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Mikhail Nazvanov
Mikhail Nazvanov
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Mikhail Mikhailovich Nazvanov (Russian: Михаил Михайлович Названов; 12 April 1918 – 13 July 1964) was a Soviet and Russian stage and film actor. He was awarded Honored Artist of the RSFSR in 1949.

Key Information

Biography

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Mikhail Nazvanov was born in Moscow in the wealthy family of a large technologist-technologist Mikhail K. Nazhanov; his mother, Olga Nikolayevna Butomo-Nazhanova, was a famous chamber singer.[1] In 1931 he graduated from Academic Music College.[1]

Between 1931 and 1935 Nazvanov studied acting at the Drama Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre.[1] April 1935 he was arrested and until 1940 imprisoned in Gulag (article 58-10, Ukhtpechlag).[1]

In 1942 Nazvanov was invited to join the Mossovet Theatre; between 1950 and 1957 he was member of the troupe at the Moscow Pushkin Drama Theatre.[2][3] In 1957 he was again invited to join the Art Theater, which, however, left in 1960 and became actor in the Mosfilm-studio. As a stage actor he played Trigorin in The Seagull, Krechinsky in Krechinsky's Wedding, Ripafratta in The Mistress of the Inn, Robert Chiltern in An Ideal Husband, and Stiva Oblonsky in Anna Karenina.

Mikhail Nazvanov made his film debut in 1943 in the popular film Wait for Me and immediately gained fame. Sergei Eisenstein invited him to the role of Andrey Kurbsky in Ivan the Terrible.[4] He collaborated also with such famous directors as Grigori Aleksandrov (Encounter at the Elbe, The Composer Glinka), Vsevolod Pudovkin (Zhukovsky), Mikhail Romm (The Russian Question, Attack from the Sea), Grigori Kozintsev (Belinsky, Hamlet). Nazvanov has also directed film The Mistress of the Inn.

Selected filmography

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Mikhail Nazvanov as Kurbsky (Ivan the Terrible)

Honors and awards

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mikhail Nazvanov is a Soviet Russian stage and film actor known for his versatile performances in classic Soviet cinema and theater, including memorable roles in Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible, Part I (1944) as Prince Andrei Kurbsky, Grigori Kozintsev's Hamlet (1964) as King Claudius, and Grigori Aleksandrov's Meeting on the Elbe (1949) as Major James Hill. Born Mikhail Mikhailovich Nazvanov on February 12, 1914, in Moscow, he trained in music and began his acting career at the Moscow Art Theatre in 1931, but his early trajectory was disrupted by his arrest in 1935 on political charges, leading to five years in labor camps where he nonetheless performed in camp theater productions. After early release in 1939 and full rehabilitation in 1956, he rebuilt his career across several prominent Moscow theaters, including the Theatre named after the Moscow City Soviet, the Pushkin Theatre, and a return to the Moscow Art Theatre, earning acclaim for stage roles such as Kreshchinsky in The Wedding of Krechinsky and Gilbert in Mary Tudor. Nazvanov entered cinema in the 1940s, appearing in over two dozen films and earning recognition for his portrayals of complex characters in historical and contemporary dramas; he also directed and wrote the screenplay for the 1956 film The Mistress of the Inn. He received the title of Honored Artist of the RSFSR in 1949 and was awarded three Stalin Prizes for his contributions to theater and film between 1948 and 1950. He died on June 13, 1964, in Moscow due to surgical complications.

Early life and education

Family background

Mikhail Nazvanov was born on February 12, 1914, in Moscow into an affluent family. His father, Mikhail K. Nazvanov, was a prominent technologist and engineer known for developing a method of sugar processing that was widely applied across Ukraine. His mother, Olga Nikolayevna Butomo-Nazvanova, was a renowned chamber singer whose career exposed the family to Moscow's cultural circles. This privileged upbringing in early 20th-century Moscow, amid the late imperial and early Soviet eras, occurred in a household marked by professional accomplishment and relative material security.

