Stefan Valdobrev: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox person |
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| name = Stefan Valdobrev |
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{{BLP sources|date=December 2012}} |
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| image = StefanValdobrev2012.jpg |
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{{No footnotes|date=December 2012}} |
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| imagesize = 250px |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1970|5|20}} |
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| birth_place = [[Stara Zagora]], [[Bulgaria]] |
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{{Infobox musical artist |
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| name = Stefan Valdobrev |
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| image = Stefan valdobrev.jpg |
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| caption = |
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| background = solo_singer |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1970|05|20}} |
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| origin = [[Stara Zagora]], [[Bulgaria]] |
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| instrument = |
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| genre = |
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| occupation = [[Singer]], [[Composer]], [[Actor]] |
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| years_active = 1991–present |
| years_active = 1991–present |
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| occupation = Actor, composer, musician, filmmaker |
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| label = |
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| website = [http://www.stefanvaldobrev.com/ www.stefanvaldobrev.com] |
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}} |
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'''Stefan Valdobrev''' ({{lang-bg|Стефан Вълдобрев}}) (born May 20, 1970) is a [[Bulgarians|Bulgarian]] |
'''Stefan Valdobrev''' ({{lang-bg|Стефан Вълдобрев}}) (born May 20, 1970) is a [[Bulgarians|Bulgarian]] actor, film/theatre composer, singer-songwriter and filmmaker. He received classical training at the [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|National Academy of Theatre and Film Arts]] in [[Sofia]]. |
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Valdobrev rose to prominence in the early 1990s, mainly with his hit songs, which made him extremely popular and gained him idol status on the Bulgarian music scene<ref name="bnt-maria">{{Cite episode |title=Денят отблизо с Мария - 4 януари 2012 |trans_title=The day closely with Maria - 4 January 2012 |url=http://bnt.bg/bg/productions/136/edition/19073/denjat_otblizo_s_marija_4_januari_2012 |network=[[Bulgarian National Television|BNT]] |station=[[BNT 1]] |language = Bulgarian |date=4 January 2012 |accessdate=20 July 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Стефан Вълдобрев - където творчеството започва и никога не вършва|trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev - where creativity starts and never ends|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.avtora.com/news/2012/11/23/stefan_vuldobrev_kudeto_tvorchestvoto_zapochva_i_nikoga_ne_svurshva|website=avtora.com|date=23 November 2012|accessdate=7 July 2013}}</ref>, twice being awarded as best male artist at the [[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|National Music Television ceremonies]]. Despite that he never quit his acting career and took part in numerous performances which have spanned a wide variety of genres from classical to contemporary drama, and from popular comedies to alternative, non-commercial projects, all staged by the most prominent Bulgarian directors on the most significant theatre stages. At that time Valdobrev gradually entered the world of film and theatre music and since 1992 has gone on to enjoy composing the original scores for more than 70 stage performances and 20 feature and documentary movies, winning many plaudits and awards for his work.<ref name="light">{{Citation |title=Герой|trans_title=Hero|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.capital.bg/vestnikut/kapital_light/vuv_fokus/2009/03/12/688376_geroi/|newspaper=[[Capital (newspaper)|Capital Light]]|issue=12 March 2009|accessdate=7 July 2013}}</ref> In 2000 he received the Golden Rose film award for debut for the ''Dog's Home'' original movie soundtrack featuring Arabel Karajan. In 2008 he composed the music for Stefan Komandarev's highly acclaimed film ''[[The World is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'', a Bulgarian-German co-production with [[Miki Manojlovic]] in the lead role, which won a considerable number of international awards and reached the [[List of submissions to the 82nd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film|Short List of The Academy Awards 2010 for Foreign Language film]]. |
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== Biography == |
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Although Valdobrev continued performing in theatre ([[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'', [[Fyodor Dostoyevsky|Dostoyevsky]]'s ''[[The Brothers Karamazov]]'', [[Mikhail Bulgakov|Bulgakov]]'s ''[[The Master and Margarita]]'', [[Heiner Muller|Muller]]'s ''[[Hamletmachine]]'', [[Jean Anouilh|Anouilh]]'s ''[[Eurydice (Anouilh play)|Eurydice]]''), he gradually moved away from this area, and also from the music stage, to become more established as a film actor. In 2004 he got his break in ''Burning out'', for which he received the Golden Rose for Best Male performance at the National Film Awards. |
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Stefan Valdobrev was born in [[Stara Zagora]]. In 1993 he graduated [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts]] in the acting class of professor [[Krikor Azaryan]] and [[Todor Kolev]]. In 2007 graduated a [[film directing]] course at the film academy [[Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague|FAMU]] in [[Prague]]. |
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In 2006-2007 Valdobrev completed a film directing specialization at the [[Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague|Academy of Performing Arts in Prague]] (FAMU). After graduating from there he directed a few short films, TV programs and music videos. He made his director's film debut in 2010 with the documentary comedy drama ''My Mate Manchester United''. Provided with the cameo appearance of the Bulgarian football superstar [[Dimitar Berbatov]], the film won two international awards and was presented in the competition of the official selection of 21 major world film festivals: [[International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam|IDFA Amsterdam]], [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival|HotDocs Toronto]], [[ZagrebDox]], [[Sarajevo Film Festival|Sarajevo]] and [[Warsaw International Film Festival|Warsaw]] among them.<ref name="mmmu">{{cite web|title=My Mate Manchester United - Home|url=http://www.mymatemanchesterunited.com/|website=My Mate Manchester United - Official Website|accessdate=7 July 2013}}</ref> |
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He has played more than forty characters on stage, starred in eight feature films. He has composed original music for more than sixty-five theatre performances, eight feature and four documentary films. He has also released 9 pop-music albums. |
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After being away from the rock stage for almost a decade in 2012 Stefan Valdobrev decided to rejoin his old band "The Usual Suspects" and to start recording songs and performing live in concerts again.<ref name="tour2012">{{cite web|title=Стефан Вълдобрев с национално турне и нов клип|trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev with a national tour and a new video|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.avtora.com/news/2012/09/28/stefan_vuldobrev_s_nacionalno_turne_i_nov_klip|website=avtora.com|date=28 September 2012|accessdate=7 July 2013}}</ref> |
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In 1999 he released his debut book of poetry called ''Catapult''. In 2001 his play ''Eros'' was published in the compilation book ''Young Bulgarian Dramaturgy'' |
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== Early life == |
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Stefan Valdobrev has toured as an actor and composer [[France]], [[Belgium]], [[Germany]], [[Italy]], [[Israel]], [[Russia]], [[Hungary]], [[United Kingdom]], [[United States|U.S.]], [[Switzerland]], [[Romania]], [[Austria]] and [[Albania]]. |
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Stefan Valdobrev was born in [[Stara Zagora]], [[Bulgaria]], the son of Maria Valdobreva (nee Atanassova) and Kostadin Valdobrev, both [[Civil engineering|civil engineers]]. His mother was descended from [[Macedonia]]n refugees who settled in the [[Rhodope Mountains]], and his paternal ancestors come from midst of the country, where the [[Thrace|Thracian]] valley meets with the Central [[Balkan Mountains|Balkan]] region. Valdobrev has a sister, Iva (born 1965).<ref name="btv-tarsise">{{Cite episode |title=Търси се: Стефан Вълдобрев |trans_title=Looking for: Stefan Valdobrev |url=http://www.btv.bg/shows/tarsi-se/videos/video/1643663304-Tarsi_se_Stefan_Valdobrev.html |station=[[bTV (Bulgaria)|bTV]] |language = Bulgarian |date=2 June 2013 |accessdate=20 July 2013}}</ref> |
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Not that he was a bad student, but he found early on that he would rather immerse himself in [[art]]s or [[association football|football]] than attend to his studies. According to his own account: "The good old socialist block of flats I lived in was in the middle of a magical Bermuda triangle in which I got lost – the stadium, the cinema and the circus. I spent all my time there – playing with a ball, wandering with my friends, sneaking into the ballerinas' trailers, acting scenes from films I'd just watched, so I often forgot to go home until late at night. The school was something in between, but never became a part of this triangle".<ref name="bela">{{cite web|title=За Стефан Вълдобрев светът е по-голям |trans_title=The world is bigger for Stefan Valdobrev|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.bela.bg/?page=inner_page&page_id=8&article_id=41&sub_page=4|website=Bela.bg|accessdate=7 July 2013}}</ref> |
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He is married to Iana, who is a [[lawyer]]. They have a daughter Maria. |
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He played the [[piano]] for quite a long time, but then decided to quit and take up the [[guitar]]. He started to take an interest in the [[theatre]] and joined a local amateur company at the town's [[chitalishte]] – a common Bulgarian Art House, where a variety of different arts could be trained and practiced. Very soon it became like a home to him: rehearsing plays on the stage, studying the guitar in the basement, reading and writing poetry in the attic, writing music for his own lyrics. It was not long before he made his acting debut as the King in [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Love's Labour's Lost]]''.<ref name="btv-tarsise"/> At the age of 18 he established himself as a songwriter, performing his first solo concert. Additionally he formed a rock band called "Alleya Alya" which made several studio recording sessions, all of them now missing.<ref name="monitor">{{Citation |last=Popova |first=Nadezhda|title=Вълдобрев и хромозомите на изкуството|trans_title= Valdobrev and the chromosomes of art |url=http://www.monitor.bg/article?id=336819|newspaper=Monitor Newspaper|issue=5 May 2012 |language = Bulgarian|accessdate=24 July 2013}}</ref> |
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== Discography == |
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*2008 - ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner|The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner OST]]'' |
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Meanwhile Valdobrev attended the [[Language school|High School for Foreign Languages]] in Stara Zagora. For a [[Communism|Communist]] country behind the [[Iron Curtain]] which Bulgaria was at that time, this school was like a breath of fresh air – with a discipline not so strict and teachers being lenient and having a personal approach to each of the students. They soon noticed Valdobrev's wandering mind and lack of concentration in class and created a system which tried to help him study the [[English language]] better. They gave him constant tasks to listen to and write down [[lyrics]] of new songs, perform them with his guitar in the lessons and translate the words for his classmates. These everyday concerts were the real productive education for him and later, when he was traveling over the [[Bulgarian Black Sea Coast|Black Sea resorts]] and [[Germany]] as a [[street musician]], he already had a [[Set list|set-list]] of 300 prepared and well-rehearsed world [[hit song]]s of any genre.<ref>{{cite web|last=Stoykova|first=Antoniya|title=Стефан Вълдобрев: "Изкарвах пари като уличен музикант"|trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev: "I was making money as a street musician" |language=Bulgarian |url=http://www.blitz.bg/article/11792|website=blitz.bg|date=13 May 2012|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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*2006 - ''Opus Theatrale 2'' (internet album) |
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*2003 - ''Opus Theatrale'' |
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In 1989 Valdobrev was accepted in [[Sofia University]] to study [[English philology]]<ref name="kontinent">{{Citation |last=Dinova|first=Liliya |title=Стефан Вълдобрев: Всичко трябва да се прави с едно намигване |trans_title= Stefan Valdobrev: Everything needs to be done with a wink |magazine=Continent Newspaper|issue=January 1995|language = Bulgarian}}</ref>, but soon quit and attended the [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts]] to become part of what was later called: "the most successful acting class of the two highly praised Bulgarian professors – [[Krikor Azaryan]] and [[Todor Kolev (actor)|Todor Kolev]]".<ref name="novinar">{{Citation |last=Gigova |first=Irina|title=Стефан Вълдобрев: Можем да захраним с положителна енергия половин България|trans_title= Stefan Valdobrev: We can charge half of Bulgaria with positive energy |url=http://novinar.bg/news/stefan-valdobrev-mozhem-da-zahranim-s-polozhitelna-energiia-polovin-balgariia_MzkyMDsyOA==.html|issue=16 May 2012 |language = Bulgarian|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> Together with his fellow colleague actors and directors Galin Stoev, [[Marius Kurkinski]], Kamen Donev, Stefka Yanorova, Koyna Ruseva, Kasiel Noah Asher, Lilia Maraviglia they formed the core of a New Wave in Bulgarian theatre.<ref name="bnt-maria"/> |
