Armen Dzhigarkhanyan

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Armen Dzhigarkhanyan
Armen Jigarhanian.jpeg
Dzhigarkhanyan being awarded by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in 2010
Born (1935-10-03) October 3, 1935 (age 88)
Yerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union
Residence Moscow[1]
Ethnicity Armenian
Citizenship Soviet Union,

Russia,

United States[2]
Occupation actor, theatre director
Years active 1955–present[3]
Awards Orden for Service II.png Orden for Service III.png Orden for Service IV.png
Orden of Honor (Armenia) BAR.svg
People Artist of the USSR1.jpg Narodny artist RSFSR.png
Website www.dzigartheater.ru

Armen Dzhigarkhanyan[lower-alpha 1] (Armenian: Արմեն Ջիգարխանյան; pronounced [dʒiɡɑrχɑnjɑn]; Russian: Армен Джигарханян;[lower-alpha 2] born 3 October 1935) is an Armenian and Russian (formerly Soviet) actor.

Born and raised in Yerevan, Dzhigarkhanyan started acting in the academic and Russian theaters of the city, before moving to Moscow to continue stage acting. Since 1960, he appeared in a number of Armenian films. He became popular in the 1970s with the various roles he portrayed in Soviet films like The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers (1968), its sequel The Crown of the Russian Empire, or Once Again the Elusive Avengers (1971) and The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed (1979). After almost 30 years on the stage of the Mayakovsky Theatre, Dzhigarkhanyan taught at VGIK and in 1996 he founded his own drama theater in Moscow.

Dzhigarkhanyan, one of the most renowned living film and stage Armenian and Russian actors, has appeared in more films than any other Russian actor with more than 250 appearances.

Early life

Armen Dzhigarkhanyan was born in Yerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union on 5 October 1935.[6] His paternal grandfather, a "professional tamada", came from an Armenian family from Tbilisi, Georgia's capital.[3] He graduated from a Russian high school named after Anton Chekhov. Between 1953 and 1954, he worked as camera operator's assistant at the state-run Hayfilm studio.[7]

Career

Theater

Actor

In 1955, Dzhigarkhanyan was admitted to the Sundukyan State Academic Theatre of Yerevan. He studied in director Armen Gulakyan's (hy, ru) class until 1958.[4] Beginning in his first year at the Sundukyan Theatre, he started acting at the Stanislavski Russian Theatre of Yerevan. He remained there for over 10 years, until 1967.[7][8] At Armenia's only Russian theater, he played around 30 roles, most notably as Vanya Kudryash in The Storm by Alexander Ostrovsky, Sergey in An Irkutsk Story by Aleksei Arbuzov, Actor in The Lower Depths by Maxim Gorky.[8] "From the beginning of his stage career, Dzhigarkhanyan has demonstrated an awesome versatility, succeeding in a wide variety of roles in the classical and contemporary repertory, including Shakespeare, Tennessee Williams, and modern Russian authors.[4]

In 1967, Dzhigarkhanyan moved to Moscow to make a career at the Lenkom Theatre.[4] He started acting under directorship of Anatoly Efros, however, they worked together for a brief period. Dzhigarkhanyan portrayed Molière in Mikhail Bulgakov's The Cabal of Hypocrites. Following Efros's departure, Dzhigarkhanyan was given more roles, but he didn't wish to continue acting in a theater without the director he came for in the first place.[8]

In 1969, Dzhigarkhanyan joined Moscow's Mayakovsky Theatre by Andrey Goncharov's recommendation.[4] He worked there until 1996 and for almost 30 years, he was "its leading actor".[3] He first appeared in the role of Levinson in The Rout by Alexander Fadeyev. His later roles include Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire. Since most of his roles were protagonistic, he moved to portray several antagonistic roles.[8]

Dzhigarkhanyan's portrayal of Socrates in Edvard Radzinsky's Conversations with Socrates in 1975 was acclaimed by critics and made him one of the "most interesting and strongest actors of the contemporary scene." During the 1970s and 1980s, Dzhigarkhanyan appeared less frequently on stage and more frequently in films and became known to the wider Soviet public. Even with decreased number of appearances on stage, Dzhigarkhanyan's every role became an object of discussion. The finest roles from this period include Big Daddy in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee Williams, Lord Bothwell in Robert Bolt's Vivat! Vivat Regina!, Nero in Edvard Radzinsky's Theater in the Time of Nero and Seneca and others.[8]

Director

Between 1989 and 1997, Dzhigarkhanyan taught the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography (VGIK), Russia's state film school.[4]

In the mid-1990s, Dzhigarkhanyan decided to create a theater that would bring together his dtudents at VGIK. In March 1996, Dzhigarkhanyan founded his own theater named "D"[4] and currently named "Moscow Drama Theater headed by Armen Dzhigarkhanyan" (Московский драматический театр под руководством Армена Джигарханяна). His theater has staged a number of famous plays, including Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape and Harold Pinter's The Homecoming.[8]

Dzhigarkhanyan has also directed combination companies and has played the roles of General in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Gambler and the main character in Filumena Marturano by Eduardo De Filippo at the Lenkom Theatre.[8]

Film

Dzhigarkhanyan made his film debut in 1960 film Landslide (Obval) as Akop. He "impressed viewers with his inspired portrayal of physicist" in Frunze Dovlatyan's Hello, That's Me! (Barev Yes Em, 1966) as Artem Manvelyan. It "gave him national renown and initiated an extremely prolific screen career." Usta Mukuch, the role of an old blacksmith he created in Triangle (Yerankyuni, 1967) directed by famed Armenian director Henrik Malyan, paved the way for dozens of films in later decades.[8]

