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Stanislav Govorukhin

Stanislav Govorukhin

Soviet and Russian film director, actor, screenwriter, producer and politician. He was named People's Artist of Russia in 2006. His movies often featured detective or adventure plots.

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govoruhin.ru
Is a
Person
Person

Person attributes

Birthdate
March 29, 1936
Birthplace
Berezniki
Berezniki
Date of Death
June 14, 2018
Place of Death
‌
Barvikha (settlement), Odintsovsky District, Moscow Oblast
Creator of
The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed
The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed
Educated at
‌
Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography
Kazan (Volga region) Federal University
Kazan (Volga region) Federal University
Occupation
Actor
Actor
Screenwriter
Screenwriter
Film director
Film director
‌
Television director
Film producer
Film producer
Politician
Politician

Other attributes

Child
‌
Sergey Govorukhin
Citizenship
Soviet Union
Soviet Union
Russia
Russia
Directed by (Film)
Bless the woman
Bless the woman
Father of
‌
Sergey Govorukhin
Wikidata ID
Q1377159

Biography

Stanislav Govorukhin in his youth

Stanislav Govorukhin in his youth

Govorukhin was born in Berezniki, Sverdlovsk Oblast (now Perm Krai). His parents divorced before he was born. His father Sergei Georgievich Govorukhin came from Russian Don Cossacks and was arrested as part of the decossackization genocide campaign started by Yakov Sverdlov. He had been exiled to Siberia where he died around 1938 at the age of 30. His mother Praskovya Afanasievna Glazkova was a tailor. She came from the Volga region, from a simple Russian family of a village school teacher. She raised Sergei and his sister Inessa by herself and died at the age of 53.

Govorukhin started his career as a geologist in 1958. He then joined a television studio in Kazan and enrolled at the VGIK. During the Soviet period, Govorukhin became noted for his successful adaptations of adolescent classics, including Robinson Crusoe (1972), Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1981), In Search of the Castaways (1983) and Ten Little Niggers (an adaptation of Agatha Christie's original 1939 novel And Then There Were None) in 1987.

Most of his Soviet movies were made at the Odessa Film Studio. He was good friends with Vladimir Vysotsky and directed three movies starring him – Vertical (1967), White Explosion (1969) and The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed (1979), one of the cult films of the late Soviet era. Several other of his films feature Visotsky's songs written as part of the soundtrack.

Apart from directing, he also wrote screenplays (including the top-grossing Soviet action film Pirates of the 20th Century directed by his fellow student Boris Durov in 1979) and started in movies as an actor. Being a trained mountaineer, he usually performed all the stunts himself. He also dedicated several movies to mountaineering, most notably Vertical and White Explosion which became some of the first examples of this subgenre in the Soviet cinema.

During the perestroika Govorukhin became less active at film making and more active in politics. He became one of the leaders of the Democratic Party of Russia. In 1990 he directed a much-publicized documentary highly critical of the Soviet society entitled We Can't Live Like This (also translates as You Can't Live Like That or This Is No Way to Live). Although his feature films were previously ignored by the critical establishment, this film won him the Nika Award for Best Director. It was at that time that Govorukhin released an extensive interview with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

By the start of the 2000s he returned to cinema, co-starring with Alisa Freindlich in the detective TV series Female Logic and releasing another revenge movie, Voroshilov Sharpshooter (with Mikhail Ulyanov in the lead role). He directed a total of seven movies since then. In recent years he had been also actively working as a producer.

Politics

Govorukhin had been a member of the State Duma since its inauguration in 1993, running the Duma culture committee for some time. Following the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, he had abandoned his previous democratic anti-communist convictions and sided with the national-communist opposition. In 1996, he supported Gennady Zyuganov against Boris Yeltsin during the second round of the presidential election campaign. In 2000 he took part in Russian presidential elections.

In 2011–2012 Govorukhin worked as the head of Vladimir Putin's campaign office. At this time he was a member of party United Russia.

In June 2013, he joined the central staff of the All-Russia People's Front, led by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In March 2014, he signed a letter in support of the position of the President of Russia Vladimir Putin on Russia's annexation of Crimea.