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*2001 - ''Propaganda, Chromosomes, Silicon'' |
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*2000 - ''Dogs' Home OST'' |
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==Career== |
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*1998 - ''...to'' |
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===Acting=== |
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*1995 - ''Revolution'' |
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====Theatre==== |
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*1995 - ''A Night at the Theatre'' |
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[[File:StefanValdobrev PeopleFromOz.JPG|thumbnail|Stefan Valdobrev portraying Sart in ''People from Oz'', 2013]] |
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*1994 - ''I love you, darling'' |
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Even before their graduation, Valdobrev and his friends were very active in acting or staging in professional theatres like the Academy Drama Theatre or the Youth Theatre. Such kick-start performances as [[Sam Shepard]]'s ''[[Angel City (play)|Angel City]]'', [[Georg Buchner]]'s ''[[Leonce and Lena]]'', [[William Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Twelfth Night]]'', [[Aeschylus]]' ''[[Agamemnon (play)|Agamemnon]]'', [[Goran Stefanovski]]'s ''Black Hole'', ''[[Anton Chekhov|Chekhov Revue]]'' and others appeared between 1991 and 1993. In June, 1993 Valdobrev became a member of the troupe of the [[Ivan Vazov National Theatre|National Theatre]], but some time later he had to start serving his 12 months' mandatory [[military service]], so eventually moved to the Bulgarian Army Theatre (actually, a civil repertory theatre sponsored by the [[Ministry of Defence (Bulgaria)|Ministry of Defense]], with a leading status in the cultural life). He spent there 10 years, taking part in many significant performances like Georg Buchner's ''[[Woyzeck]]'', Shakespeare’s ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'', [[Eric Bogosian]]'s ''[[suburbia (play)|Suburbia]]'' and [[Jean Anouilh]]'s ''[[Eurydice (Anouilh play)|Eurydice]]''. In 1997 the independent theatre company La Strada, formed by the popular director Tedi Moskov produced three major hit performances in collaboration with the Bulgarian Army Theatre: ''[[The Master and Margarita]]'' (presented at the official selection of the [[Festival d'Avignon|Avignon Theatre Festival]]), ''Commedia del Servitore'' (a co-production with the Avignon Theatre Festival) and ''Fantasmagorii''. As one of the cast Valdobrev spent the next five years touring and presenting the plays at the most prestigious European [[theatre festival]]s.<ref name="public-republic">{{cite web|last=Lazarova |first=Vanya|title=Пролетна среща със Стефан Вълдобрев|trans_title=Spring meeting with Stefan Valdobrev |url=http://www.public-republic.com/magazine/2009/04/18325.php|website=public-republic.com|date=17 April 2009|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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2007 marked a significant turning point in his career. After an absence from the theatre stage for a few years, Valdobrev returned as a freelance actor for a beneficial collaboration with the [[Paris]]-based [[Comedie-Francaise]] Bulgarian director Galin Stoev, who started occasionally to return home only to stage the texts of the prominent contemporary young dramatist Yana Borisova. ''Small Play for a Children’s Room'' (2008), ''Pleasantlyscary'' (2010) and ''People from Oz'' (2013) became remarkable events in the theatre life and were many times awarded for best performance, best play, or best director.<ref>{{cite web|title="Хората от Оз" - дълго любовно писмо без адресат|trans_title="People from Oz" - long love letter with no addressee|url=http://www.vesti.bg/index.phtml?tid=40&oid=5670291|website=vesti.bg|date=8 April 2013|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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====Film==== |
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[[File:StefanValdobrev BurningOut.jpg|thumbnail|Valdobrev on the set of the film ''Burning Out'', 2003]] |
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In the early 1990s Valdobrev made quite a few appearances on [[Bulgarian National Television]], mainly as a participant in a students' show with a cult status named "Coo-Coo". Despite this success he subsequently decided to turn to film for more challenging roles. While struggling to establish himself in cinema, he took small parts in international co-production [[B movie]]s. His onscreen career began in 2000 with the supporting role of the tricky Communist activist Popadamchev in the Bulgarian-Macedonian production ''[[Warming Up Yesterday's Lunch]]''. The [[Television comedy|TV comedy]] ''Encounter'' (2003) gave him his first leading role as a clumsy journalist who falls in love with his cousin's girlfriend. 2004 was the year of his big movie break when he took on the lead in ''Burning Out'', a love drama by director Stanimir Trifonov, set in the immediate [[Aftermath of World War II|post World War II]] period. Valdobrev’s performance of the romantic Italian doctor Enrico Corsa, separated from his Bulgarian wife and sent to a [[Forced labour camps in Communist Bulgaria|Communist prison camp]], from which he finally escapes, has been described as fine, deep and centered |
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<ref>{{Citation |last=Dimitrova |first=Genoveva|title=Воля за кино, разговор с Вера Найденова|trans_title= A Will to Cinema, a conversation with Vera Naydenova |url=http://www.kultura.bg/media/my_html/2337/verakino.htm|newspaper=Kultura Newspaper|issue=Issue 35, 24 September 2004|issn=0861-1408|language = Bulgarian|accessdate=20 July 2013}}</ref>, and brought him the Best Actor award at the Golden Rose National film ceremony. Valdobrev was cast as Mitko, an expert of campaigns in the team of his American colleague Tim Knight ([[Ross McCall]]) in the 2007 [[USA]]-Bulgarian [[political thriller]] ''Trade Routes''. Taking the chance to play opposite the [[Italy|Italian]] prominent actor [[Sergio Castellitto]], Valdobrev decided to make a [[cameo appearance]] in the 2007 TV [[war drama]] ''L'Aviatore'', performing an [[Italian Jews|Italian Jew]], rescued by the [[Genoa|Genoese]] skilled-pilot Massimo Teglio (Castellitto). |
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In 2008 he collaborated with director and friend Stefan Komandarev in his highly acclaimed film ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'', performing the supporting character of the Bulgarian emigrant Stoyan. The film enjoyed a rich festival career, won many nominations and awards, was released theatrically in 72 countries worldwide and reached the [[List of submissions to the 82nd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film|Short List of The Academy Awards 2010 for a Foreign Language film]]. That same year he starred opposite the Bulgarian born [[France|French]] actress Natalia Dontcheva in ''The Glass River'', a [[mystery film]] by Stanimir Trifonov in which Valdobrev portrayed the obstinate priest Peter, a hermit who is experiencing a crisis of faith and trying to discover the secret of the [[Catharism|Cathar]]-[[Bogomilism|Bogomils]], whilst crossing paths with an unknown visitor to his village, the French [[symbologist]] Ellen Tibaud. In 2012 Valdobrev played the lead role in the [[Road movie|road comedy drama]] ''Migration of the Belted Bonito'' - a film by the Bulgarian independent and critically acclaimed film-maker Lyudmil Todorov. Valdobrev portrayed the poor and dreamy painter of [[Eastern Orthodox Church#Icons|Orthodox icons]] Simo, who, together with his close friend and neighbour, finds the most unorthodox way to make ends meet, with them both setting out on a comical journey from their modest village to the [[Black Sea]] shore. Critics praised the film as being "one of the finest comedies of the newest Bulgarian cinema".<ref>{{cite web|last=Jeleva|first=Pavlina|title=FNE at Golden Rose FF 2012: Competition: Migration of the Belted Bonito|url=http://www.filmneweurope.com/news/bulgaria/103989-fne-at-golden-rose-ff-2012-competition-migration-of-the-belted-bonito/menu-id-147|website=filmneweurope.com|date=11 October 2012|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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===Music=== |
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====Film and Theatre==== |
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When he was still in the Academy of Theatre and Film Arts Stefan Valdobrev was assigned to compose the music for almost every one of the performances he played in.<ref name="kontinent"/> This is how he gained skills directly in practice. By the end of his acting education he had already written the [[Theatre music|scores]] for 10 stage performances. His work garnered attention, providing him a long list of commissions to the professional scene.<ref name="light"/> He then enjoyed a long period of productive years, composing the music for more than 70 theatre plays and 20 feature and documentary films, receiving many plaudits, awards and nominations. |
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In 1999, Valdobrev was approached by director Stefan Komandarev to compose the music for his feature directorial debut, ''Dog's Home''. Valdobrev composed both the [[film score]] and the words and music for six songs, performed by some of the most prominent contemporary [[alternative rock]] bands. The released [[Soundtrack|Original Soundtrack]] was actually the first ever released Bulgarian movie soundtrack. It turned out to be a great success.<ref>{{Citation |last=Nenova|first=Nadezhda |title=Музиката изпревари нов български филм |trans_title= The music ahead of a new Bulgarian film |magazine=[[24 Chasa]] Newspaper|issue=28 March 2000|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> The pilot single ''Is it me, or is it not?'' performed by Stefan Valdobrev and featuring his friend and colleague Arabel Karajan became one of the film songs classics.<ref>{{cite web|title=Стефан Вълдобрев: Човек е по-голям от целия свят|trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev: A person is bigger than the whole world|language=Bulgarian|url=http://news.bgnes.com/view/1006537|website=bgnes.com|date=18 May 2012|accessdate=10 August 2013}}</ref> The film’s score earned Valdobrev the Golden Rose for a film debut at the 2000 National Film Awards ceremony. Two years later Komandarev and Valdobrev teamed up again in Komandarev’s second documentary film ''Alphabet of Hope''. Their collaboration resumed with the director’s 2009 hit ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'', based on the best-selling novel by the German author [[Ilija Trojanow]] and featuring [[Miki Manojlovic]] in the lead role. Both the film and the soundtrack were very successful.<ref name="public-republic"/> The film received numerous international awards and nominations, reaching the Oscars' Foreign Language Films' Shortlist. During the same period Valdobrev started to span his work on mainly European projects.<ref name="dnevnik">{{Citation |last=Stefanova |first=Maya|title= Стефан Вълдобрев, актьор: Младите сега са страхотни, нищо че външно не показват чувства|trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev, actor: The young now are great, even if they don't show their feelings|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.dnevnik.bg/razvlechenie/2012/02/26/1763103_stefan_vuldobrev_aktyor_mladite_sega_sa_strahotni/|newspaper=[[Dnevnik (Bulgaria)|Capital]]|issue=26 February 2012|accessdate=29 July 2013}}</ref> Since 2008 he has provided the music for fiction and documentaries like the [[Czech Republic|Czech]] films ''Kulicky'' (2008), ''Killing the Czech Way'' (2010) and ''Love in the Grave'' (2012), the [[Norway|Norwegian]] ''Can You Talk?'' (2011) and the [[Slovenia|Slovenian]] ''State of Shock'' (2011). In 2013 he started to create the score for the [[Bulgarian National Television]] series ''The Ungiven'', a somber drama that tells the story of the [[Bulgarian Jews#Bulgarian Jews during World War II|saving of 48,000 Bulgarian Jews in the years of the Second World War]]. |
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His musical style is difficult to catalogue. It varies greatly with the passage of time, play after play and film after film. Working in a wide field of genres, due to the requirements of the dramaturgy or the script, Valdobrev successfully switches from melancholy, delicate and deeply emotional compositions to Balkan gypsy and folk brass music, from classic orchestra scores to ethno-ambient tunes.<ref>{{Citation |title=Далече от личните теми с актьора Стефан Вълдобрев |trans_title= Distant from personal questions with the actor Stefan Valdobrev |magazine=Review Magazine|issue=Issue 3, 2005|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> He sometimes uses a light jazz idiom with a slight hint of the absurd and another time would use examples of circus-like dodecaphonic themes in a gently ironic way. Artistic movements like [[New Romanticism]], [[Postminimalism]] and [[World music]] are also influential on his work. What may be regarded as a mark of his output is the very occasional use of a memorable [[leitmotif]] in each of his compositions.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Приключенията на Илияна Бойчева - 9 May 2001 |trans_title=The Adventures of Iliyana Boycheva - 9 May 2012 |station=Radio Tangra |language = Bulgarian |date=9 May 2001 |accessdate=20 July 2013}}</ref> |
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Based mostly on his twelve years of [[classical piano]] and [[acoustic guitar]] lessons at school, Valdobrev followed the way to a collaboration and friendship with the most outstanding Bulgarian musicians, [[jazz]] and ethno bands, [[symphony orchestra]]s and [[Conducting|conductors]]. He has often stated that the lack of [[Music school|musical Academy training]] was of course a disadvantage, but this was compensated by the advantage of being an actor who composes for fellow-actors and senses their need on the stage or on the screen: "After all, if you had the right professors and they were good in a certain art (which was my case) they could teach you the rules of arts in a way to use them in another field of your muses. Because the rules of art are universal. For me there’s no difference if I play a character, compose music or write poetry for my songs, it’s all about telling stories, communication, sharing thoughts and emotions, about the ability to stretch and push the boundaries with visions of your own world".<ref name="dnevnik"/> |
