Yevgeny Karelov
Yevgeny Karelov | |
---|---|
Born | Yevgeny Yefimovich Karelov 12 October 1931 |
Died | 11 July 1977 | (aged 45)
Occupation(s) | Film director, screenwriter |
Years active | 1955—1976 |
Yevgeny Yefimovich Karelov (Template:Lang-ru; 12 October 1931 — 11 July 1977) was a Soviet film director and screenwriter known for comedy movies, war dramas and children's films. He was named Meritorious Artist of RSFSR in 1974.[1]
Biography
Karelov was born in the Bogorodskoye village (known as Bogorodskoye urban-type settlement today) into a peasant family, one of the four children. His parents soon moved to Drezna and applied to a secondary school: his mother Maria Andreevna Karelova — as a teacher, and his father Yefim Trofimovich Karelov — as a stoker and gardener. During the early 1950s the family moved to Podolsk.[2]
In 1949 Yevgeny tried to enter VGIK, but failed and entered the regional Pedagogical University, Faculty of Physical Culture. In a year he successfully entered VGIK and in 1955 he finished the directing courses led by Grigori Aleksandrov and started working at Mosfilm. Simultaneously he finished the Pedagogical University and joined the Federation of Sport Movies to promote sports culture. Among his projects was a war drama The Third Half (1962) about The Death Match that happened in the Nazi-occupied Kiev, a TV comedy Seven Old Men and a Girl (1968) about a young coach assigned to train a group of "hopeless" elderly men and a screenplay When I'm a King dedicated to the Soviet ice hockey coach Yuri Ulianov which was made into a documentary after his death.[3][4]
In 1968 Karelov directed Two Comrades Were Serving where Oleg Yankovsky played one of his first roles (his debut film The Shield and the Sword was released same year). It depicted the events of the Russian Civil War shown from both Red and White perspectives. The White Army poruchik Alexander Brusentsov played by Vladimir Vysotsky turned into one of his biggest movie roles in the entire career. Karelov later returned to revolutionary events with Those Who Saved Fire (1970) and the High Rank dilogy (1973—1974), both with Evgeny Matveev in the lead, director's favourite actor and a close friend.[3][5]
Karelov also produced a number of films aimed at children and youth, including Smoke in the Forest (1955) based on the story by Arkady Gaidar and Nakhalyonok (1961) based on Don Tales by Mikhail Sholokhov. In 1965 he directed the family comedy Children of Don Quixote about a goofy head of maternity clinic and his sons. It was among the first leading roles by Anatoly Papanov and the only role by Andrey Belyaninov, the head of the Federal Customs Service of Russia during the 2000s. In 1976 he directed a TV mini-series Two Captains based on the popular children's novel by Veniamin Kaverin who served as a screenwriter and added several scenes along the way.[5]
After the work on Two Captains was finished, the film crew went to Pitsunda to have a rest. On 11 July 1977 Karelov died of heart failure while swimming in the sea. Boris Tokarev and Evgeny Matveev who witnessed it managed to pull out his body, but Karelov was already dead by that time.[5] He was buried in the family tomb at the Podolsk cemetery.[6] He was survived by his wife Tatiana Germanovna Karelova and daughter Marina.[4]
On 4 November 2016 a new boulevard in the memory of Yevgeny Karelov was opened in Podolsk where two monuments were placed: one depicting Karelov, and another — the boy from his Nakhalyonok movie (role performed by Vladimir Semyonov).[7]
Filmography
Year | Title | Original title | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Director | Screenwriter | |||
1955 | Smoke in the Forest | Дым в лесу | ||
1960 | Yasha Toporkov | Яша Топорков | ||
Let It Shine | Пусть светит | |||
1961 | Nakhalyonok | Нахалёнок | ||
1962 | The Third Half | Третий тайм | ||
1964—1967 | Fitil | Фитиль | ||
1965 | Children of Don Quixote | Дети Дон Кихота | ||
1968 | Two Comrades Were Serving | Служили два товарища | ||
Seven Old Men and a Girl | Семь стариков и одна девушка | |||
1970 | Those Who Saved Fire | Сохранившие огонь | ||
1973—1974 | High Rank | Высокое звание | ||
1976 | Two Captains | Два капитана | ||
1979 | When I'm a King | Когда я король |
References
- ^ Cinema: Encyclopedic Dictionary // ed. Sergei Yutkevich. — Moscow: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1987, p. 171
- ^ Evgeny Golodnov. Drezna dwellers and cinema article at the Orekhovo-Zuyevo regional union of local historians (in Russian)
- ^ a b Yuri Kozlovskiy. It was so long ago article about Yevgeny Karelov from the Tête-à-Tête magazine, 1993 (in Russian)
- ^ a b Islands. Yevgeny Karelov documentary by Russia-K, 2012 (in Russian)
- ^ a b c Galina Tsymbal. Interview with Boris Tokarev at Gordon's Boulevard, 30 October 2007 (in Russian)
- ^ Yevgeny Karelov's tomb
- ^ A boulevard in the memory of the film director Evgeny Karelov was opened in Podolsk article at Podolsk.ru, 5 November 2016 (in Russian)
External links
- Yevgeny Karelov at IMDb
- Yevgeni Karelov at Russia-IC
- Director Yevgeny Karelov: biografía, filmografía (in Spanish)