Sergey Martinson
Sergey Martinson | |
---|---|
Born | Sergey Aleksandrovich Martinson 6 February [O.S. 25 January] 1899 |
Died | 2 September 1984 | (aged 85)
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1923—1984 |
Sergey Aleksandrovich Martinson (Russian: Сергей Александрович Мартинсон; 6 February [O.S. 25 January] 1899 – 2 September 1984) was a Soviet and Russian stage, film and voice actor. People's Artist of the RSFSR (1964).[1][2]
He was born in Saint Petersburg in the family of Swedish and Russian descent. His parents adored theater and took their son to many performances. As a schoolboy, Sergey played in a theatrical studio.
After one year of education in the Technological institute, he decided to become a professional actor. At the entrance exams he read Boris Godunov's monologue from Pushkin's play. The exam board roared with laughter, but refused to accept him. He later joined the theatrical institute from a second attempt.[3]
Martinson worked in several theaters. In 1924–1941 he played in the Theatre of the Revolution. In 1925–1926, 1929–1933, 1937–1938 he was the leading actor of Vsevolod Meyerhold's theatre. He was cast by Meyerhold in the plays The Government Inspector, Mandate and others. From 1933 to 1936 he worked in the music hall.[4]
He married his first wife, Yekaterina Ilyinichna Ilyina (born: 1900, St Petersburg, Russia, died: 1985, New York, USA), an actress, in 1927, whom he met during his acting studies; their daughter, Anna, later a successful artist and costume designer, was born in 1928 (died New York, 2012), she married the Russian conductor and violist Rudolf Barshai (1924–2010). Although they had never officially divorced, he married his second wife, dancer Lola Dobrokhotova, who was later exiled by the government for alleged connections to "foreign elements" and died in exile; they had a son, Aleksandr (1939–2003). His third wife, Luisa (born: Ukraine, 1929, died: 2018, USA) was a woman 30 years junior to Martinson. They had a daughter, Natasha (born 1956) and divorced several years later.
Filmography
Films
- The Adventures of Oktyabrina (1924) – Coolidge Kerzonovich Poincaré
- The Devil's Wheel (1926) – Orchestra conductor
- Little Brother (1927) – Trust director
- The Deserter (1933) – Passerby
- Marionettes (1934) – G, the Barber
- Revolt of the Fishermen (1934) – Herr Bredel, fishing magnate
- Loss of Sensation (1935) – Dizer, music hall artist
- Treasure Island (1937) – Bradley
- The Oppenheim Family (1938) – Gutwetter, poet
- Stepan Razin (1939) – Fyodor Shpyn
- The Golden Key (1939) – Duremar
- Anton Ivanovich Is Angry (1941) – Kerosinov, composer
- We from the Urals (1943) – Dance club manager
- Silva (1944) – Count Boni
- The Wedding (1944) – Ivan Mikhailovich Yat, telegrapher
- Secret Agent (1947) – Willi Pommer
- The Third Blow (1948) – Adolf Hitler
- Przhevalsky (1951) – Andrei Ivanovich Shatilo, professor
- Sadko (1952) – Inok
- Attack from the Sea (1953) – Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies
- Ilya Muromets (1956) – Boyar Mishatychka
- A Crazy Day (1956) – Miusov
- The Idiot (1958) – Lebedev
- Scarlet Sails (1961) – Philip, coal miner
- The Night Before Christmas (1961) – Osip Nikiforovich, diak
- Wind of Freedom (1961) – Innkeeper
- Funny Stories (1962) – Lyuska the dog's owner
- Tale about the Boy-Kibalchish (1964) – Agent 518
- Tale About the Lost Time (1964) – Prokofy Prokofyevich the Evil Wizard
- Thirty Three (1965) – Valentin Petrovich, Rozochka's father
- The Tale of Tsar Saltan (1966) – Saltan's guardian
- The Beautiful Girl (1969) – Lonely old man with cane
- Ruslan and Ludmila (1972) – Byzantine ambassador
- Armed and Dangerous (1977) – Mr. Trott
- The New Adventures of Captain Wrongel (1978) – Sir Vant, bandit leader
- The Hound of the Baskervilles (1981) – Mr. Frankland
- And Life, and Tears, and Love (1983) – Yegoshkin
Voice acting
- The Lost Letter (1945) – Witch
- The Enchanted Boy (1955) – Rat leader
- The Snow Queen (1957) – The Raven
- The Adventures of Buratino (1959) – Mantis the Doctor
- It Was I Who Drew the Little Man (1960) – Chalk-drawn Little Man / Eight-legged creature
- Cipollino (1961) – Prince Lemon / One of Lemon's soldiers
- The Key (1961) – Zmei Gorynych's second head
- The Wild Swans (1962) – Monk
- Adventures of Mowgli (1967–1971) – Tabaqui
References
- ^ Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 433–434. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
- ^ Сергей Александрович Мартинсон — легкомысленный король гротеска
- ^ Сергей Мартинсон: интервью и статьи, фильмография и фотографии
- ^ Подступы к трагедии
External links
- (in Russian) Wikipedia in Russian
- (in Russian) Biography
- (in Russian) About Sergey Martinson
- Sergey Martinson at IMDb