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====Popular music==== |
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[[File:StefanValdobrev TheUsualSuspects.JPG|thumbnail|Valdobrev with his band The Usual Suspects, 2012]] |
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He began creating songs when he was 17. In the beginning it was more like putting music to his [[poetry]] and performing it with a [[guitar]]. At the age of 19 he made his first solo concert, which included 22 author songs.<ref name="musicspace">{{cite web |title=Музикална кариера на Стефан Вълдобрев |trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev's music career|language=Bulgarian|date=13 January 2013|url=http://www.musicspace.bg/pop/muzikalna_kariera_na_stefan_valdobrev|website=musicspace.bg|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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Parallel to this in 1988 he formed a band, named Alleya Alya – a blend of [[New wave music|new wave]], [[Psychedelic rock|psychedelic]] [[art rock]] with a hint of [[World music|ethno]]-elements. They made some gigs and some recording sessions, unfortunately all the tapes are missing. The group disbanded two years later when Valdobrev was accepted to study acting at the Theatre and Film Academy in Sofia.<ref name="musicspace"/> |
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Despite his heavy studies there, he never quit his tend for singing and was eager to join the burgeoning [[Sofia]] music scene. |
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In the early 1990s Bulgaria was powered with the spirit of freedom, revolution and exaltation – the perfect background for creating [[rock music]]. A lot of new names and bands sprang up, bringing fresh air and sweeping away the old music controlled and censored by the Communist authorities.<ref name="light"/> |
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His first record was a song called ''May'', a new wave-like, alternative middle tempo record that was premiered and aired on [[Bulgarian National Radio|National Radio]].<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Сутрешен блок Стартер - 20 февруари 2005 |trans_title=Morning show Starter - 20 February 2005 |station=BG Radio |language = Bulgarian |date=20 February 2005}}</ref> |
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In the next year, while being a member of the student's TV Show Coo-Coo, he garnered attention for a song called ''Cinema'', which had later been added in the company's debut album, and turned out to be Valdobrev’s first released song ever.<ref name="light"/> |
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In 1993 he started to work on his first [[solo album]]. Regarding his ambition in films and theatre he knew he couldn't afford himself to keep a regular band, so he decided to invite highly skilled and established rock and jazz musicians. A large number of performers took part in the album, but there were three of them that formed the core of the future long term partnership in touring and recording studio albums: Ivan Lechev – the [[Guitarist|guitar player]] of the [[Grammy Award|Grammy Awarded]] band [[FSB (band)|FSB]], [[Stoyan Yankoulov]] – a jazz, rock and ethno [[Drummer|drum player]], and Vesselin Vesselinov (Eko) – [[Bass guitar|bass-guitar]] and [[Double bass|double-bass]]. (Later on, in 1999 Miroslav Ivanov - a young and talented guitarist joined the band to stay till the present.)<ref name="3moreta">{{cite web |last=Turiyska |first=Geri|title=Стефан Вълдобрев на три морета |trans_title=Stefan Valdobrev on three seas|language=Bulgarian|date=22 March 2012|url=http://www.programata.bg/?p=35&l=1&c=1&id=511|website=programata.bg|accessdate=24 July 2013}}</ref> |
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The music style of the first records was a mixture between alternative rock, new wave and ethno jazz music. But there was an unexpected 'factor' that finally took the lead and cast its mighty shadow over the other songs: a musical joke which Valdobrev created together with friend and colleague Kamen Donev on their way back from a theatre tour in [[Vienna]]. Tired of the long and boring trip they took a bunch of keys for percussion and started [[rapping]] over a three chord [[Country music|country]]-like [[Gypsy style|gypsy tune]] ''I love you, my dear''. Back in Sofia they recorded the song in less than an hour, adding the characteristic voice of their colleague, the young actress Maya Bejanska.<ref name="monitor"/> Although this ditty was totally different from anything in the album, it was so catchy that the producers decided to release it as a [[Single (music)|single]]. In no time it became vastly popular and later gave its name to the album that sold over 130,000 copies<ref name="kontinent"/>. This success almost obliged Stefan, Kamen and Maya to repeat this direction. And in 1996 they joined for a single project – an album called ''Revolution''. It was based on [[Folk music|folklore]] and [[Romani music|gypsy songs]] and used many ethno instruments and elements in a rock context.<ref name="jenata">{{Citation |last=Kumanova|first=Roslava |title=Любимецът на тинейджърките е женен за ученическата си любов |trans_title= The teenagers' favourite is married to his school love |magazine=For the Woman Magazine|issue=Issue 6, June 2001|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> Meanwhile, in 1995 Valdobrev released a collection of his scores for theatre performances called ''A Night at the Theatre''. |
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1998 was a turning point for him. When his solo album titled: ''...to'' was released in October that same year, it topped the charts in the country, becoming a big critical and commercial success.<ref name="valdobrev-formula">{{Citation |last=Dremdzhiev |first=Veselin |title= Формулата "Вълдобрев"|trans_title=The "Valdobrev" formula|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.capital.bg/politika_i_ikonomika/obshtestvo/1999/04/24/250000_formulata_vuldobrev/|newspaper=[[Capital (newspaper)|Capital]]|issue=24 April 1999|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> The album spawned five number one hits: ''...to'', ''Heaven'', ''One'', ''Wolf'' and ''Yes'' and brought Valdobrev the [[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|annual music awards]] for Best Male Artist and Best Album. ''...to'' represented a significant change in musical and thematic direction for Stefan and the band. Sonically the record incorporated influences from the [[Britpop]] and [[alternative rock]] of the time. And even if there were some songs with an impact from [[Bulgarian folk music|Bulgarian ethno music]], the elements were very subtly dispersed into the prevailing guitar sound textures.<ref>{{Citation |title= Вълдобрев записва "слънчев албум"|trans_title=Valdobrev records a "sunny album"|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.capital.bg/politika_i_ikonomika/obshtestvo/1998/07/04/245415_vuldobrev_zapisva_slunchev_album/|newspaper=[[Capital (newspaper)|Capital]]|issue=4 July 1998|accessdate=10 August 2013}}</ref> A good example was the song ''One'', featuring the [[Goran Bregovic]] Orchestra's folk singer Snejka Borisova.<ref name="valdobrev-formula"/> Until today, Valdobrev’s album ''...to''' is considered by many to be among the most influential and famous [[Pop music|pop albums]] in the [[Music of Bulgaria#Popular music|contemporary music scene in Bulgaria]].<ref name="musicspace"/> |
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In the next several years Stefan Valdobrev's career reached its zenith. He has toured extensively for each of his albums and has released a total of 12 number one BG Charts singles. He further incorporated diverse styles into his music. Together with Arabel Karajan he performed the [[Trip hop|trip hop]] [[ballad]] ''Is it me, or is it not?'' for the 1999 film ''Dog's Home''. The song became a major hit and that same year Valdobrev repeated his Best Male artist annual music award. Later he became the first artist to sign a contract with [[Universal Music Group|Universal Music]] Bulgaria. |
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In 2000 he made a dramatic shift and gradually ventured into more unconventional and more radio-unfriendly works. He focused on experimentation, [[guitar effects]], [[Tape loop|tape looping]], [[Music sequencing|rhythm sequencing]] and [[Sampler (musical instrument)|sampling]] while developing his sixth studio album ''Propaganda, Chromosomes, Silicon''.<ref name="jenata"/> He sought a harder-hitting sound and headed a direction which was more into [[industrial music]] and [[alternative rock]]. Thematically it was a more personal and introspective record. Valdobrev’s lyrics have incorporated a variety of social, philosophical and political influences and appealed mainly to a vanishing counterculture in burgeoning [[Hyperconsumerism|hyper-consumerism]].<ref>{{Citation |title=Стефан Вълдобрев: Скоростта на живота ни е голяма |trans_title= Stefan Valdobrev: The speed in our life is very high |magazine=Teenager Love Magazine|issue=Issue 21, 24 May 2001|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> |
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This album was unexpectedly darker and yielded decent reviews, but no major hits.<ref>{{Citation |title=Монокъл: Стефан Вълдобрев |trans_title=Monocle: Stefan Valdobrev|language=Bulgarian|url=http://www.capital.bg/vestnikut/kapitel/2001/06/09/209331_monokul/|newspaper=[[Capital (newspaper)|CapitEl]]|issue=9 June 2001|accessdate=25 July 2013}}</ref> |
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In 2001 Stefan Valdobrev decided to concentrate mainly on his acting career and took a long break from the music scene. For almost a decade he very sporadically released a few singles that became instant hits<ref name="musicspace"/> but it was, as he stated, "just to keep me in form".<ref name="3moreta"/> In 2006 he recorded the blue romantic song ''Fireworks'', in 2009 the [[reggae]]-[[Swing music|swing]] chart-topper ''The Riverbank Most Green'', introducing the young future [[Soul music|soul]] star Ruth Koleva. |
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During that period Valdobrev briefly resumed touring for a series of sold-out concerts, presenting mainly his theatre and film music and working with an orchestra of fifteen jazz, ethno and classical musicians. In 2007 he received a nomination for Best Male Artist of the decade by the [[MM (television)|National Music Television MM]]. After being away from the rock stage for nearly ten years, in 2012 Stefan Valdobrev decided to rejoin his old band "The Usual Suspects". They recorded two brand new songs: ''Helicopter'' and ''Snow on the Sahara'' and started a series of 25 club gigs and theatre hall shows.<ref name="tour2012"/> |
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===Directing=== |
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[[File:StefanValdobrev MyMateManchesterUnited.jpg|thumbnail|Filming ''My Mate Manchester United'', 2008]] |
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In 2006-2007 Valdobrev spent two productive years specializing in [[Film director|film directing]] at the [[Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague|Academy of Performing Arts in Prague]] (FAMU). There he made a few [[short film]]s, attended a [[Milos Forman]] workshop and visited the lectures of [[Otakar Vavra]] and Jaromir Sofr. His graduate short film ''Hide'' in 2007, marked the beginning of a professional collaboration and friendship with the acclaimed [[Mexico|Mexican]] [[director of photography]] Antonio Riestra.<ref name="monitor"/> |
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Back in Sofia he started working on a [[documentary film]] project named ''My Mate Manchester United'' - the story of a 48-year-old [[football fan]] who changed his name to [[Manchester United]]. Valdobrev, together with the director of photography Krum Rodriguez decided to "follow the quest of this man's awkward dream to be named after his favorite football club and by getting close to the life of a Bulgarian builder and his memorable mates to create a moving social portrait of [[History of Bulgaria since 1989|contemporary Bulgaria]] with its bewildered and confused people, so disappointed by the life in the country that they migrate to their own substitute reality. The journey started in [[Svishtov]], a small town on the bank of the [[Danube|Danube river]], told the story of the protagonist’s struggle with the authorities, lead all the way to [[Old Trafford|Old Trafford Stadium]], where he met his idol, the [[Manchester United]] top-striker [[Dimitar Berbatov]], and ended up back home, raising questions about identity, about who we are and who we want to be".<ref>{{cite web|title=My Mate Manchester United - Synopsis|url=http://acrossworks.com/mymatemanchesterunited/synopsis.html|website=My Mate Manchester United - Official Website|accessdate=24 July 2013}}</ref> |
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Initially launched by Stanimir Trifonov and Vreme Film Studio, the project went through some difficulties, before being successfully finalized by producer Dragomir Keranov with the support of Desislav Dionisiev and Alexander Vrabevski.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Денят започва с култура - 4 май 2012 |trans_title=The day starts with culture - 4 May 2012 |url=http://bnt.bg/bg/productions/121/edition/22634/denjat_zapochva_s_kultura_4_maj_2012 |network=[[Bulgarian National Television|BNT]] |station=[[BNT 1]] |language = Bulgarian |date=4 May 2012 |accessdate=24 July 2013}}</ref> |
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The film was premiered on 10 March 2011 at the [[Sofia International Film Festival]] and has since then enjoyed a rich festival career, winning two international awards and being presented in the competition or the official selection of 21 major world film festivals: [[International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam|IDFA Amsterdam]], [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival|HotDocs Toronto]], [[ZagrebDox]], [[Sarajevo Film Festival|Sarajevo]] and [[Warsaw International Film Festival|Warsaw]] among them.<ref name="mmmu"/> |
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Recently Valdobrev has been developing some [[feature film]] projects. |
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<ref name="3moreta"/> |
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== Personal life == |
