Natalya bondarchuk

Sergei Bondarchuk

Soviet and Russian actor and filmmaker (1920–1994)

In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Fyodorovich and the family name is Bondarchuk.

Sergei Fyodorovich Bondarchuk[a] (25 September 1920 – 20 October 1994) was a Soviet and Russian actor and filmmaker who was one of the leading figures of Soviet cinema in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.[1] He is known for his sweeping period dramas, including War and Peace (1966-67), his internationally acclaimed four-part film adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's novel, and for Waterloo (1970), a Napoleonic War epic.

Bondarchuk's work won him numerous international accolades. War and Peace won Bondarchuk, who both directed and acted in the leading role of Pierre Bezukhov, the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film (1968), and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1968.[2] He was made both a Hero of Socialist Labour and a People's Artist of the USSR.

Early life and education

Sergei Fyodorovich Bondarch

Sergei Bondarchuk (1982)

Moments from the filming of the feature film "I Saw the Birth of a New World" (the second film in the "Red Bells" dilogy).

Panorama from the actors to the film crew. S. Bondarchuk gives instructions to the actors on the set.

The film's cameraman V. Yusov at the camera - Wed.

The sound engineer is working, a panorama from the face to the reels of the tape recorder - ed.

The make-up artist is putting on make-up for an actor - ed. S. Bondarchuk is talking to the actors - ed.

Panorama of the actors dressed as revolutionary sailors - general.

Filming of the battle scene - Storming of the Winter Palace. S. Bondarchuk during filming - ed.

A moment of filming the scene "Storming of the Winter Palace" - general.

The Rostral Column on Palace Square in Leningrad. S. Bondarchuk is standing near the column, walking along Palace Square, walking along the bridge - general, Wed.

Photographs of S. Bondarchuk from different years – cf. S. Bondarchuk walking along the parapet of the Neva embankment – c

Sergei Bondarchuk

Sergei Bondarchuk first rose to prominence as an actor after his performances in Gerasimov�s Molodaia Gvardiia/ Young Guard (1948), in Yuli Raizman's Kavaler Zolotoi Zvezdy/ Knight of the Golden Star (1950), in Ihor Savchenko's Taras Shevchenko (1950, unfinished), and in Sergei Yutkevich's Othello (1956).

Bondarchuk turned to directing with the black-and-white Sudba Cheloveka/ The Fate of a Man (1959), based on a novella by Mikhail Sholokhov, with the mammoth 431-minute Lev Tolstoy adaptation Voina i Mir/ War and Peace (1967), which launched the career of actress Ludmila Savelyeva and of soundtrack composer Vyacheslav Ovchinnikov, and with his historical epic Oni Srazhalis za Rodinu/ They Fought for Their Country (1975), another Sholokhov adaptation.

After Step�/ Steppe (1977), Bondarchuk made the five-hour Krasnye Kolokola/ Red Bells (1982), based on John Reed's books about the revolutions in Mexico and Russia.

After Boris Godunov (1986), adapted from Aleksandr Pushkin, he adapted Sholokhov�s most famous novel for the ten-hou

Copyright ©hubdebt.pages.dev 2025