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Nikolai Plotnikov
Nikolai Plotnikov 1939
Personal details
Born (1897-11-05)5 November 1897
Vyazma, Vyazemsky Uyezd, Smolensk Governorate, Russian Empire
Died 3 February 1979(1979-02-03) (aged 81)
Moscow, Soviet Union
Occupation Actor

Nikolai Sergeyevich Plotnikov (Russian: Николай Сергеевич Пло́тников; 5 November 1897 – 3 February 1979) was a Soviet Russian film actor. He appeared in the 1949 biopic Ivan Pavlov.[1]

Selected filmography[]

  • Dawn of Paris (1936) as General Dombrovsky
  • The Lonely White Sail (1937) as The Plainclothes Agent of the Tsar
  • The Oppenheim Family (1939) as Edgar Oppenheim
  • Lenin in 1918 (1939) as the kulak from Tamborsk
  • Gorky 2: My Apprenticeship (1939) as Nikiforytch
  • Gorky 3: My Universities (1940) as Nikiforytch
  • The Wedding (1944) as the best man
  • The Vow (1946) as Ivan Yermilov
  • The White Fang (1946) as Handsome Smith
  • Ivan Pavlov (1949) as Nikodin Vasilyevich
  • The Battle of Stalingrad (1949) as Commissioner Gurov
  • The Fall of Berlin (1950) as Walther von Brauchitsch
  • Least We Forget (1954) as Vsevolod Yevgenevich Yarchuk
  • Nine Days in One Year (1962) as Professor Sintsov
  • Your Contemporary (1967) as Professor Nitochkyn
  • The Seagull (1972) as Piotr Nikolaïévitch Sorin

Awards[]

  • Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1933)
  • Stalin Prize of the first degree (1947)
  • People's Artist of the RSFSR (1957)[2]
  • People's Artist of the USSR (1966)
  • All-Union Film Festival (1968) — Best Actor (Your Contemporary)
  • Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (1968) — Best Actor (Your Contemporary)
  • Stanislavsky State Prize of the RSFSR (1970)[3]
  • two Orders of Lenin (1972, 1977)
  • Order of the Red Banner of Labor (1967)

In Vyazma there is a street named after him.

References[]

  1. Beumers p.203
  2. Театральная Энциклопедия. драма опера балет оперетта цирк эстрада драматург режиссёр
  3. Большая Советская Энциклопедия. Гл. ред. А. М. Прохоров, 3-е изд. Т. 20. Плата — Проб. 1975. 608 стр., илл.; 21 л. илл. и карт.

Bibliography[]

  • Beumers, Birgit. Directory of World Cinema: Russia. Intellect Books, 2011.

External links[]

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