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In 1996 Valdobrev married his high school love Jana. "We have many shared memories as childhood sweethearts in Stara Zagora. We were 10 when we first met. Our parents were coming back from an excursion, we got off the bus at the same station and headed in different directions. After a few meters I stopped and turned to look back. She had stopped too and was looking at me. We stood like that for a few moments, staring at each other, our parents holding our hands. Growing up with someone's memories and making that journey through adulthood together is probably what makes a relationship strong. No one knows me better than Jana."<ref name="biograph">{{Citation |last=Bachurova |first=Antoaneta |title=Стефан Вълдобрев - Аз ли съм или не съм |trans_title= Stefan Valdobrev - Is it me, or is it not |magazine=Biograph Magazine|issue=Issue 9, May 2012|issn=1314-4413|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> In 1998 Jana gave birth to their daughter Maria. Three weeks after that Valdobrev had a terrible car accident that almost cost him his life and kept him immovable and out of action for a year. For that reason he couldn’t join [[Regis Wargnier]]’s [[72nd Academy Awards|Oscar-nominated]] film production ''[[East/West]]'', for which he'd been cast to play opposite [[Catherine Deneuve]] and [[Sandrine Bonnaire]].<ref>{{Citation |last=Chalakova|first=Vera|title=Вълдобрев ще снима в София с Катрин Деньов |trans_title= Valdobrev will make a film with Catherine Deneuve in Sofia |magazine=[[Dneven Trud|Trud Newspaper]]|issue=20 August 1998|language = Bulgarian}}</ref> |
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== Social life == |
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The year of 1989, when Valdobrev attended the National Academy of Theatre and Film Arts, was crucial for the whole of Eastern Europe. The [[People's Republic of Bulgaria#Fall of the Communist regime|fall of the Communist regime in Bulgaria]] wasn't enough for the people and they demanded additional democratic reforms. Valdobrev became part of the strong student movement raised to power in the next few years of [[mass demonstration]]s, [[Riot|street riots]], [[Barricade|barricade protests]] and sieges of parliament.<ref name="light"/> In 1990 the students caused a National [[Strike action|strike]] by occupying all the Universities for more than a month. As a result the recently elected Communist President [[Petar Mladenov]] resigned. On the next year a new two-month-long occupation strike inflamed by the Art Academy students led to the resignation of the Communist Prime minister [[Andrey Lukanov]]. On 31 December 2006 Valdobrev hosted Bulgaria’s celebration concert for [[Accession of Bulgaria to the European Union|joining the EU]]. The event was held in [[Prince Alexander of Battenberg Square|Battenberg square]] in Sofia, and was attended by 80,000 people. |
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== Filmography == |
== Filmography == |
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===Actor=== |
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*2010 - ''The Glass River'', directed by [[Stanimir Trifonov]] |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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*2008 - ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'', directed by [[Stephan Komandarev]] |
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|- |
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*2008 - ''Escape to Freedom - the Aviator'', directed by [[Carlo Carlei]] |
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! Year !! Title !! Role !! Notes |
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*2007 - ''Trade Routes'', directed by [[Jim Loftus]] |
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|- |
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*2004 - ''Burning Out'', directed by [[Stanimir Trifonov]] |
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| 1997 || ''Compagnons Secrets'' || Schwartz || TV film |
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*2003 - ''Meeting'', directed by [[Ivan Traykov]] |
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|- |
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*2002 - ''Warming Up Yesterday's Lunch'', directed by [[Kostadin Bonev]] |
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| 1999 || ''[[Bloodsport 4: The Dark Kumite]]'' || Gills || Fiction film |
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|- |
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*1996 - ''The Mysterious Companion'', directed by [[Pierre Beuchot]] |
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| 2002 || ''[[Warming Up Yesterday's Lunch]]'' || Popadamchev || Fiction film |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Encounter'' || The Journalist || TV film |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Pas de Trois'' || The Lover || Short film |
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|- |
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| 2004 || ''Burning Out'' || Enriko Corsa || Fiction film<br/>Golden Rose Film Festival Award for Best Actor |
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|- |
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| 2007 || ''Trade Routes'' || Mitko || Fiction film<br/>Nominated - [[Method Fest Independent Film Festival|Method Fest Independent Film Festival, Los Angeles]] for Best Ensemble Cast |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''Escape To Freedom – L'aviatore'' || Fugitive || TV film |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'' || Stoyan || Fiction film<br/>[[List of submissions to the 82nd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film|Academy Awards shortlist for Best Foreign Language Film]] |
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|- |
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| 2010 || ''Kill Me Again'' || The Husband || Short film |
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|- |
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| 2010 || ''The Glass River'' || Father Peter || Fiction film |
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|- |
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| 2012 || ''Migration of the Belted Bonito'' || Simo || Fiction film<br/>Nominated – Bulgarian Film Academy Award for Best Film |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''The Ungiven'' || Buko Levy || TV series |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''Sinking of Sozopol'' || || Fiction film<br/>pre-production |
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|} |
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===Composer=== |
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== Notable theatre appearances == |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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*2009 - Philip in [[Pleasantlyscary]] by [[Iana Borisova]] |
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|- |
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*2007 - Dodo in [[Little Play for a Children Room]] by [[Iana Borisova]] |
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! Year !! Title !! Notes |
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*2005 - Ivan Karamazov in ''[[The Brothers Karamazov]]'' by [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]] |
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|- |
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*2004 - Clown, Poet, Clerk in ''Fantasmagorii'' by [[Stefan Moskov]] |
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| 1994 || ''Izmislici-Premislici'' || TV series |
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*2002 - Orpheus in ''[[Eurydice (Anouilh play)|Eurydice]]'' by [[Jean Anouilh]] |
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|- |
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*2002 - The lover in ''Finale Grande'' by [[Kamen Donev]] |
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| 1996 || ''Sindbad'' || Fiction film |
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*2001 - Draftsman, Servant, Hamlet, Silvio, Megre in ''Commedia del Servitore'' by [[Stefan Moskov]] |
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|- |
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*1999 - Eugene O'Neal in ''And Give Us the Shadows'' by [[Lars Norén]] |
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| 1996 || ''The Green Hedgehog''||TV film |
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*1998 - Don Juan in ''Juan In Love'' by [[Alexander Pushkin]] |
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|- |
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*1997 - Styopa Lihodeev, Rimski, Daniel Harms in ''[[The Master and Margarita]]'' by [[Mikhail Bulgakov]] |
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| 1997 || ''The Nest'' || TV film |
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*1996 - Hugh Oatcake in ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' by [[William Shakespeare]] |
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|- |
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*1995 - Iliyko in ''Learning to Fly'' by [[Yordan Radichkov]] |
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| 1997 || ''Good Life'' || Fiction film |
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*1993 - Silyan in ''Black Hole'' by [[Goran Stefanovski]] |
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|- |
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*1993 - Feste The Clown in ''[[Twelfth Night]]'' by [[William Shakespeare]] |
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| 2000 || ''Dog's Home'' || Fiction film<br/>Golden Rose Film Festival Award for Debut |
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*1992 - Willer in ''The City of Angels'' by [[Sam Shepard]] |
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|- |
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*1991 - Leonce in ''Leonce and Lena'' by [[Georg Buechner]] |
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| 2001 || ''The Straw Orphan'' ||TV film |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Alphabet of Hope'' ||Documentary |
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| 2003 || ''Camera, Curtain'' ||TV series |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Short Stories'' || Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2004 || ''The House'' ||TV film |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''Kulicky'' || Fiction film |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''Ogan I Voda'' ||TV film |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'' || Fiction film |
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|- |
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| 2010 || ''I Dream of Mummers'' || Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2010 || ''Killing In the Czech Way'' || Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''My Mate Manchester United'' ||Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''Can You Talk?'' || Short film |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''State of Shock'' || Fiction film |
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|- |
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| 2012 || ''Love in the Grave'' || Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''Otazky pana Lasky'' || Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''The Ungiven'' || TV series |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''The Judgement'' || Fiction film |
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|} |
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== |
===Director=== |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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*2005 - Ikarus for original music for ''Figures in Love Flight'' |
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|- |
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*2004 - Golden rose for best male performance in ''Burning Out'' |
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! Year !! Title !! Notes |
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*2000 - Golden rose for film debut for the ''Dogs' Home'' soundtrack |
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|- |
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*1999 - MM Television Music Award - male performer of the year |
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| 2002 || ''Chromosomes'' ||Music video |
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*1998 - MM Television Music Award - best album (''...to'') |
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|- |
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*1993 - shared A'Askeer for debut performance for ''Black Hole'' |
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| 2006 || ''Hana'' ||Short film |
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|- |
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| 2007 || ''Hide'' ||Short film |
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|- |
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| 2009 || ''100 years of Todor Kolev'' ||TV film |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''My Mate Manchester United'' ||Documentary<br/>Almaty International Film Festival Special Award<br/>[[Listapad|Minsk Listapad Film Festival]] Best Film-Portrait Award<br/>Nominated - [[ZagrebDox]] for Best Regional Documentary<br/>Nominated - [[Warsaw International Film Festival]] for Best Documentary |
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|- |
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| 2012 || ''Helicopter'' ||Music video |
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|} |
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== Theatre == |
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===Actor=== |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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|- |
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! Year !! Title !! Theatre !! Notes |
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|- |
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| 1992 || ''[[Angel City (play)|Angel City]]'' || [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|NATFIZ]] || |
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|- |
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| 1993 || ''[[Twelfth Night]]'' || Youth Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 1993 || ''Black Hole'' || [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|NATFIZ]] || A'Askeer Award for Ensemble Cast Debut |
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|- |
