Mikhail Zharov

Mikhail Ivanovich Sharov (Russian: Михаил Иванович Жаров; * 14.jul / 27 October 1900greg in Moscow, .. † 15 December 1981 ) was a Soviet actor.

Life

Sharov studied until 1919 drama with Theodor Komissarschewski and was then engaged in the 1920s in various theaters including the Meyerhold Theatre in Moscow as well as at theaters in Baku and Kazan. From 1931 to 1937 he played at the Moscow Chamber Theatre. In 1938 he joined the Maly Theatre, where he played until the end of his career over again. Here he often played classical roles, such as wolves and sheep, The Inspector General, Hart is not a stone, thunder storm.

His first experience in film had Sharov polutschajet even before his training as an actor in two films by director Alexander Ivanov -Gai, Tsar Ivan Vasilyevich Grozny (1915 ) and Tot, kto poschtschetschiny (1916). But only with Yakov Protasanows Aelita began his real career - initially only in supporting roles as an amorous clerk in Juri Scheljabuschskis Papirosniza ot Mosselproma (1924 ) and a waiter in Miss Mend by Boris Barnet and Fedor Ozep. Mikhail Sharov became known for his role in the Schigan Nikolai Ekks drama The Road to Life (1931 ), the first Soviet sound film. Other important roles he played in 1933 in the film Okraina directed by Boris Barnet and when Prince Menshikov in both parts of Vladimir Petrov Peter I. (1937 and 1939). In Sergei Eisenstein's three parts planned and machined 1943-1947 film project Ivan the Terrible (Part 1/Part 2) he acted as the Tsar Familiar Malyuta Skuratov. In 1946, Scharows only directorial effort Bespokoinoje chosjaistwo. In the 1960s and 1970s, he embodied the village policeman Aniskin in a popular television series by Ivan Lukinski: The Village Detective (1968), Aniskin i Fantomas (1974 ) and I Snowa Aniskin (1978).

Sharov 1941, 1942, 1947 awarded the Stalin Prize and in 1949 as the People's Artist of the USSR. In 1974 he was awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labor.

Filmography (selection)

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