Director,
Actor
Born in 1927 
 
Died in 2007
Mikhail ULYANOV
▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪
Михаил Александрович УЛЬЯНОВ
Mikhaïl OULIANOV
Also : Mihail ULJANOV
From filmography
 
Director
1968 - Bratya Karamazovy (Братья Карамазовы) [fiction, 231 mn]
 
Actor
2004 - God loshadi - sozvezdie Skorpiona (Год лошади - созвездие Скорпиона) from Natalia NAUMOVA [fiction, 85 mn]
2002 - Antikiller (Антикиллер) from Egor KONCHALOVSKY [fiction, 111 mn]
1999 - Voroshilovskiy strelok (Ворошиловский стрелок) from Stanislav GOVORUKHIN [fiction, 95 mn]
1998 - Sochinenie ko Dnyu Pobedy (Сочинение ко Дню Победы) from Sergey URSULIAK [fiction, 111 mn]
1995 - Vsyo budet khorosho (Все будет хорошо) from Dmitry ASTRAKHAN [fiction, 100 mn]
1994 - Master i Margarita (Мастер и Маргарита) from Yuri KARA [fiction, 113 mn]
1991 - Dom pod zvezdnum nebom (Дом под звездным небом) from Sergey SOLOVYOV [fiction, 121 mn]
1989 - Stalingrad (Сталинград) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 196 mn]
1988 - Nash bronepoezd (Наш бронепоезд) from Mikhail PTASHUK [fiction, 150 mn]
1987 - Vybor (Выбор) from Vladimir NAUMOV [fiction, 142 mn]
1985 - Bitva za Moskvy (Битва за Москву) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 352 mn]
1983 - Bez sviditeleï (Без свидетелей) from Nikita MIKHALKOV [fiction, 95 mn]
1982 - Chastnaya zhizn (Частная жизнь) from Yuli RAIZMAN [fiction, 102 mn]
1980 - Posledniy pobeg (Последний побег) from Leonid MENAKER [fiction, 92 mn]
1979 - Tema (Тема) from Gleb PANFILOV [fiction, 98 mn]
1977 - pozovi menia v dal svetluyu (Позови меня в даль светлую) from German LAVROV , Stanislav LIUBSHIN [fiction, 97 mn]
1977 - Obratnaya zvyaz (Обратная связь) from Viktor TREGUBOVICH [fiction, 93 mn]
1974 - Blokada: Luzhskiy rubezh, Pulkovskiy meredian (Блокада: Фильм 1: Лужский рубеж, Пулковский меридиан) from Mikhail YERSHOV [fiction, 185 mn]
1971 - Egor Bulychev i drugie (Егор Булычев и другие) from Sergey SOLOVYOV [fiction, 90 mn]
1971 - Bitva za Berlin (Битва за Берлин) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 70 mn]
1971 - Osvobozhdenie : Posledniy shturm (Освобождение: Последний штурм) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 75 mn]
1970 - Beg (Бег) from Aleksandr ALOV , Vladimir NAUMOV [fiction, 196 mn]
1970 - Osvobozhdenie (Освобождение) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 477 mn]
1968 - Bratya Karamazovy (Братья Карамазовы) from Kirill LAVROV , Ivan PYRIEV , Mikhail ULYANOV [fiction, 231 mn]
1968 - Osvobozhdenie: Ognennaya duga (Освобождение: Огненная дуга) from Yuri OZEROV [fiction, 93 mn]
1964 - Predsedatel (Председатель) from Aleksey SALTYKOV [fiction, 166 mn]
1960 - Baltiyskoe nebo (Балтийское небо) from Vladimir VENGEROV [fiction, 89 mn]
1957 - Dom, v kotorom ya zhivu (Дом, в котором я живу) from Lev KULIDZHANOV , Yakov SEGEL [fiction, 100 mn]
1952 - Egor Bulychev i drugie (Егор Булычев и другие) from Yulia SOLNTSEVA [fiction, 159 mn]

Awards :
Voroshilovskiy strelok :
Best actor, Award "White Elephant", Moscow (Russia), 1999
Best actor, "NIKA" Prizes, Moscow (Russia), 1999
Best actor, Open Russian Film Festival Kinotavr, Sochi (Russia), 1999
Bratya Karamazovy :
Special Prize, Moscow International Film Festival (MIFF), Moscow (Russia), 1969
Bratya Karamazovy :
Meilleur film de 1969 en Russie pour les recettes, d’après la revue Ecran soviétique