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| 1994 || ''[[Agamemnon (play)|Agamemnon]]'' || [[National Palace of Culture]] || |
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|- |
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| 1994 || ''[[Woyzeck]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1995 || ''Learning To Fly'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1997 || ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1997 || ''[[The Master and Margarita]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1998 || ''[[The Stone Guest (play)|Juan in Love]]'' || Satirical Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 1999 || ''And Give Us the Shadows'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2000 || ''[[suburbia (play)|Suburbia]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2001 || ''[[La Ronde (play)|La Ronde]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2001 || ''Commedia del Servitore'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2002 || ''[[Eurydice (Anouilh play)|Eurydice]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2002 || ''Finale Grande'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Meteor'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2004 || ''Fantasmagorii'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2005 || ''[[The Brothers Karamazov]]'' || Dramatic Theatre Plovdiv || |
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|- |
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| 2007 || ''Small Play for a Children's Room'' || Theatre 199 || |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''[[Hamletmachine]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre<br/>Theater Rampe Stuttgart<br/>Theatre National du Luxembourg || |
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|- |
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| 2009 || ''Pleasantlyscary'' || Theatre 199 ||A'Askeer Award for Best Performance |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''[[Blue/Orange]]'' || Theatre 199 || |
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|- |
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| 2013 || ''People from Oz'' || Theatre 199 || |
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|} |
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===Composer=== |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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|- |
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! Year !! Title !! Theatre !! Notes |
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|- |
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| 1992 || ''[[Angel City (play)|Angel City]]'' || [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|NATFIZ]] || |
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|- |
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| 1992 || ''Chekhov - review'' || Youth Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 1993 || ''[[Twelfth Night]]'' || Youth Theatre Sofia ||Nominated - A'Askeer Award for Best Original Music |
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|- |
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| 1993 || ''Black Hole'' || [[Krastyo Sarafov National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts|NATFIZ]] || |
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|- |
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| 1994 || ''The Fall of Ikarus'' || SFUMATO || |
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|- |
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| 1994 || ''Persifedron'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre|| |
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|- |
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| 1995 || ''[[Lorenzaccio]]'' || National Theatre Bitola|| |
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|- |
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| 1996 || ''Long Play'' || Satirical Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 1997 || ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1998 || ''[[The Stone Guest (play)|Juan in Love]]'' || Satirical Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 1998 || ''[[Henry IV, Part 1|Henry IV]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1999 || ''An Give Us the Shadows'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 1999 || ''The Powder Keg'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2000 || ''[[Troilus and Cressida]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2000 || ''The Mediterraneans'' || Satirical Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 2000 || ''The Heroins'' || [[Stoyan Bachvarov Dramatic Theatre|Dramatic Theatre Varna]] || |
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|- |
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| 2002 || ''Finale Grande'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''The Powder Keg'' || Moscow Dramatic Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''[[The Phoney Civilization]]'' || Dramatic-puppet Theatre Shumen || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Meteor'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Night before the Forest'' || Sofia Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''The Fourth Sister'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2005 || ''Day-off'' || [[Ivan Vazov National Theatre]] || |
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|- |
|||
| 2005 || ''Figures in a Love Flight'' || SFUMATO ||Ikarus Theatre Award for Best Original Music |
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|- |
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| 2005 || ''Out of Control'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2005 || ''January'' || Youth Theatre Sofia || |
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|- |
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| 2006 || ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire (play)|A Streetcar Named Desire]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
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|- |
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| 2006 || ''Zmei'' || Dramatic-puppet Theatre Shumen || |
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|- |
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| 2006 || ''[[The Comedy of Errors]]'' || Bulgarian Army Theatre || |
|||
|- |
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| 2006 || ''The Cabinet Minister's Wife'' || Divadlo Disk || |
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|- |
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| 2007 || ''[[The Imaginary Invalid]]'' || Klicperovo divadlo || |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''The Cabinet Minister's Wife'' || Mestske divadlo Most || |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' || National Theatre Bitola || |
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|- |
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| 2011 || ''Working Hours'' || [[Ivan Vazov National Theatre]] || |
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|} |
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== Discography == |
|||
===Albums=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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|- |
|||
! Year !! Title !! Notes |
|||
|- |
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| 1994 || ''I love you, my dear'' || |
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|- |
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| 1995 || ''A Night at the Theatre'' || |
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|- |
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| 1996 || ''Revolution'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1998 || ''…to'' ||[[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|MM Music Award]] for Best Album<br/>[[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|MM Music Award]] for Best Male Performer 1998<br/>[[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|MM Music Award]] for Best Male Performer 1999 |
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|- |
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| 2000 || ''Dog's Home'' ||Soundtrack |
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|- |
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| 2001 || ''Propaganda, Chromosomes, Silicon'' ||Nominated - BG Radio Music Awards for Best Male Performer<br/>Nominated - [[MM (television)#MM Television Annual Music Awards|MM Music Awards]] for Best Rock/Alternative Album |
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|- |
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| 2003 || ''Opus Theatrale'' || |
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|- |
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| 2006 || ''Opus Theatrale 2'' || |
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|- |
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| 2008 || ''[[The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner]]'' ||Soundtrack |
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|} |
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===Singles=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year !! Title !! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1997 || ''One & Heaven'' || |
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|- |
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| 2006 || ''Fireworks'' || |
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|- |
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| 2010 || ''The Riverbank Most Green'' <small>(feat. Ruth Koleva)</small> || |
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|- |
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| 2012 || ''Helicopter'' || |
|||
|} |
|||
===Tours=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year !! Title !! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1996 || Revolution Tour || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1999 || …to Tour || |
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|- |
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| 2000 || Mason's Tour || |
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|- |
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| 2001 || Propaganda Tour || |
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|- |
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| 2012 || Stefan Valdobrev and The Usual Suspects || |
|||
|} |
|||
===Music Videos and Films=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year !! Title !! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1994 || ''I Love you, My Dear'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1994 || ''Alisa Reggae'' || |
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|- |
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| 1995 || ''Job'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1996 || ''Ivana'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1997 || ''Heaven'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1998 || ''One'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 1998 || ''…to'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1999 || ''Wolf'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1999 || ''Yes'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1999 || ''Tummy of a Penguin'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2000 || ''Is it me, or is it not?'' <small>(feat. Arabel Karajan)</small>|| |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2001 || ''Propaganda'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2001 || ''Silicon'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 2002 || ''Exploadiram'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2002 || ''Chromosomes'' || |
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|- |
|||
| 2006 || ''Fireworks'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2009 || ''Backgammon Dice'' || |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2012 || ''Helicopter'' || |
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|} |
|||
==References== |
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{{reflist|colwidth=25em}} |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. --> |
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| NAME =Valdobrev, Stefan |
| NAME = Valdobrev, Stefan |
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| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Вълдобрев, Стефан (Bulgarian) |
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| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Bulgarian actor |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Bulgarian actor, composer, singer-songwriter and filmmaker |
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| DATE OF BIRTH = |
| DATE OF BIRTH = 20 May 1970 |
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| PLACE OF BIRTH = |
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Stara Zagora, Bulgaria |
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| DATE OF DEATH = |
| DATE OF DEATH = |
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| PLACE OF DEATH = |
| PLACE OF DEATH = |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Valdobrev, Stefan}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Valdobrev, Stefan}} |
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[[Category:1970 births]] |
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[[Category:People from Stara Zagora]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian film actors]] |
[[Category:Bulgarian film actors]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian stage actors]] |
[[Category:Bulgarian stage actors]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian composers]] |
[[Category:Bulgarian composers]] |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:People from Stara Zagora]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian pop singers]] |
[[Category:Bulgarian pop singers]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian male singers]] |
[[Category:Bulgarian male singers]] |
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[[Category:Bulgarian film directors]] |
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{{Bulgaria-actor-stub}} |
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{{Bulgaria-musician-stub}} |
Revision as of 19:34, 15 August 2013
Stefan Valdobrev | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation(s) | Actor, composer, musician, filmmaker |
Years active | 1991–present |
Stefan Valdobrev (Template:Lang-bg) (born May 20, 1970) is a Bulgarian actor, film/theatre composer, singer-songwriter and filmmaker. He received classical training at the National Academy of Theatre and Film Arts in Sofia.
