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Artyom Bogucharsky

Artyom Bogucharsky
Born
Artyom Gennadyevich Bogucharsky

(1989-08-14) 14 August 1989 (age 35)
NationalityRussian
OccupationActor
Years active2002–present

Artyom Gennadyevich Bogucharsky (Russian: Артем Генна́дьевич Богучарский; born 14 August 1989)[1] is a Russian stage, film and television actor who is perhaps best recalled internationally for his role in the 2002 drama, Lilya 4-ever.

Career

Born in Moscow in 1989, he garnered his first role at age 12 as the doomed Volodya, the young friend of an abandoned teenage girl in the 2002 Lukas Moodysson-directed drama Lilya 4-ever. The film received positive reviews. It won five Guldbagge Awards including Best Film and Bogucharsky was nominated as Best Actor.[2] It was nominated for Best Film and Best Actress at the European Film Awards.[3] The film also won several awards from film festivals around the world, including Best Film at the Gijón International Film Festival and the Rouen Nordic Film Festival.[4][5]

Following his role in Lilya 4-ever, Bogucharsky went on to appear in a number of Russian films and television series. He graduated from the Gnessin State Musical College as a clarinet player. After graduating from the M.S. Schepkin Higher Theatre School in Moscow in 2009, he began appearing in a number of stage roles.[1]

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2002 Lilya 4-ever Volodya
2003-2007 Evlampiya Romanov. The Investigation is Conducted By an Amateur
2003 Striped Summer Asisiyay Mini-series
2004 The Beginning of the Road
2004-2013 Kulagin and Partners TV series
2004 Lonely Heaven TV series
2007–2013 Daddy's Daughters Sobolev TV series
2008-2010 Ranetki Ivan TV series
2008 Step by Step TV series
2008 Well Short film
2011 The Last Chord Vanya Cherepanov TV series
2017 Dinosaur TV series

References

  1. ^ a b Profile, kinomania.ru; accessed 2 July 2015.(in Russian)
  2. ^ Guldbaggen - Vinnare och nominerade 2000-03[permanent dead link], Swedish Film Institute; retrieved 2 June 2015.(in Swedish)
  3. ^ Brown, Colin (7 November 2002). "Kaurismaki, Almodovar lead European Film Award nominations". Screen Daily. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  4. ^ Hopewell, John (2 December 2002). "'Lilya' takes top honors at Gijon". Variety. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  5. ^ Festival Cinéma Nordique 2003 Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine, Rouen Nordic Film Festival; retrieved 2 July 2015.