Vladimir Menshov

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Birth Date:
17.09.1939
Death date:
05.07.2021
Length of life:
81
Days since birth:
30905
Years since birth:
84
Days since death:
1028
Years since death:
2
Patronymic:
Valentinovich
Person's maiden name:
Влади́мир Валенти́нович Меньшо́в
Extra names:
Vladimirs Meņšovs, Владимир Меньшов
Categories:
Actor, COVID-19 , Director, Film director, Pedagogue, teacher
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Vladimir Valentinovich Menshov (Russian: Влади́мир Валенти́нович Меньшо́в; 17 September 1939 – 5 July 2021) was a Soviet and Russian actor and film director. 

He was noted for depicting the Russian everyman and working class life in his films.

Although Menshov mostly worked as an actor, he is best known for the five films he directed, especially for the 1979 melodrama Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears, which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Actress Vera Alentova, who starred in the film, is the mother of Vladimir Menshov's daughter Yuliya Menshova.

Biography

Menshov was born in a Russian family in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR. His father, Valentin Mikhailovich Menshov, was a sailor and later an NKVD officer; his mother Antonina Aleksandrovna Menshova (née Dubovskaya) was a housewife. Because of his father's work, the family lived in Baku, Arkhangelsk and Astrakhan.

As a teenager Menshov worked as a machinist student at a factory, at a mine in Vorkuta, as a sailor on a diving boat in Baku, and also as a supporting actor at the Astrakhan Kirov Theater. In 1961 he entered the acting department of the Moscow Art Theatre School. During the second year he married actress Vera Alentova who was also studying at the same theatre school. In 1965, after graduating, he worked for two years as an actor and assistant director at the Stavropol Regional Drama Theater.

In 1970 he graduated from the VGIK postgraduate course in the department of feature film direction (Mikhail Romm's workshop).

From 1970 to 1976, Vladimir Menshov worked under contracts at the film studios Mosfilm, Lenfilm and the Odessa Film Studio. He made a short thesis film On the Question of the Dialectic of the Perception of Art, or Lost Dreams, staged the novel Mess-Mend by Marietta Shaginyan, which was staged at the Leningrad Youth Theater, and wrote the script I'm Serving on the Border at the request of Lenfilm.

In those years his cinematic acting career began: he starred in the title role in the thesis work of his classmate Alexander Pavlovsky Happy Kukushkin. The film was shot at the Odessa Film Studio. Vladimir Menshov also appeared in it as a co-author of the script. The picture received the main prize at the Molodist-71 Kiev Film Festival, and the following year, Menshov received an invitation from director Alexei Sakharov to star in the film A Man in his Place. At the VI All-Union Film Festival in Almaty Menshov was awarded the first prize for the best performance of the male role. After this he was an in demand actor in film.

As an actor, Vladimir Menshov has more than 100 credits. Some of the most popular films with his appearance include How Czar Peter the Great Married Off His Moor (1976), Where is the Nophelet? (1988), Night Watch (2004), Day Watch (2006) and Legend № 17 (2013).

Menshov's directorial debut took place in 1976 with the film Practical Joke. The second picture of Menshov, Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears became one of Russia's box-office record holders, was awarded the State Prize of the USSR, and then the Oscar (1981) as the Best Foreign Language Film.

In 1984, Menchov shot the picture Love and Pigeons based on the play of Vladimir Gurkin.

Vladimir Menshov also directed films: What a Mess! (1995), The Envy of Gods (2000), The Great Waltz (2008).

He wrote screenplays for films: I Serve on the Border (1973), The Night is Short (1981), What a Mess! (1995), The Great Waltz (2008), was the producer of several films, among which: Love of Evil (1998), Chinese Service (1999), Quadrille (1999), The Envy of Gods (2000), Neighbor (2004), Time to collect stones (2005), Shawls (2006), The Great Waltz (2008).

In 2004, Menshov was the host of the Channel One show Last Hero.

Vladimir Menshov was the general director and art director of "Film Studio Genre", which is a subsidiary of Mosfilm.

In 2011 as the chair of the Russian Academy Award committee he refused to co-sign the decision to nominate Nikita Mikhalkov's film Burnt by the Sun 2: The Citadel as the Russian submission for the 2011 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

He expressed support for the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation and was blacklisted in Ukraine in 2015 as a result. 

In 2016, he was forbidden by the Security Service of Ukraine to enter Ukraine for five years.

Awards

President Vladimir Putin awards the 2nd Degree Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" to Menshov on 24 May 2017

Vladimir Menshov – Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1984), People's Artist of Russia (1989), winner of the State Prizes of the RSFSR (1978, for the film Rally) and the USSR (1981, for the film Moscow Does not Believe in Tears).

  • The Order of Merit for the Fatherland, IV degree (1999).
  • The "For Services to Moscow" badge (30 July 2009)
  • The Golden Eagle Award as Best Supporting Actor in Legend No. 17 (2014).

Personal life and death

Vladimir Menshov married actress Vera Alentova in 1962. They had a daughter, Yuliya Menshova.

He died aged 81 as a consequence of COVID-19 infection.

Source: wikipedia.org

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