Valdobrev rose to prominence in the early 1990s, mainly with his hit songs, which made him extremely popular and gained him idol status on the Bulgarian music scene[1][2], twice being awarded as best male artist at the National Music Television ceremonies. Despite that he never quit his acting career and took part in numerous performances which have spanned a wide variety of genres from classical to contemporary drama, and from popular comedies to alternative, non-commercial projects, all staged by the most prominent Bulgarian directors on the most significant theatre stages. At that time Valdobrev gradually entered the world of film and theatre music and since 1992 has gone on to enjoy composing the original scores for more than 70 stage performances and 20 feature and documentary movies, winning many plaudits and awards for his work.[3] In 2000 he received the Golden Rose film award for debut for the Dog's Home original movie soundtrack featuring Arabel Karajan. In 2008 he composed the music for Stefan Komandarev's highly acclaimed film The World is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner, a Bulgarian-German co-production with Miki Manojlovic in the lead role, which won a considerable number of international awards and reached the Short List of The Academy Awards 2010 for Foreign Language film.
Although Valdobrev continued performing in theatre (Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov, Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita, Muller's Hamletmachine, Anouilh's Eurydice), he gradually moved away from this area, and also from the music stage, to become more established as a film actor. In 2004 he got his break in Burning out, for which he received the Golden Rose for Best Male performance at the National Film Awards.
In 2006-2007 Valdobrev completed a film directing specialization at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). After graduating from there he directed a few short films, TV programs and music videos. He made his director's film debut in 2010 with the documentary comedy drama My Mate Manchester United. Provided with the cameo appearance of the Bulgarian football superstar Dimitar Berbatov, the film won two international awards and was presented in the competition of the official selection of 21 major world film festivals: IDFA Amsterdam, HotDocs Toronto, ZagrebDox, Sarajevo and Warsaw among them.[4]
After being away from the rock stage for almost a decade in 2012 Stefan Valdobrev decided to rejoin his old band "The Usual Suspects" and to start recording songs and performing live in concerts again.[5]
Early life
Stefan Valdobrev was born in Stara Zagora, Bulgaria, the son of Maria Valdobreva (nee Atanassova) and Kostadin Valdobrev, both civil engineers. His mother was descended from Macedonian refugees who settled in the Rhodope Mountains, and his paternal ancestors come from midst of the country, where the Thracian valley meets with the Central Balkan region. Valdobrev has a sister, Iva (born 1965).[6]
Not that he was a bad student, but he found early on that he would rather immerse himself in arts or football than attend to his studies. According to his own account: "The good old socialist block of flats I lived in was in the middle of a magical Bermuda triangle in which I got lost – the stadium, the cinema and the circus. I spent all my time there – playing with a ball, wandering with my friends, sneaking into the ballerinas' trailers, acting scenes from films I'd just watched, so I often forgot to go home until late at night. The school was something in between, but never became a part of this triangle".[7]
He played the piano for quite a long time, but then decided to quit and take up the guitar. He started to take an interest in the theatre and joined a local amateur company at the town's chitalishte – a common Bulgarian Art House, where a variety of different arts could be trained and practiced. Very soon it became like a home to him: rehearsing plays on the stage, studying the guitar in the basement, reading and writing poetry in the attic, writing music for his own lyrics. It was not long before he made his acting debut as the King in Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost.[6] At the age of 18 he established himself as a songwriter, performing his first solo concert. Additionally he formed a rock band called "Alleya Alya" which made several studio recording sessions, all of them now missing.[8]
Meanwhile Valdobrev attended the High School for Foreign Languages in Stara Zagora. For a Communist country behind the Iron Curtain which Bulgaria was at that time, this school was like a breath of fresh air – with a discipline not so strict and teachers being lenient and having a personal approach to each of the students. They soon noticed Valdobrev's wandering mind and lack of concentration in class and created a system which tried to help him study the English language better. They gave him constant tasks to listen to and write down lyrics of new songs, perform them with his guitar in the lessons and translate the words for his classmates. These everyday concerts were the real productive education for him and later, when he was traveling over the Black Sea resorts and Germany as a street musician, he already had a set-list of 300 prepared and well-rehearsed world hit songs of any genre.[9]
In 1989 Valdobrev was accepted in Sofia University to study English philology[10], but soon quit and attended the National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts to become part of what was later called: "the most successful acting class of the two highly praised Bulgarian professors – Krikor Azaryan and Todor Kolev".[11] Together with his fellow colleague actors and directors Galin Stoev, Marius Kurkinski, Kamen Donev, Stefka Yanorova, Koyna Ruseva, Kasiel Noah Asher, Lilia Maraviglia they formed the core of a New Wave in Bulgarian theatre.[1]
Career
Acting
Theatre
Even before their graduation, Valdobrev and his friends were very active in acting or staging in professional theatres like the Academy Drama Theatre or the Youth Theatre. Such kick-start performances as Sam Shepard's Angel City, Georg Buchner's Leonce and Lena, William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, Aeschylus' Agamemnon, Goran Stefanovski's Black Hole, Chekhov Revue and others appeared between 1991 and 1993. In June, 1993 Valdobrev became a member of the troupe of the National Theatre, but some time later he had to start serving his 12 months' mandatory military service, so eventually moved to the Bulgarian Army Theatre (actually, a civil repertory theatre sponsored by the Ministry of Defense, with a leading status in the cultural life). He spent there 10 years, taking part in many significant performances like Georg Buchner's Woyzeck, Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, Eric Bogosian's Suburbia and Jean Anouilh's Eurydice. In 1997 the independent theatre company La Strada, formed by the popular director Tedi Moskov produced three major hit performances in collaboration with the Bulgarian Army Theatre: The Master and Margarita (presented at the official selection of the Avignon Theatre Festival), Commedia del Servitore (a co-production with the Avignon Theatre Festival) and Fantasmagorii. As one of the cast Valdobrev spent the next five years touring and presenting the plays at the most prestigious European theatre festivals.[12]
2007 marked a significant turning point in his career. After an absence from the theatre stage for a few years, Valdobrev returned as a freelance actor for a beneficial collaboration with the Paris-based Comedie-Francaise Bulgarian director Galin Stoev, who started occasionally to return home only to stage the texts of the prominent contemporary young dramatist Yana Borisova. Small Play for a Children’s Room (2008), Pleasantlyscary (2010) and People from Oz (2013) became remarkable events in the theatre life and were many times awarded for best performance, best play, or best director.[13]
Film
In the early 1990s Valdobrev made quite a few appearances on Bulgarian National Television, mainly as a participant in a students' show with a cult status named "Coo-Coo". Despite this success he subsequently decided to turn to film for more challenging roles. While struggling to establish himself in cinema, he took small parts in international co-production B movies. His onscreen career began in 2000 with the supporting role of the tricky Communist activist Popadamchev in the Bulgarian-Macedonian production Warming Up Yesterday's Lunch. The TV comedy Encounter (2003) gave him his first leading role as a clumsy journalist who falls in love with his cousin's girlfriend. 2004 was the year of his big movie break when he took on the lead in Burning Out, a love drama by director Stanimir Trifonov, set in the immediate post World War II period. Valdobrev’s performance of the romantic Italian doctor Enrico Corsa, separated from his Bulgarian wife and sent to a Communist prison camp, from which he finally escapes, has been described as fine, deep and centered [14], and brought him the Best Actor award at the Golden Rose National film ceremony. Valdobrev was cast as Mitko, an expert of campaigns in the team of his American colleague Tim Knight (Ross McCall) in the 2007 USA-Bulgarian political thriller Trade Routes. Taking the chance to play opposite the Italian prominent actor Sergio Castellitto, Valdobrev decided to make a cameo appearance in the 2007 TV war drama L'Aviatore, performing an Italian Jew, rescued by the Genoese skilled-pilot Massimo Teglio (Castellitto).
In 2008 he collaborated with director and friend Stefan Komandarev in his highly acclaimed film The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner, performing the supporting character of the Bulgarian emigrant Stoyan. The film enjoyed a rich festival career, won many nominations and awards, was released theatrically in 72 countries worldwide and reached the Short List of The Academy Awards 2010 for a Foreign Language film. That same year he starred opposite the Bulgarian born French actress Natalia Dontcheva in The Glass River, a mystery film by Stanimir Trifonov in which Valdobrev portrayed the obstinate priest Peter, a hermit who is experiencing a crisis of faith and trying to discover the secret of the Cathar-Bogomils, whilst crossing paths with an unknown visitor to his village, the French symbologist Ellen Tibaud. In 2012 Valdobrev played the lead role in the road comedy drama Migration of the Belted Bonito - a film by the Bulgarian independent and critically acclaimed film-maker Lyudmil Todorov. Valdobrev portrayed the poor and dreamy painter of Orthodox icons Simo, who, together with his close friend and neighbour, finds the most unorthodox way to make ends meet, with them both setting out on a comical journey from their modest village to the Black Sea shore. Critics praised the film as being "one of the finest comedies of the newest Bulgarian cinema".[15]
Music
Film and Theatre
When he was still in the Academy of Theatre and Film Arts Stefan Valdobrev was assigned to compose the music for almost every one of the performances he played in.[10] This is how he gained skills directly in practice. By the end of his acting education he had already written the scores for 10 stage performances. His work garnered attention, providing him a long list of commissions to the professional scene.[3] He then enjoyed a long period of productive years, composing the music for more than 70 theatre plays and 20 feature and documentary films, receiving many plaudits, awards and nominations.
In 1999, Valdobrev was approached by director Stefan Komandarev to compose the music for his feature directorial debut, Dog's Home. Valdobrev composed both the film score and the words and music for six songs, performed by some of the most prominent contemporary alternative rock bands. The released Original Soundtrack was actually the first ever released Bulgarian movie soundtrack. It turned out to be a great success.[16] The pilot single Is it me, or is it not? performed by Stefan Valdobrev and featuring his friend and colleague Arabel Karajan became one of the film songs classics.[17] The film’s score earned Valdobrev the Golden Rose for a film debut at the 2000 National Film Awards ceremony. Two years later Komandarev and Valdobrev teamed up again in Komandarev’s second documentary film Alphabet of Hope. Their collaboration resumed with the director’s 2009 hit The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner, based on the best-selling novel by the German author Ilija Trojanow and featuring Miki Manojlovic in the lead role. Both the film and the soundtrack were very successful.[12] The film received numerous international awards and nominations, reaching the Oscars' Foreign Language Films' Shortlist. During the same period Valdobrev started to span his work on mainly European projects.[18] Since 2008 he has provided the music for fiction and documentaries like the Czech films Kulicky (2008), Killing the Czech Way (2010) and Love in the Grave (2012), the Norwegian Can You Talk? (2011) and the Slovenian State of Shock (2011). In 2013 he started to create the score for the Bulgarian National Television series The Ungiven, a somber drama that tells the story of the saving of 48,000 Bulgarian Jews in the years of the Second World War.
