumph Award for Cultural Contribution (2001)
• The Seagull Theatrical Award for Best Comedy Performance of the Season ("№ 13", 2001)
• The Crystal Turandot Award for Best Performance by a Man ("№ 13", 2002)
• Man of the Year Award (2003)
• Best Actor Award at The National Literature and Film Festival ("The Metamorphosis", 2003)
• Best Actor Award, TEFI National Television Awards ("The Idiot", 2003)
• Best TV Actor Award, Golden Eagle National Film Awards ("The Idiot", 2004)
• The Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Literary Award ("The Idiot", 2004)
• Outstanding Actor of the Year Golden Nymph Award in the Television Drama Category, the Monte Carlo Film Festival ("The Idiot", 2004)
• The Arguments and Facts Newspaper's National Pride of Russia Award for Personal Contribution to Cultural Development (2004)
• Idol, a Business Circle Award, "For Highest Service to the Acting Profession" (2005)
• The Tarkovsky Fund Award, Window to Europe National Film Festival ("On Upper Maslovka", 2005)
• Best Actor Award, Nika National Film Awards ("Dreaming of Space", 2006)
• Best Actor Award, Golden Ram National Film Critics’ Festival ("Dreaming of Space", 2006)
• Russian of the Year Award (2006)
• The Crystal Turandot Award for Best Performance by a Man ("The Golovlyovs", 2006)
• The Federal Security Service's Work by an Actor Award ("August of ‘44", 2006)
• MTV Russian Movie Award for Best Villain in Film ("The Hunt for Piranha", 2006)
• The National Golden Mask Award for Best Performance by a Man ("The Golovlyovs", 2007)
• The Crystal Turandot Award for Best Actor ("Shukshin's Stories", 2009)
• The National Golden Mask Award for Best Performance by a Man ("Caligula", 2012)
• The Crystal Turandot Award for Best Actor ("Hamlet | Collage", 2014)
References[]
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yevgeny Mironov. |
- 1966 births
- Living people
- People from Saratov
- Soviet male actors
- 20th-century Russian male actors
- 21st-century Russian male actors
- Soviet male film actors
- Soviet male stage actors
- Soviet male television actors
- Russian male film actors
- Russian male stage actors
- Russian male television actors
- Russian male voice actors
- Recipients of the Order of Honour (Russia)
- Honored Artists of the Russian Federation
- People's Artists of Russia
- State Prize of the Russian Federation laureates
- Recipients of the Nika Award
- Academicians of the National Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of Russia
- Solzhenitsyn Prize winners
- Moscow Art Theatre School alumni