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Nikolay Litvinov
Николай Литвинов
Life Time
19 May 1907 - 27 December 1987
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Nikolai Vladimirovich Litvinov began his career on the stage, playing alternately in different, mainly Moscow, theaters. But his true vocation found, coming to the radio - here, in the editorial office of radio broadcasting for children, he became not only known throughout the country actor, but also the host of children's programs, including the once very popular "Radionnaya". Nikolai Vladimirovich (19 May 1907 – 27 December 1987) began his life path in Tiflis (now Tbilisi), where he was born,
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Nikolai Vladimirovich Litvinov began his career on the stage, playing alternately in different, mainly Moscow, theaters. But his true vocation found, coming to the radio - here, in the editorial office of radio broadcasting for children, he became not only known throughout the country actor, but also the host of children's programs, including the once very popular "Radionnaya".
Nikolai Vladimirovich (19 May 1907 – 27 December 1987) began his life path in Tiflis (now Tbilisi), where he was born, and from where he went to study at the Theatre Institute, the place of which is now occupied by GITIS.
Acting career began in 1926, and since 1932 Litvinov began to try himself as a radio actor. Since 1938, he was already engaged in radio productions as a director, and eventually took the post of chief director of the editorial office of radio broadcasting for children.
Decades of his work on the radio gave listeners a lot of talentedly staged and played performances, in some of which, as in the radio play of 1949 “Golden Key, or the Adventures of Buratino”, he played literally all the roles, demonstrating his multifaceted talent. Since 1970, he participated in the creation and led a cognitive program for children “Radionnian”, where he was a “radio magician”.
A man who is sincerely in love with his profession, who loves children, he remained faithful to the cause of his life until the last days. Nikolai Vladimirovich made his last radio recording in just three days of his death.