He later appeared in several iconic films, including as captain Ovechkin in Edmond Keosayan's The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers (1968) and The Crown of the Russian Empire, or Once Again the Elusive Avengers (1971). The 1973 comedy The Men, directed by Edmond Keosayan, became one of the most iconic Armenian films of the late Soviet period and today, a statue of its leading characters stands in central Yerevan.[9] "By the early 1970s, Dzhigarkhanyan had become one of the most popular Soviet film actor who appeared in more than 200 roles, covering all genres from situational comedy to historical adventure, psychological drama, thriller, and quality literary adaptation, moving effortlessly from trivial entertainment to sophisticated art." In the five-part TV miniseries The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed (1979), starring all-time favorite Vladimir Vysotsky, Dzhigarkhanyan played a thief in law, which made he more popular to the general Soviet public.[4][7] He also appeared in a leading role in the joint Soviet-French Teheran 43 (1981) alongside to Claude Jade as his mysterious young mistress and Curd Jurgens as his lawyer.[7]

Personal life

Dzhigarkhanyan has married thrice. In the early 1960s, he secretly married Alla Vanovskaya, an actress at the Stanislavski Russian Theatre of Yerevan. Their daughter, Yelena, was born in 1964 and died at age 23 in 1987 of suffocation at sleep, because she left the car engine running.[10] His second wife Tatyana Vlasova, was also an actress at the Stanislavski Theatre in Yerevan. They never officially married, but they started living together in 1967, when they moved to Moscow together. Tatyana now resides in Dallas, Texas and works as a Russian language teacher at a university. Dzhigarkhanyan often visits her.[11] His third wife is 43 years younger than him.

Recognition

Dzhigarkhanyan (left) at an ITAR-TASS press-conference, 2012

Dzhigarkhanyan is one of the most popular[12][13] and renowned living Russian actors, both in films and theatre.[14][15] Novaya Gazeta, one of Russia's largest weeklies, described Dzhigarkhanyan as a "distinct brand" in Russian theatre and film and his voice as "a separate living brand".[16] According to Peter Rollberg, Professor of Slavic Languages, Film Studies at the Elliott School of International Affairs, "Dzhigarkhanyan's characters usually are distinguished by stoicism, irony, and a quiet inner strength, irradiating a rough charm that has only grown with age."[4]

With the deaths of Frunzik Mkrtchyan (1993), Khoren Abrahamyan (2004) and Sos Sargsyan (2013), Dzhigarkhanyan remains the last major Armenian actor of the Soviet era.[17]

In his birthday congratulation in 2005, Armenia's second president Robert Kocharyan stated that Dzhigarkhanyan's "great popularity" is "due to [his] talent and devoted work". Kocharyan further said that "[his] art has become a peculiar standard of mutual enrichment of Armenian and Russian cultures."[18] In 2010, Armenia's current president Serzh Sargsyan described the artist as "one of the prominent figures of the modern cinema" who has "boundless talent and charm". Sargsyan stated that "The Armenian nation is proud of you."[19] In 2010, Russian president Dmitry Medvedev awarded Dzhigarkhanyan with the Order For Merit to the Fatherland and stated:[20]

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For decades, you've given the audience you talent and the appreciative audience responds to you with sincere love. You've played a number of memorable roles, each of which is an example of mastery of the profession. Today, inexhaustible creative energy, the ability to integrate talented people to help you in your work with the company of one of the most popular Moscow theaters in the education of the younger generation of domestic actors."

In 2012, Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin congratulated Dzhigarkhanyan on his birthday and described him as "an outstanding actor and talented director" who "over many years of service to the stage and screen made a huge contribution to the development of Russian culture."[21]

Record

A number of sources claim that Dzhigarkhanyan is included in Guinness World Records as the Russian actor with most film appearances (as of 2013), suggesting that he has played in more than 250 films[22][23][24][25] (300 according to RIA Novosti).[26] However, the Guinness World Records website does not provide such data by country.[27] In reference to the large number of films in which he has appeared, prominent Soviet Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian once stated, "[Whenever] you turn on the iron, Dzhigarkhanyan is there!"[26][28] Actor Valentin Gaft has written an epigram in an humorous reference to his large number of appearances: "There are less Armenians in the world, / Than there are films where Dzhigarkhanyan has appeared" (Гораздо меньше на земле армян, / Чем фильмов, где сыграл Джигарханян.)[26]

Awards

Soviet Union
Russia
Armenia

Selected filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1966 Hello, That's Me! Artyom Manvelyan
1967 Triangle (Yerankyuni) Usta Mukuch
1968 The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers captain Ovechkin
1970 The Seagull Ilya Afanasievich Shamraev
1971 The Crown of the Russian Empire, or Once Again the Elusive Avengers captain Ovechkin
1973 The Men (Tghamardik) Ghazaryan
1975 Hello, I'm Your Aunt! Judge Criggs
1977 Kogda nastupaet sentyabr
1979 The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed Hunchback
1981 Teheran 43 Max
1982 Gikor Bazaz Artem
1990 Passport
1992 White King, Red Queen
1995 Shirli-Myrli Kozyulski
2008 The Best Movie
Voice

References

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Notes
  1. Alternative spellings include Dzhigarkhanian and Jigarkhanyan.[4][5]
  2. full name in Russian: Арме́н Бори́сович Джигарханя́н Armen Borisovich Dzhigarkhanyan[4]
Citations
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External links