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Bruno Arturovich Freyndlih
Бруно Фрейндлих
Life Time
10 October 1909 - 9 July 2002
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Bruno Arturovich Freundlich - People's Artist of the USSR, laureate of the Stalin Prize.
Born on October 10, 1909 in St. Petersburg. He worked in the Leningrad Theatre of Working Youth. There he met a young actress Ksenia Fedorovna Fedorova, who became his wife and mother of the famous artist Alice Freundlich. 1941, the war started. During the years of evacuation, Bruno met another love, and after the Great Patriotic War he returned to Leningrad with his new wife and daughter Irina. The actor got
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Bruno Arturovich Freundlich - People's Artist of the USSR, laureate of the Stalin Prize.
Born on October 10, 1909 in St. Petersburg. He worked in the Leningrad Theatre of Working Youth. There he met a young actress Ksenia Fedorovna Fedorova, who became his wife and mother of the famous artist Alice Freundlich.
1941, the war started. During the years of evacuation, Bruno met another love, and after the Great Patriotic War he returned to Leningrad with his new wife and daughter Irina. The actor got a job in the Bolshoi Drama Theater named after Gorky, but later moved to the Leningrad Drama Theater named after A. S. Pushkin, to whom he gave more than half of his life.
Among the famous works of Bruno: Khlestakov in the “Inspector” by N.V. Gogol, Gaev in the “Cherry Orchard” by A.P. Chekhov, Baron in “At the Bottom” by M. Gorky and many others. His characters were always distinguished by subtle psychologicalism and bright colors of characters.
Freundlich began acting when he was thirty-eight. His first role was the character Sergey Kostrov in the film Return to Life. He then played Marconi in Herbert Rappoport’s historical and biographical film Alexander Popov, for which the actor was awarded the Stalin Prize. He managed to create different images for about forty years. This is the jester Fest in Twelfth Night, and Roshchin in Different Destinies, the old man in Explanation in Love, Patrick Gordon in the series Young Russia. The most notable roles were played by him in the films: "It's not my business", "Hamlet" and
"Running" . His skill has always been distinguished by the highest nobility and intellectualism.
Bruno Arturovich died on July 7, 2002, he was ninety-three years old. As his colleagues put it: “Fatherland art has lost a truly unique Master, a unique individuality. Bruno Arturovich was unique in becoming. The last representative of the Imperial Alexandrinsky Theatre. /