Nikolay_Burlyaev

Nikolai Burlyayev

Nikolai Burlyayev

Russian film director and actor


Nikolai Petrovich Burlyayev[lower-alpha 1] (Russian: Николай Петрович Бурляев; born 3 August 1946) is a Soviet and Russian actor and film director.[1] Born into a family of actors, Burlyayev started his career in film and theatre when he was still a child. He is best known for his title role in Andrei Tarkovsky's Ivan's Childhood. He worked with Tarkovsky again four years later, as Boriska in Andrei Rublev.[2]

Quick Facts MP, Member of the State Duma (Party List Seat) ...

He was elected to the State Duma in the 2021 parliamentary elections.

Biography

Burlyayev majored in acting at the Shchukin theater school in Moscow, graduating in 1967. Burlyayev is a graduate of the Film Directors’ Faculty of VGIK, where he studied under Mikhail Romm and Lev Kulidzhanov.[3] He graduated in 1975. Burlyayev's film acting debut was the lead in Andrei Konchalovsky's short film The Boy and the Dove (1960). Burliaev played the teacher with a gambling habit Aleksei Ivanovich in Aleksei Batalov's screen version of Dostoevsky's The Gambler (1972) and Evgeni in Mikhail Shveitser's Little Tragedies (1979, TV, from Aleksandr Pushkin). He also played supporting parts in Petr Todorovski's Frontline Romance (1983) and in Natalia Bondarchuk's dilogy Bambi's Childhood (1985) and Bambi’s Youth (1986). His later films include Wartime Romance (1983) and Lermontov (1986), where he played the lead.

Since 1991, Burlyayev has been the founder and director of the annual Zolotoi Vityaz (Golden Knight) Moscow Film Festival of Slavic and Orthodox Peoples, and since 1996 he has been the founder and chairman of the International Association of Cinematographers of Slavic and Orthodox Peoples.[4]

In March 2014, he signed a letter in support of the position of the President of Russia Vladimir Putin on Russia's military intervention in Ukraine.[5] Burlyayev emphasizes that he is Orthodox, repeatedly sharply expressed his negative attitude towards people with non-traditional sexual orientation, calls himself a homophobe.[3][6]

He was married to Natalya Bondarchuk, and is thus the son-in-law of Sergei Bondarchuk and Inna Makarova.

Sanctions

Sanctioned by the UK government in 2022 in relation to Russo-Ukrainian War. [7]

On 24 March 2022, the United States Treasury sanctioned him in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[8]

Filmography

Notes

  1. Also transliterated as Nikolay Burlyaev.

References

  1. Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 125–126. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
  2. Анастасия Гусенцова (28 May 2012). "Президент "Золотого Витязя" рассказал омичам о профессии, гомофобии и Хабенском". РИА Омскпресс. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  3. Олег Дусаев (4 February 2008). "Гей-славяне". The New Times. Retrieved 19 November 2013.

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