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Dmitriy Dyachenko
Дмитрий Дьяченко
Birth at
16 September 1972
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Dmitry Dyachenko, Russian director and screenwriter, was born on September 16, 1972. After graduation he entered the Voronezh Institute of Arts. While studying in the studio of Rector Vladimir Bugrov, even in his student years he managed to prove himself as a talented aspiring actor and an outstanding personality. After graduating in 1989, he entered the directorial courses of VIPPK at VGIK in the workshop of Nikolai Burlyaev and Boris Plotnikov. From 1995 to 1998 he worked as a director at the
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Dmitry Dyachenko, Russian director and screenwriter, was born on September 16, 1972. After graduation he entered the Voronezh Institute of Arts. While studying in the studio of Rector Vladimir Bugrov, even in his student years he managed to prove himself as a talented aspiring actor and an outstanding personality. After graduating in 1989, he entered the directorial courses of VIPPK at VGIK in the workshop of Nikolai Burlyaev and Boris Plotnikov.
From 1995 to 1998 he worked as a director at the Dakarta production center on the AST television channel. From 1999 to 2002 in the companies "Business-Video" and "Video Communications" he held the position of director, and from 2003 to 2004 he shot documentaries in the production center "STF Unit".
In 2005, in the play “Faster than rabbits” of the theater “Quartet I” Dyachenko was engaged in video design. In three episodes of the series “Kulagin and Partners”, Dmitry acted as a director. The following year, the administration of the theater “Contemporary” offered the director to make a documentary for the play “America-2”.
In 2008, with the participants of the “Quartet I” in the lead roles, a new film by Dmitry Dyachenko “Radio Day” was released. The year 2010 brought new success. On the screens of the country came a comedy with the same actors called
"What Men Talk About" . It was shot in the genre of road-movie based on the play “Conversations of middle-aged men about women, cinema and aluminum forks”. The following year, Dmitry Dyachenko filmed a continuation of this story.