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Selected filmography: ''Magistral'' ''({{lang-ru|Магистраль}})'' was released in 1983
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* ''[[The Suicide Club, or the Adventures of a Titled Person]]'' (1981) as Colonel Geraldine
* ''[[The Suicide Club, or the Adventures of a Titled Person]]'' (1981) as Colonel Geraldine
* ''[[The Pokrovsky Gate]]'' (1982) as Gleb Orlovich
* ''[[The Pokrovsky Gate]]'' (1982) as Gleb Orlovich
* ''[[Magistral (1982 film)|Magistral]]'' ''({{lang-ru|Магистраль}})'' as Passender Igor
* ''[[Return from Orbit]]'' (1983) as Kuznetsov's fellow traveler on the train
* ''[[Return from Orbit]]'' (1983) as Kuznetsov's fellow traveler on the train
* ''[[Crazy Day of Engineer Barkasov]]'' (1983) as Krutetsky
* ''[[Crazy Day of Engineer Barkasov]]'' (1983) as Krutetsky

Revision as of 21:39, 17 December 2023

Igor Dmitriev
File:Igor Dmitriev.jpeg
Born(1927-05-29)29 May 1927
Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
(now Saint Petersburg, Russia)
Died26 January 2008(2008-01-26) (aged 80)
NationalitySoviet and Russian
OccupationActor
Years active1948—2008

Igor Borisovich Dmitriev (Template:Lang-ru) (29 May 1927 – 26 January 2008) was a Soviet and Russian film and theatre actor who specialized in playing aristocratic characters in costume productions (e.g., Rosencrantz in Grigori Kozintsev's Hamlet).

Igor Dmitriev was born in Leningrad to parents Boris Petrovich Dmitriev, a professional yachtsman and Elena Tauber, a ballerina. In 1948 he graduated from the Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre and in 1949 became an actor of the Vera Komissarzhevskaya Theater of Drama in Leningrad. From 1967 to 1984 he worked at Lenfilm. In 1984 he started working at the Nikolay Akimov Theater of Comedy. Dmitriev worked with Georgi Tovstonogov, Sergei Gerasimov, Yan Frid. He acted in more than 120 films, not only in the Soviet Union, but also in Hungary, Poland, East Germany, the United States, Morocco and Algeria.

He became People's Artist of the RSFSR in 1988. In 2000 he played the benefit performance in the play of George Bernard Shaw and Jerome Kilty Dear Liar: A Comedy of Letters. He also worked as a radio narrator, being one of the first actors to do so, he recited the novels of Leo Tolstoy, Theodore Dreiser, Guy de Maupassant, Émile Zola, Anton Chekhov and many others.

Selected filmography