Personal life

Govorukhin was married twice. He had one son from his first marriage — Sergey Govorukhin (1961–2011), a war correspondent, writer and director of documentary films who took part in different armed conflicts in Tajikistan, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and both Chechen wars between 1994 and 2005. In 1995 he was wounded by Chechen terrorists which resulted in one of his legs being amputated. Nevertheless, he continued his work. In 1998 he released one of the most acclaimed documentaries about the First Chechen War — Damned and Forgotten that was awarded with the Nika Award in 1998 as the best documentary. He also took part in several non-governmental organizations dedicated to helping disabled war veterans. In 2011 he survived a stroke and died several days later at the age of 50. He left two sons and one daughter.

In his youth, Stanislav Govorukhin was fond of mountain climbing and performed dangerous stunts on his own, without understudies, during filming.

He liked to read books, play roulette, chess and billiards. Smoked a pipe.

He was an honorary member of the Russian Academy of Arts (RAKh). Since the mid-1990s he was fond of painting. He began with pencil sketches made at countless film sessions. Then he moved from drawings to landscapes painted in oil. His favorite genre was the lyrical landscape in the traditions of the Russian school of painting. Solo exhibitions of his paintings were held in 1998 at the Cinema House, in 2006 - in the Museum and Exhibition Hall of Russian Academy of Arts "Zurab Tsereteli Gallery of Arts" on Prechistenka, in February 2011 - in Kiev. In 2001 the hall was an exhibition of paintings by the artist "Parliamentary vacations", in 2006 - an exhibition on the occasion of his seventieth birthday, in 2011 - dedicated to the seventy-fifth anniversary of the artist.

Govorukhin belonged to the Russian Orthodox Church. In 2016, during his 80th birthday, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow awarded him with the II class Order of Sergius of Radonezh.

Death

Russian President Vladimir Putin at the funeral ceremony for Stanislav Govorukhin, June 16, 2018

Russian President Vladimir Putin at the funeral ceremony for Stanislav Govorukhin, June 16, 2018

Stanislav Govorukhin died on June 14, 2018, at the 83rd year of his life in the Barvikha sanatorium after a long illness. According to some reports, the cause of death was cancer.

Govorukhin last appeared before the public on May 29, when the Duma committee on culture was considering a bill introducing administrative and criminal liability for vandalism of exhibited works of art.

A funeral and funeral service were held on June 16, 2018, at the Transfiguration Church of Christ the Savior Cathedral; Govorukhin was buried on the same day at Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow next to the graves of Soviet national artists Oleg Tabakov and Leonid Bronevoy.

He was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

Filmography

  1. 1964 Pharmacist
  2. 1967 Vertical
  3. 1968 Angel Day
  4. 1969 White Explosion
  5. 1972 Life and Amazing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
  6. 1974 Contraband
  7. 1977 A Breeze of «Hope»
  8. 1978 Marshal of Revolution
  9. 1979 The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed
  10. 1979 Pirates of the 20th Century
  11. 1980 Invasion
  12. 1981 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn
  13. 1982 The Return of Butterfly
  14. 1983 Among Grey Stones
  15. 1985 In Search of Captain Grant
  16. 1986 Secrets of Madame Wong
  17. 1987 Ten Little Niggers, Assa
  18. 1988 Champagne Splashes
  19. 1989 Double Exposition
  20. 1990 We Can't Live Like This
  21. 1990 Sons of Bitches
  22. 1991 And the Wind Returns...
  23. 1992 Russia We Lost
  24. 1992 Encore Once More Encore!
  25. 1994 Great Criminal Revolution
  26. 1994 Moscow Nights
  27. 1995 The Black Veil
  28. 1995 Heads and Tails
  29. 1997 War Is Over. Forget It...
  30. 1999 Voroshilov Sharpshooter
  31. 2000 The Captain's Daughter
  32. 2002–2006 Woman's Logic (mini-series)
  33. 2003 Bless the Woman
  34. 2005 Not by Bread Alone
  35. 2005 The 9th Company
  36. 2007 Actress
  37. 2008 Passenger
  38. 2008 On June, 1941
  39. 2010 In the Style of Jazz
  40. 2010 Lovey-Dovey 3
  41. 2013 Weekend Weekend
  42. 2015 The End of a Great Era

Timeline

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