Musical and acting training

Mikhail Nazvanov began his formal musical education in 1928 upon entering the Academic Music College affiliated with the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied piano and singing. He graduated from the college in 1931, having developed strong musical skills that later proved valuable in his career. In 1931, at the age of 17, Nazvanov shifted his focus to acting and enrolled in the Drama Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre, where he trained until 1935. During this period, he became actively involved with the Moscow Art Theatre itself, working directly under Konstantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko in their productions. He performed five small roles over the course of three and a half years, progressively gaining experience on stage while being regarded as a promising student, to the extent that Stanislavski drew on his natural talents and surname for illustrative purposes in his book An Actor's Work.

Arrest, imprisonment, and rehabilitation

Arrest and Gulag sentence

Mikhail Nazvanov's theatrical training was suddenly halted in 1935 when he was arrested on April 30 following a denunciation by a colleague. The arrest took place at his home in Krivoarbatsky Lane in Moscow shortly after he returned from a rehearsal and performance, where NKVD operatives conducted an extensive search lasting several hours and confiscated items such as letters bearing foreign postmarks and photographs from a production of The Days of the Turbins that featured actors in white officer uniforms. He was initially taken to Lubyanka and then transferred to Butyrka prison. The charges stemmed from two casual phrases uttered during backstage conversations and a test metro ride in early April 1935, which were interpreted as counter-revolutionary agitation under Article 58-10 of the RSFSR Criminal Code. In July 1935, Nazvanov was sentenced to five years in corrective labor camps. He was dispatched by prisoner transport on September 6, 1935, traveling from Moscow to Kotlas and then by steamer along the Vychegda River to the Ukhtpechlag camp system in Chibyu (later renamed Ukhta) in the Komi region. These events unfolded amid the escalating Stalin-era political purges of the mid-1930s, during which many Soviet intellectuals, including artists and theater professionals, faced arbitrary arrests and convictions on fabricated political charges. Nazvanov's expulsion from the Moscow Art Theatre's second studio staff, where he had studied since 1931 and been regarded as a promising pupil by Konstantin Stanislavsky, took effect on the very date of his arrest.

Imprisonment and parole

Nazvanov was imprisoned in the Ukhtpechlag camp from September 1935 until his release in April 1939, following his arrest and sentencing to five years of corrective labor camps under Article 58-10 of the RSFSR Criminal Code. He endured initial hard labor constructing railway sections in remote forest areas under extreme conditions, including severe winters, inadequate clothing, starvation, and physical injuries. In January 1936, he was transferred to the camp's amateur theater troupe in Chibyu (later renamed Ukhta), where he performed professionally as one of the few trained actors in a small ensemble, taking on leading roles in dozens of productions spanning drama, comedy, operetta, and opera. Notable performances included Fairfax in "Geisha" (1937), Count Federico in "The Dog in the Manger" (1940), Helmer in "Nora" (1940), and the Cavalier in "The Mistress of the Hotel" (1940), among many others that sustained cultural activity within the camp. He was released on April 16, 1939, but remained in Ukhta working in the same theater until approximately spring 1940 under parole conditions that restricted residence in major cities. With the restriction preventing return to Moscow or other large urban centers, Nazvanov resumed his acting career at the Maxim Gorky Theatre in Simferopol, Crimea. During World War II, the theater company was evacuated to Kazakhstan, where he continued performing amid wartime displacements.

Return to Moscow and exoneration

After his parole, Nazvanov continued acting during the wartime evacuation of theaters. In February 1942, while the theater was based in Chimkent, he was invited to join the troupe of the Mossovet Theatre. In March 1944, Nazvanov's criminal record was expunged, enabling his return to Moscow in May 1944. Nazvanov returned to Moscow in May 1944 and rejoined the Mossovet Theatre there. On December 30, 1956, the Supreme Court of the USSR fully exonerated him for the illegal repression he suffered in the 1930s.

Theater career

Early post-release engagements

After his early release from imprisonment on April 16, 1939, Mikhail Nazvanov, prohibited from residing in major Russian cities, joined the troupe of the Crimean State Theater named after Maxim Gorky in Simferopol in 1940. He performed there until the German invasion of the Soviet Union disrupted operations, with the theater continuing patriotic repertoire and frontline concerts through late October 1941. On November 6, 1941, Nazvanov was evacuated with other actors to Central Asia amid the war. He then worked at the Russian Drama Theater named after N.K. Krupskaya in Frunze (now Bishkek), Kirghiz SSR, from 1941 to 1942. In 1942, he moved to Chimkent in Kazakhstan and was invited to join the evacuated troupe of the Moscow Mossovet Theater, where he was formally accepted on February 11, 1942, initially performing in crowd scenes before taking on more prominent roles.

