He was born on August 7, 1957 in Moscow. In 1978 he graduated from the B.V. Shchukin Theatre School, in 1987 - the directorial faculty of VGIK (the workshop of A. Kochetkov). In 1978-1983 he was an actor of the Moscow Youth Theatre. Director of a number of documentaries. He made his film debut in the film Jung of the Northern Fleet at the age of 15. In 1991, together with his wife Marina Szymanskaya, he moved to Spain, worked on television. He teaches acting, puts on performances. From an interview
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He was born on August 7, 1957 in Moscow.
In 1978 he graduated from the B.V. Shchukin Theatre School, in 1987 - the directorial faculty of VGIK (the workshop of A. Kochetkov).
In 1978-1983 he was an actor of the Moscow Youth Theatre.
Director of a number of documentaries.
He made his film debut in the film Jung of the Northern Fleet at the age of 15.
In 1991, together with his wife Marina Szymanskaya, he moved to Spain, worked on television. He teaches acting, puts on performances.
From an interview with the magazine "City of Women" (January 2007):
Andquot; I was born because of global disasters. The Spanish Civil War, World War II... if it wasn’t for all this, my parents wouldn’t have met. It all began in the 37th year: the Basque people were so panicked by bombing that the people rushed to the steamers. My grandfather sent three daughters to Russia from Bilbao. No one expected that the Second World War would begin and children from Russia would be impossible to return! My father was growing up in Lithuania at the time, when he was 16 years old in 45. My mother entered the Moscow Energy Institute by the age of 44, and my father in the year of 49 was sent to Moscow to study at the Higher Party School. Thus, two young future Communists, who believed in the ideals of the party, met in Moscow.
I had such a terrible mix, because I had acquired a Soviet upbringing, in Shchukin school I received a portion of Russian culture and Russian theater. I was raised by my mother and we spoke Spanish at home. But I was born in Moscow, lived there for 30 years and consider myself a Muscovite.
In the year 56, the first major repatriation took place. Her mother was unable to go, because by that time she had been blacklisted because of her work in the Central Committee of the Party and on Pyrenaica radio. After the death of General Franco, she began to travel to her homeland, but she had little to live. She died in Moscow.
For me, Bilbao is a small homeland. Therefore, when I was offered a job on Spanish television for 3-4 years, a documentary series about the fate of Baksky children in Russia, I agreed.