Biography
Mikhail Ulyanov was a notable Russian actor and director, who was also an important Soviet political figure, Member of the Central Committe of the Communist Party, Co-Chairman, with Kirill Lavrov, of Theatrical Union of the USSR, and the leader of Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow, Russia.
He was born Mikhail Aleksandrovich Ulyanov, on November 20, 1927, in the village of Bergamak, Omsk province, Soviet Union. His father, Aleksandr Andreevich Ulyanov, was Chairman of a Soviet collective farm, then Mayor of the town of Tara, Russia. His mother, Elizaveta Mikhailovna Ulyanova, was a homemaker. Young Mikhail Ulyanov enjoyed a rather privileged life during his childhood and youth, because of his father's position in the Soviet Communist Party. Eventually, Ulyanov himself joined the Soviet Communist Party, a move that helped his career. His name was similar to that of the founder of the Soviet Communist Party, Ulyanov-Lenin, a fact that helped Ulyanov to get to play the character of Lenin, the most lucrative stage and film character in the former Soviet Union.
From 1946 - 1950 Ulyanov studied acting at Shchukin Theatrical School of Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow, under Boris Zakhava, graduating in 1950 as an actor. Since 1950 until his death in 2007, Ulyanov was a permanent member of the troupe at Vakhtangov Drama Theatre. There his stage partners were such actors as Vasiliy Lanovoy, Ruben Simonov, Mikhail Astangov, Boris Zakhava, Varvara Popova, Yuliya Borisova, Lyudmila Maksakova, Lyudmila Tselikovskaya, Marianna Vertinskaya, Nina Ruslanova, Irina Kupchenko, Natalya Tenyakova, Nikolai Plotnikov, Yuriy Yakovlev, Vladimir Etush, Vyacheslav Shalevich, Andrei Abrikosov, Grigori Abrikosov, Boris Babochkin, Nikolai Gritsenko, Nikolai Timofeyev, Aleksandr Grave, Evgeniy Karelskikh, Sergey Makovetskiy, and other notable Russian actors.
In 1987, Mikhail Ulyanov became artistic director of the Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow. During the course of his career, Ulyanov was closely watched by the Communist Party and also by Ekaterina Furtseva, the most powerful woman in the 1960s - 1970s Soviet Union as Minister of Culture, she ordered Ulyanov to "keep playing Lenin and other role-models" for the Soviet people. Eventually Ulyanov became known for his portrayal of exemplary communists, Soviet-era heroes, and other characters typical of the Soviet propaganda on stage and in film. Ulyanov played the character of Marshal Georgi Zhukov in several Soviet war films. Although, he never met the legendary Marshal Zhukov, Ulyanov became the officially approved impersonator of the famous Soviet military leader. Ulyanov's facial expression closely resembled that of Marshal Georgi Zhukov, so Ulyanov's face was used as a model for the monument to Zhukov in Moscow.
With the official recognition in the roles as Lenin and Zhukov, Ulyanov was granted more flexibility in his artistic choices, he enjoyed the privilege of playing several roles that opened the true range of his acting talent. In 1970 Ulyanov played one of his best roles ever as General Charnota, a White Russian émigré, in La fuite (1971), an epic film by directors Alov and Naumov. In 1979, a few years after the death of actor-director Vasiliy Shukshin, Ulyanov directed a stage production of Shukshin's unfinished project "Ya prishel dat vam volyu" (aka.. I came to let you free). In that production, Ulyanov played the leading role as Stepan Razin, Russian historic hero of the 17 century, who was the Cossac leader of a major popular uprising against the Russian Tzar, and was brutally executed by the Russian government at the Red Square in Moscow.
During the political changes in the 1980s Soviet Union, Ulyanov was critical of dramatic social shifts caused by "perestroika" and "glasnost" initiated by Mikhail Gorbachev. However, Ulyanov continued playing the character of V. I. Lenin in numerous productions on stage and on Soviet National television. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he expressed his disappointment with the drastic socio-economic changes and cultural chaos in the post-Soviet Russia. He played a number of patriotic, violent and controversial characters in several films made during the post-Soviet era. During the 2000s, Ulyanov used his star power to help his less fortunate colleagues in Russian Theatrical Union. He also supported the politics of Russian President.
From 1976 - 1990, Ulyanov served as Permanent Member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the USSR. In the course of his acting career spanning over 50 years, Ulyanov received numerous Soviet and Russian awards and decorations, such as the Order of Lenin (twice), Order of October Revolution, and was awarded Lenin's Prize and State Prize of the USSR. He died of a heart failure on March 26, 2007, in Moscow, and was laid to rest in Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, Russia.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Steve Shelokhonov