Major theaters and stage roles

Mikhail Nazvanov's mature theater career unfolded primarily in Moscow after his return from wartime and regional engagements. From 1942 to 1950 he was an actor at the Mossovet Theatre, where he performed in a range of classical and contemporary productions and earned recognition for his portrayals of complex characters. In 1950 Nazvanov moved to the Moscow Pushkin Drama Theatre, remaining there until 1957. This proved one of his most productive theater periods, with performances including Krechinsky in Aleksandr Sukhovo-Kobylin's Krechinsky's Wedding, alongside other roles that showcased his versatility in dramatic and comedic parts. From 1957 to 1960 he was affiliated with the Moscow Art Theatre, where he took on supporting yet distinctive roles in major classical works, notably Robert Chiltern in Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband and Stiva Oblonsky in the stage adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. These performances highlighted his ability to embody nuanced aristocratic and worldly figures. Beginning in 1960 Nazvanov affiliated with the Central Studio of Cinema Actors at Mosfilm studio, shifting his primary focus toward film while concluding his major stage work in Moscow theaters.

Film career

Debut and breakthrough roles

Mikhail Nazvanov made his film debut in the 1943 Soviet war drama Wait for Me (Zhdi menya), directed by Aleksandr Stolper, where he played the romantic lead Andrei Panov. Filming for this role began in spring 1942, marking his entry into cinema following his rehabilitation and return to professional artistic activity. He achieved a major breakthrough the following year with his role as Prince Andrey Kurbsky in Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible, Part I (1944). Cast as the "stately" actor while simultaneously completing his debut film, Nazvanov played strongly against type, transforming the romantic hero of Wait for Me into a weakling and traitor as Kurbsky. Eisenstein privately praised the performance as "great" in a 1947 note. In the postwar years, Nazvanov continued with supporting roles in notable Soviet productions, including The Great Glinka (1946) as the hussar Kostya and The Russian Question (1947) as the American correspondent Jack Gould. These early appearances established him as a versatile screen presence in both historical and contemporary dramas.

Key collaborations and notable performances

Nazvanov's post-war film career featured collaborations with several leading Soviet directors, including Grigori Aleksandrov, Vsevolod Pudovkin, Mikhail Romm, and Grigori Kozintsev. In 1949, he portrayed Major James Hill, an American officer symbolizing Allied cooperation, in Grigori Aleksandrov's Encounter at the Elbe. That same year, he played Colonel Lyudnikov in The Battle of Stalingrad, contributing to the epic depiction of the pivotal World War II battle. He then took the role of Czar Nikolai I in Igor Savchenko's Taras Shevchenko (1951), embodying imperial authority in the biographical drama about the Ukrainian poet. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, Nazvanov appeared in supporting roles that showcased his versatility, including Mark Ivanovich Klyauzov in The Safety Match (1954), Karl Bogdanovich Bekker in Gutta-percha Boy (1957), and Andrey Ivanovich in My Younger Brother (1962). His roles gradually evolved from dashing figures in earlier works to more authoritative characters, often military officers or rulers. A crowning achievement came with his portrayal of Claudius, King of Denmark, in Grigori Kozintsev's Hamlet (1964), where he brought depth to the scheming monarch in one of Soviet cinema's most acclaimed adaptations. This performance, among his last before his death, highlighted his command of complex, authoritative screen presences.

Directing and screenwriting

Work on Khozyayka gostinitsy

Mikhail Nazvanov served as director, screenwriter, and lead actor for the 1956 Soviet film Khozyayka gostinitsy (The Mistress of the Inn), marking his sole known credit as a director. This black-and-white production adapted Carlo Goldoni's classic comedy La locandiera, centering on the clever innkeeper Mirandolina and her interactions with suitors. Nazvanov wrote the screenplay and portrayed the Cavaliere di Ripafratta, the arrogant and woman-averse nobleman who becomes the target of Mirandolina's witty schemes. The film represented a multifaceted creative endeavor for Nazvanov, combining his talents in direction, script adaptation, and performance in a single project.

Awards and honors

Personal life and death

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