His musical style is difficult to catalogue. It varies greatly with the passage of time, play after play and film after film. Working in a wide field of genres, due to the requirements of the dramaturgy or the script, Valdobrev successfully switches from melancholy, delicate and deeply emotional compositions to Balkan gypsy and folk brass music, from classic orchestra scores to ethno-ambient tunes.[19] He sometimes uses a light jazz idiom with a slight hint of the absurd and another time would use examples of circus-like dodecaphonic themes in a gently ironic way. Artistic movements like New Romanticism, Postminimalism and World music are also influential on his work. What may be regarded as a mark of his output is the very occasional use of a memorable leitmotif in each of his compositions.[20]
Based mostly on his twelve years of classical piano and acoustic guitar lessons at school, Valdobrev followed the way to a collaboration and friendship with the most outstanding Bulgarian musicians, jazz and ethno bands, symphony orchestras and conductors. He has often stated that the lack of musical Academy training was of course a disadvantage, but this was compensated by the advantage of being an actor who composes for fellow-actors and senses their need on the stage or on the screen: "After all, if you had the right professors and they were good in a certain art (which was my case) they could teach you the rules of arts in a way to use them in another field of your muses. Because the rules of art are universal. For me there’s no difference if I play a character, compose music or write poetry for my songs, it’s all about telling stories, communication, sharing thoughts and emotions, about the ability to stretch and push the boundaries with visions of your own world".[18]
Popular music
He began creating songs when he was 17. In the beginning it was more like putting music to his poetry and performing it with a guitar. At the age of 19 he made his first solo concert, which included 22 author songs.[21]
Parallel to this in 1988 he formed a band, named Alleya Alya – a blend of new wave, psychedelic art rock with a hint of ethno-elements. They made some gigs and some recording sessions, unfortunately all the tapes are missing. The group disbanded two years later when Valdobrev was accepted to study acting at the Theatre and Film Academy in Sofia.[21]
Despite his heavy studies there, he never quit his tend for singing and was eager to join the burgeoning Sofia music scene.
In the early 1990s Bulgaria was powered with the spirit of freedom, revolution and exaltation – the perfect background for creating rock music. A lot of new names and bands sprang up, bringing fresh air and sweeping away the old music controlled and censored by the Communist authorities.[3]
His first record was a song called May, a new wave-like, alternative middle tempo record that was premiered and aired on National Radio.[22]
In the next year, while being a member of the student's TV Show Coo-Coo, he garnered attention for a song called Cinema, which had later been added in the company's debut album, and turned out to be Valdobrev’s first released song ever.[3]
In 1993 he started to work on his first solo album. Regarding his ambition in films and theatre he knew he couldn't afford himself to keep a regular band, so he decided to invite highly skilled and established rock and jazz musicians. A large number of performers took part in the album, but there were three of them that formed the core of the future long term partnership in touring and recording studio albums: Ivan Lechev – the guitar player of the Grammy Awarded band FSB, Stoyan Yankoulov – a jazz, rock and ethno drum player, and Vesselin Vesselinov (Eko) – bass-guitar and double-bass. (Later on, in 1999 Miroslav Ivanov - a young and talented guitarist joined the band to stay till the present.)[23]
The music style of the first records was a mixture between alternative rock, new wave and ethno jazz music. But there was an unexpected 'factor' that finally took the lead and cast its mighty shadow over the other songs: a musical joke which Valdobrev created together with friend and colleague Kamen Donev on their way back from a theatre tour in Vienna. Tired of the long and boring trip they took a bunch of keys for percussion and started rapping over a three chord country-like gypsy tune I love you, my dear. Back in Sofia they recorded the song in less than an hour, adding the characteristic voice of their colleague, the young actress Maya Bejanska.[8] Although this ditty was totally different from anything in the album, it was so catchy that the producers decided to release it as a single. In no time it became vastly popular and later gave its name to the album that sold over 130,000 copies[10]. This success almost obliged Stefan, Kamen and Maya to repeat this direction. And in 1996 they joined for a single project – an album called Revolution. It was based on folklore and gypsy songs and used many ethno instruments and elements in a rock context.[24] Meanwhile, in 1995 Valdobrev released a collection of his scores for theatre performances called A Night at the Theatre.
1998 was a turning point for him. When his solo album titled: ...to was released in October that same year, it topped the charts in the country, becoming a big critical and commercial success.[25] The album spawned five number one hits: ...to, Heaven, One, Wolf and Yes and brought Valdobrev the annual music awards for Best Male Artist and Best Album. ...to represented a significant change in musical and thematic direction for Stefan and the band. Sonically the record incorporated influences from the Britpop and alternative rock of the time. And even if there were some songs with an impact from Bulgarian ethno music, the elements were very subtly dispersed into the prevailing guitar sound textures.[26] A good example was the song One, featuring the Goran Bregovic Orchestra's folk singer Snejka Borisova.[25] Until today, Valdobrev’s album ...to' is considered by many to be among the most influential and famous pop albums in the contemporary music scene in Bulgaria.[21]
In the next several years Stefan Valdobrev's career reached its zenith. He has toured extensively for each of his albums and has released a total of 12 number one BG Charts singles. He further incorporated diverse styles into his music. Together with Arabel Karajan he performed the trip hop ballad Is it me, or is it not? for the 1999 film Dog's Home. The song became a major hit and that same year Valdobrev repeated his Best Male artist annual music award. Later he became the first artist to sign a contract with Universal Music Bulgaria.
In 2000 he made a dramatic shift and gradually ventured into more unconventional and more radio-unfriendly works. He focused on experimentation, guitar effects, tape looping, rhythm sequencing and sampling while developing his sixth studio album Propaganda, Chromosomes, Silicon.[24] He sought a harder-hitting sound and headed a direction which was more into industrial music and alternative rock. Thematically it was a more personal and introspective record. Valdobrev’s lyrics have incorporated a variety of social, philosophical and political influences and appealed mainly to a vanishing counterculture in burgeoning hyper-consumerism.[27] This album was unexpectedly darker and yielded decent reviews, but no major hits.[28]
In 2001 Stefan Valdobrev decided to concentrate mainly on his acting career and took a long break from the music scene. For almost a decade he very sporadically released a few singles that became instant hits[21] but it was, as he stated, "just to keep me in form".[23] In 2006 he recorded the blue romantic song Fireworks, in 2009 the reggae-swing chart-topper The Riverbank Most Green, introducing the young future soul star Ruth Koleva.
During that period Valdobrev briefly resumed touring for a series of sold-out concerts, presenting mainly his theatre and film music and working with an orchestra of fifteen jazz, ethno and classical musicians. In 2007 he received a nomination for Best Male Artist of the decade by the National Music Television MM. After being away from the rock stage for nearly ten years, in 2012 Stefan Valdobrev decided to rejoin his old band "The Usual Suspects". They recorded two brand new songs: Helicopter and Snow on the Sahara and started a series of 25 club gigs and theatre hall shows.[5]
Directing
In 2006-2007 Valdobrev spent two productive years specializing in film directing at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). There he made a few short films, attended a Milos Forman workshop and visited the lectures of Otakar Vavra and Jaromir Sofr. His graduate short film Hide in 2007, marked the beginning of a professional collaboration and friendship with the acclaimed Mexican director of photography Antonio Riestra.[8]
Back in Sofia he started working on a documentary film project named My Mate Manchester United - the story of a 48-year-old football fan who changed his name to Manchester United. Valdobrev, together with the director of photography Krum Rodriguez decided to "follow the quest of this man's awkward dream to be named after his favorite football club and by getting close to the life of a Bulgarian builder and his memorable mates to create a moving social portrait of contemporary Bulgaria with its bewildered and confused people, so disappointed by the life in the country that they migrate to their own substitute reality. The journey started in Svishtov, a small town on the bank of the Danube river, told the story of the protagonist’s struggle with the authorities, lead all the way to Old Trafford Stadium, where he met his idol, the Manchester United top-striker Dimitar Berbatov, and ended up back home, raising questions about identity, about who we are and who we want to be".[29]
Initially launched by Stanimir Trifonov and Vreme Film Studio, the project went through some difficulties, before being successfully finalized by producer Dragomir Keranov with the support of Desislav Dionisiev and Alexander Vrabevski.[30]
The film was premiered on 10 March 2011 at the Sofia International Film Festival and has since then enjoyed a rich festival career, winning two international awards and being presented in the competition or the official selection of 21 major world film festivals: IDFA Amsterdam, HotDocs Toronto, ZagrebDox, Sarajevo and Warsaw among them.[4]
Recently Valdobrev has been developing some feature film projects. [23]
Personal life
In 1996 Valdobrev married his high school love Jana. "We have many shared memories as childhood sweethearts in Stara Zagora. We were 10 when we first met. Our parents were coming back from an excursion, we got off the bus at the same station and headed in different directions. After a few meters I stopped and turned to look back. She had stopped too and was looking at me. We stood like that for a few moments, staring at each other, our parents holding our hands. Growing up with someone's memories and making that journey through adulthood together is probably what makes a relationship strong. No one knows me better than Jana."[31] In 1998 Jana gave birth to their daughter Maria. Three weeks after that Valdobrev had a terrible car accident that almost cost him his life and kept him immovable and out of action for a year. For that reason he couldn’t join Regis Wargnier’s Oscar-nominated film production East/West, for which he'd been cast to play opposite Catherine Deneuve and Sandrine Bonnaire.[32]
Social life
The year of 1989, when Valdobrev attended the National Academy of Theatre and Film Arts, was crucial for the whole of Eastern Europe. The fall of the Communist regime in Bulgaria wasn't enough for the people and they demanded additional democratic reforms. Valdobrev became part of the strong student movement raised to power in the next few years of mass demonstrations, street riots, barricade protests and sieges of parliament.[3] In 1990 the students caused a National strike by occupying all the Universities for more than a month. As a result the recently elected Communist President Petar Mladenov resigned. On the next year a new two-month-long occupation strike inflamed by the Art Academy students led to the resignation of the Communist Prime minister Andrey Lukanov. On 31 December 2006 Valdobrev hosted Bulgaria’s celebration concert for joining the EU. The event was held in Battenberg square in Sofia, and was attended by 80,000 people.
