- Nacimiento
- Defunción18 de enero de 1939 · Neuilly-sur-Seine, Francia (una tuberculosis)
- Nombre de nacimientoIvan Ilyitch Mozzhukhin
- Alias
- Ivan Mozukin
- Altura1.80 m
- Ivan Mozzhukhin nació el 26 de septiembre de 1889 en Penza, Russian Empire [ahora Russia]. Fue un actor y escritor, conocido por L'angoissante aventure (1920), Le lion des Mogols (1924) y Feu Mathias Pascal (1925). Estuvo casado con Nathalie Lissenko. Murió el 18 de enero de 1939 en Francia.
- CónyugeNathalie Lissenko (divorciado)
- Since Mosjoukine spoke no English, he used an interpreter during the entire shooting of the film, 'Surrender.' Nevertheless, due to his extensive acting and directorial experience, he was able to intuitively follow the director's instructions with minimal input from his interpreter. With the advent of 'the talkies,' Mosjoukine's lack of linguistic skills other than Russian was profoundly detrimental to this once shining Russian and European superstar's career.
- While Mosjoukine left no official progeny, French novelist Romain Gary (original name Roman Kacew) had maintained that his birth in Vilnius on 8 May 1914 was the result of an affair between his mother Nina Owczynska and the 24-year-old Ivan Mosjoukine who was on the verge of becoming the most popular leading man of Czarist cinema. At the time, Nina was a young, minor Polish-Jewish provincial actress, recently married to one Arieh Kacew. In 1960, Gary wrote a novelized autobiographical account of his mother's struggles and triumphs, La promesse de l'aube (Promise at Dawn), which became the basis for an English-language play and a French-American film. The play, Samuel A. Taylor's First Love, opened on Broadway at the Morosco Theatre on Christmas Day 1961 and closed on 13 January 1962, after 24 performances. In 1970, returning to its original title, it was adapted for the screen and directed by Jules Dassin as a vehicle for his wife Melina Mercouri (then aged 49), who played Nina. Dassin, who was 59 years old at the time, chose to play Mosjoukine himself in the single scene that the character appears in the film.
- Ivan Mosjoukin, once one of the most prominent and nuanced silent movie stars of the European cinema died completely impoverished.
- Ivan Mosjoukin's roles were strong restricted when the sound film arised, his accent was a handicap and his strongest point - the physical expressiveness - wasn't in demand longer.
- Ivan Mosjoukin rose to the greatest Russian silent movie star in the following years and he personified the man of countless female fan's dreams with tendency to the emotional side.
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta