Leonid Bykov

Leonid Fedorovich Bykov (Ukrainian: Леонід Федорович Биков, Russian: Леонид Фёдорович Быков; 11 December 1928, in Znamenka village, Artemivsk Okruha of Ukrainian SSR – 11 April 1979, in Kyiv Oblast of Ukraine, USSR) was a Soviet actor, film director, and script writer.[1] He received the "Honored Artist of the RSFSR" title in 1965 and the "People's Artist of the Ukrainian SSR" title in 1974.[2]

Leonid Bykov
A plaque on the facade of Hovhannes Tumanyan street, 8, Kyiv, where Bykov lived before his death
Born
Leonid Fedorovich Bykov

11 December 1928
Died11 April 1979(1979-04-11) (aged 50)
En route from Minsk to Kyiv
Resting placeBaikove Cemetery, Kyiv
Occupation(s)Actor, film director, screenwriter
Years active1952–1979
Notable workOnly "Old Men" Are Going Into Battle (1973)

Life and career

Leonid Bykov was born in the Znamenka village into a peasant family of Feodor Ivanovich Bykov and Zinaida Pankratovna Bykova, who shared the same surname. He had an elder sister, Luisa (born 1927). His father was a simple laborer who took part in the World War I and the Russian Civil War and in 1930 moved his family to Kramatorsk to work at the local steel mill, and where Leonid finished the secondary school.[3]

Bykov initially attempted to become a military pilot. He later studied at Kharkiv Theater Institute from 1946 to 1951 and joined the troupe of the Taras Shevchenko Theater in Kharkiv, working on stage until 1960. He received recognition initially with the supporting role of an unsophisticated countryman in Marina's Destiny (1953). His other notable performances included Petya Mokin in Aleksandr Ivanovski's and Nadezhda Kosheverova's blockbuster comedy Tamer of Tigers (1955) and in the title role of Maksim Perepelitsa (1956). Bykov also appeared as a hopeless romantic in films such as Yuri Egorov's Volunteers (1958), Stanislav Rostotskii's May Stars (1961), and Iosif Kheifits's My Dear Man (1958). As a director, Bykov debuted at Lenfilm Studio in 1962 with the 10-minute satire However the Rope Is Twisted (co-directed by Gerbert Rappaport), which skewered absurdities of the Soviet economy. The popular comedy Bunny (1965), in which Bykov also played the lead, portrays an idealistic man who struggles against bureaucracy. His most famous films as director are World War II dramas Only "Old Men" Are Going Into Battle (1974) and One-Two, Soldiers Were Going... (1977), in which he also starred.

Bykov died in a traffic accident in 1979 on the highway from Minsk to Kyiv.[4] In 1994, the International Astronomical Union named a minor planet after him, (4682) Bykov.[2]

Selected filmography

Actor

Film director

Screen writer

References

  1. Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 126–127. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
  2. Новая Российская энциклопедия: в 12 т. / Редкол.: А. Д. Некипелов, В. И. Данилов-Данильян и др. — М.: ООО «Издательство „Энциклопедия“» Т. 3 Бруней — Винча, 2007. — 480 с.: ил.
  3. Kotsarenko V. F.Kramatorsk tale. Kramamtorsk: AOZT, 2002. 175 pages. ISBN 966-96024-0-8
  4. Наш Фильм — журнал о российском кино Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine


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