Filmography
Actor
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Compagnons Secrets | Schwartz | TV film |
1999 | Bloodsport 4: The Dark Kumite | Gills | Fiction film |
2002 | Warming Up Yesterday's Lunch | Popadamchev | Fiction film |
2003 | Encounter | The Journalist | TV film |
2003 | Pas de Trois | The Lover | Short film |
2004 | Burning Out | Enriko Corsa | Fiction film Golden Rose Film Festival Award for Best Actor |
2007 | Trade Routes | Mitko | Fiction film Nominated - Method Fest Independent Film Festival, Los Angeles for Best Ensemble Cast |
2008 | Escape To Freedom – L'aviatore | Fugitive | TV film |
2008 | The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner | Stoyan | Fiction film Academy Awards shortlist for Best Foreign Language Film |
2010 | Kill Me Again | The Husband | Short film |
2010 | The Glass River | Father Peter | Fiction film |
2012 | Migration of the Belted Bonito | Simo | Fiction film Nominated – Bulgarian Film Academy Award for Best Film |
2013 | The Ungiven | Buko Levy | TV series |
2013 | Sinking of Sozopol | Fiction film pre-production |
Composer
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1994 | Izmislici-Premislici | TV series |
1996 | Sindbad | Fiction film |
1996 | The Green Hedgehog | TV film |
1997 | The Nest | TV film |
1997 | Good Life | Fiction film |
2000 | Dog's Home | Fiction film Golden Rose Film Festival Award for Debut |
2001 | The Straw Orphan | TV film |
2003 | Alphabet of Hope | Documentary |
2003 | Camera, Curtain | TV series |
2003 | Short Stories | Documentary |
2004 | The House | TV film |
2008 | Kulicky | Fiction film |
2008 | Ogan I Voda | TV film |
2008 | The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner | Fiction film |
2010 | I Dream of Mummers | Documentary |
2010 | Killing In the Czech Way | Documentary |
2011 | My Mate Manchester United | Documentary |
2011 | Can You Talk? | Short film |
2011 | State of Shock | Fiction film |
2012 | Love in the Grave | Documentary |
2013 | Otazky pana Lasky | Documentary |
2013 | The Ungiven | TV series |
2013 | The Judgement | Fiction film |
Director
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
2002 | Chromosomes | Music video |
2006 | Hana | Short film |
2007 | Hide | Short film |
2009 | 100 years of Todor Kolev | TV film |
2011 | My Mate Manchester United | Documentary Almaty International Film Festival Special Award Minsk Listapad Film Festival Best Film-Portrait Award Nominated - ZagrebDox for Best Regional Documentary Nominated - Warsaw International Film Festival for Best Documentary |
2012 | Helicopter | Music video |
Theatre
Actor
Year | Title | Theatre | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Angel City | NATFIZ | |
1993 | Twelfth Night | Youth Theatre Sofia | |
1993 | Black Hole | NATFIZ | A'Askeer Award for Ensemble Cast Debut |
1994 | Agamemnon | National Palace of Culture | |
1994 | Woyzeck | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1995 | Learning To Fly | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1997 | Much Ado About Nothing | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1997 | The Master and Margarita | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1998 | Juan in Love | Satirical Theatre Sofia | |
1999 | And Give Us the Shadows | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2000 | Suburbia | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2001 | La Ronde | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2001 | Commedia del Servitore | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2002 | Eurydice | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2002 | Finale Grande | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2003 | Meteor | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2004 | Fantasmagorii | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2005 | The Brothers Karamazov | Dramatic Theatre Plovdiv | |
2007 | Small Play for a Children's Room | Theatre 199 | |
2008 | Hamletmachine | Bulgarian Army Theatre Theater Rampe Stuttgart Theatre National du Luxembourg |
|
2009 | Pleasantlyscary | Theatre 199 | A'Askeer Award for Best Performance |
2011 | Blue/Orange | Theatre 199 | |
2013 | People from Oz | Theatre 199 |
Composer
Year | Title | Theatre | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Angel City | NATFIZ | |
1992 | Chekhov - review | Youth Theatre Sofia | |
1993 | Twelfth Night | Youth Theatre Sofia | Nominated - A'Askeer Award for Best Original Music |
1993 | Black Hole | NATFIZ | |
1994 | The Fall of Ikarus | SFUMATO | |
1994 | Persifedron | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1995 | Lorenzaccio | National Theatre Bitola | |
1996 | Long Play | Satirical Theatre Sofia | |
1997 | Much Ado About Nothing | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1998 | Juan in Love | Satirical Theatre Sofia | |
1998 | Henry IV | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1999 | An Give Us the Shadows | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
1999 | The Powder Keg | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2000 | Troilus and Cressida | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2000 | The Mediterraneans | Satirical Theatre Sofia | |
2000 | The Heroins | Dramatic Theatre Varna | |
2002 | Finale Grande | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2003 | The Powder Keg | Moscow Dramatic Theatre | |
2003 | The Phoney Civilization | Dramatic-puppet Theatre Shumen | |
2003 | Meteor | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2003 | Night before the Forest | Sofia Theatre | |
2003 | The Fourth Sister | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2005 | Day-off | Ivan Vazov National Theatre | |
2005 | Figures in a Love Flight | SFUMATO | Ikarus Theatre Award for Best Original Music |
2005 | Out of Control | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2005 | January | Youth Theatre Sofia | |
2006 | A Streetcar Named Desire | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2006 | Zmei | Dramatic-puppet Theatre Shumen | |
2006 | The Comedy of Errors | Bulgarian Army Theatre | |
2006 | The Cabinet Minister's Wife | Divadlo Disk | |
2007 | The Imaginary Invalid | Klicperovo divadlo | |
2008 | The Cabinet Minister's Wife | Mestske divadlo Most | |
2008 | Much Ado About Nothing | National Theatre Bitola | |
2011 | Working Hours | Ivan Vazov National Theatre |
Discography
Albums
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1994 | I love you, my dear | |
1995 | A Night at the Theatre | |
1996 | Revolution | |
1998 | …to | MM Music Award for Best Album MM Music Award for Best Male Performer 1998 MM Music Award for Best Male Performer 1999 |
2000 | Dog's Home | Soundtrack |
2001 | Propaganda, Chromosomes, Silicon | Nominated - BG Radio Music Awards for Best Male Performer Nominated - MM Music Awards for Best Rock/Alternative Album |
2003 | Opus Theatrale | |
2006 | Opus Theatrale 2 | |
2008 | The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner | Soundtrack |
Singles
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1997 | One & Heaven | |
2006 | Fireworks | |
2010 | The Riverbank Most Green (feat. Ruth Koleva) | |
2012 | Helicopter |
Tours
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1996 | Revolution Tour | |
1999 | …to Tour | |
2000 | Mason's Tour | |
2001 | Propaganda Tour | |
2012 | Stefan Valdobrev and The Usual Suspects |
Music Videos and Films
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1994 | I Love you, My Dear | |
1994 | Alisa Reggae | |
1995 | Job | |
1996 | Ivana | |
1997 | Heaven | |
1998 | One | |
1998 | …to | |
1999 | Wolf | |
1999 | Yes | |
1999 | Tummy of a Penguin | |
2000 | Is it me, or is it not? (feat. Arabel Karajan) | |
2001 | Propaganda | |
2001 | Silicon | |
2002 | Exploadiram | |
2002 | Chromosomes | |
2006 | Fireworks | |
2009 | Backgammon Dice | |
2012 | Helicopter |
References
- ^ a b "Денят отблизо с Мария - 4 януари 2012". (in Bulgarian). 4 January 2012. BNT. BNT 1. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
{{cite episode}}
: Missing or empty|series=
(help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Стефан Вълдобрев - където творчеството започва и никога не вършва". avtora.com (in Bulgarian). 23 November 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c d e "Герой", Capital Light (in Bulgarian), no. 12 March 2009, retrieved 7 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b "My Mate Manchester United - Home". My Mate Manchester United - Official Website. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
- ^ a b "Стефан Вълдобрев с национално турне и нов клип". avtora.com (in Bulgarian). 28 September 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b "Търси се: Стефан Вълдобрев". (in Bulgarian). 2 June 2013. bTV. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
{{cite episode}}
: Missing or empty|series=
(help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "За Стефан Вълдобрев светът е по-голям". Bela.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 7 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Popova, Nadezhda, "Вълдобрев и хромозомите на изкуството", Monitor Newspaper (in Bulgarian), no. 5 May 2012, retrieved 24 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ Stoykova, Antoniya (13 May 2012). "Стефан Вълдобрев: "Изкарвах пари като уличен музикант"". blitz.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 25 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Dinova, Liliya, "Стефан Вълдобрев: Всичко трябва да се прави с едно намигване", Continent Newspaper (in Bulgarian), no. January 1995
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Gigova, Irina, Стефан Вълдобрев: Можем да захраним с положителна енергия половин България (in Bulgarian), retrieved 25 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Lazarova, Vanya (17 April 2009). "Пролетна среща със Стефан Вълдобрев". public-republic.com. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ ""Хората от Оз" - дълго любовно писмо без адресат". vesti.bg. 8 April 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ Dimitrova, Genoveva, "Воля за кино, разговор с Вера Найденова", Kultura Newspaper (in Bulgarian), no. Issue 35, 24 September 2004, ISSN 0861-1408, retrieved 20 July 2013
{{citation}}
:|issue=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ Jeleva, Pavlina (11 October 2012). "FNE at Golden Rose FF 2012: Competition: Migration of the Belted Bonito". filmneweurope.com. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
- ^ Nenova, Nadezhda, "Музиката изпревари нов български филм", 24 Chasa Newspaper (in Bulgarian), no. 28 March 2000
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Стефан Вълдобрев: Човек е по-голям от целия свят". bgnes.com (in Bulgarian). 18 May 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Stefanova, Maya, "Стефан Вълдобрев, актьор: Младите сега са страхотни, нищо че външно не показват чувства", Capital (in Bulgarian), no. 26 February 2012, retrieved 29 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Далече от личните теми с актьора Стефан Вълдобрев", Review Magazine (in Bulgarian), no. Issue 3, 2005
{{citation}}
:|issue=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Приключенията на Илияна Бойчева - 9 May 2001". (in Bulgarian). 9 May 2001. Radio Tangra.
{{cite episode}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help); Missing or empty|series=
(help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c d "Музикална кариера на Стефан Вълдобрев". musicspace.bg (in Bulgarian). 13 January 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Сутрешен блок Стартер - 20 февруари 2005". (in Bulgarian). 20 February 2005. BG Radio.
{{cite episode}}
: Missing or empty|series=
(help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Turiyska, Geri (22 March 2012). "Стефан Вълдобрев на три морета". programata.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 24 July 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Kumanova, Roslava, "Любимецът на тинейджърките е женен за ученическата си любов", For the Woman Magazine (in Bulgarian), no. Issue 6, June 2001
{{citation}}
:|issue=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Dremdzhiev, Veselin, "Формулата "Вълдобрев"", Capital (in Bulgarian), no. 24 April 1999, retrieved 25 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Вълдобрев записва "слънчев албум"", Capital (in Bulgarian), no. 4 July 1998, retrieved 10 August 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Стефан Вълдобрев: Скоростта на живота ни е голяма", Teenager Love Magazine (in Bulgarian), no. Issue 21, 24 May 2001
{{citation}}
:|issue=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Монокъл: Стефан Вълдобрев", CapitEl (in Bulgarian), no. 9 June 2001, retrieved 25 July 2013
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ "My Mate Manchester United - Synopsis". My Mate Manchester United - Official Website. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
- ^ "Денят започва с култура - 4 май 2012". (in Bulgarian). 4 May 2012. BNT. BNT 1. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
{{cite episode}}
: Missing or empty|series=
(help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
ignored (|trans-title=
suggested) (help) - ^ Bachurova, Antoaneta, "Стефан Вълдобрев - Аз ли съм или не съм", Biograph Magazine (in Bulgarian), no. Issue 9, May 2012, ISSN 1314-4413
{{citation}}
:|issue=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Chalakova, Vera, "Вълдобрев ще снима в София с Катрин Деньов", Trud Newspaper (in Bulgarian), no. 20 August 1998
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: Unknown parameter|trans_title=
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