Benefit of Honored Artist of the Voronezh Region Yuri Smyshnikov
Automatic translate
24 Февраля
Воронежский государственный академический театр драмы им. А. Кольцова
пр. Революции, 55
Воронеж
February 24 at the Voronezh Academic Drama Theater. A. Koltsov will benefit from the honored artist of the Voronezh region Yuri Smyshnikov.
A student of the People’s Artist of Russia Anatoly Ivanov, he joined the theater troupe as a student. Soon he played several major roles, among which: Zhadov in A. Ostrovsky’s “Profitable Place”, Figaro in Beaumarchais’s “Marriage of Figaro”, Zilov in A. Vampilov’s “Duck Hunt”, and M. Bulgakov in Oboyaninov.
The audience remembered the small, but very important in meaning, role of Boris in the play by V. Rozov’s play “Eternally Alive” and the image of captain Ivanov in “How Far Everything Is - Spring, Love and Youth…”, a very personal production of Anatoly Ivanov according to the stories of Andrei Platonov.
Today on his account about 40 roles played, among them - not a single passing.
Yuri Smyshnikov twice became the laureate of the regional theater competition - for the role of Zilov in “Duck Hunt” by A. Vampilov (dir. A. Ivanov) and Lopakhin in the “Cherry Orchard” by A. Chekhov (dir. V. Petrov). He is a laureate of the ХХ1Х international festival “Lipetsk Theater Meetings” for the role of Tartuffe in the play “Tartuffe” by J. B. Moliere (dir. A. Slyusarenko).
But the main thing is not in the number of awards, but in the fact that the audience is very fond of this artist and often “goes” to him.
In his benefit evening, Yuri Smyshnikov will take the stage as Lopakhin in A. Chekhov’s “Cherry Orchard”. And at the end of the performance, the artist will be honored.
- Moliere’s "Tartuffe", summary
- The repertoire of the Voronezh State Academic Drama Theater named after A. Koltsov for March 2015.
- The repertoire of the Voronezh State Academic Drama Theater named after A. Koltsov for July 2015.
- TARTUF (16+) comedy in two acts
- TARTUF (16+) comedy in two acts
- A summary of "They Fought for Their Country" by Mikhail Sholokhov