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Ivan Mozzhukhin(1889-1939)

  • Actor
  • Writer
  • Director
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Ivan Mozzhukhin
Ivan Mozzhukhin was a legendary actor of Russian silent films, who escaped execution by the Soviet Red Army and had a stellar career in Europe.

He was born Ivan Ilyich Mozzhukhin on September 26, 1889, in the village of Kondol, Saratov province, Russia (now Penza province, Russia). His father was general manager of the large estate of Prince Obolensky. Mozzhukhin attended all-boys Gymnasium in Penza, then studied at the Law School of Moscow University for two years. There he was active in amateur stage productions and joined a touring troupe, then returned to Moscow and was a member of the Vvedensky Narodny Dom Theatre. He made his film debut in 1908. From 1911-14 he worked in the films of producer Aleksandr Khanzhonkov. Mozzhukhin shot to fame after his leading role as violinist Trukhachevsky in La sonate de Kreutzer (1911) by director Pyotr Chardynin, based on the eponymous story by Lev Tolstoy. He starred as Adm. Kornilov in La défense de Sébastopol (1911) and in about 30 more silent films made by Chardynin, Yevgeny Bauer and Khanzhyonkov.

By the mid-'10s Mozzhukhin was the indisputable leading star of the Russian cinema, having such film partners as 'Diaghilev''s ballerina Vera Karalli, and his own wife Nathalie Lissenko. His facial expressions were studied by many actors and directors as exemplary acting masks. From 1915-19 he worked in about 40 films by directors Yakov Protazanov and Viktor Tourjansky under the legendary Russian producer Joseph N. Ermolieff. His best known films of the Russian period were Pikovaya dama (1916) and Le père Serge (1918), both by Protazanov. Mozzhukhin's incredible popularity brought him significant wealth, but that came with attendant pressure; he also became famous for his numerous love affairs with his admirers.

In 1918 the Russian Communist revolution had already caused irreversible destruction of cultural and economic life, and Mozzhukhin moved under protection of the anti-Communist White Russian forces in Yalta, Crimea. There he worked for Ermolieff during the Russian Civil War. Meanwhile, Soviet government leader Vladimir Lenin ordered the seizure and nationalization of all film studios and their films, properties and other assets to use for making Soviet propaganda' most of Mozzhukhin's 70 films were arrested and / or censored. Lev Kuleshov used fragments of Mozzhukhin's films to demonstrate his editing ideas. Mozzhukhin's face was used in Kuleshov's psychological montage to illustrate the principles of film editing, known today as the Kuleshov Effect.

Mozzhukhin suffered terribly from the loss of his property after the Communist revolution. However, he continued working in Yalta with Ermolieff until the end of 1919. When the Red Army advanced into Crimea and broke through to Yalta, however, he joined the White Russians and fled the now-communist Russia at the end of the Civil War. He managed to save a few rolls of his silent films, which he took aboard the Greek steamer Pantera\ in February of 1920. He left Russia together with his film partners from the Ermolieff film company, his wife Nathalie Lissenko, actors Nicolas Koline and Nicolas Rimsky, actress Nathalie Kovanko, cinematographer Nikolai Toporkoff, director Viktor Tourjansky and producer Joseph N. Ermolieff. They emigrated together to Paris, France, and started a Russian-French film company.

In 1926 Mozzhukhin got a lucrative contract with Universal Pictures in Hollywood, and was cast as the male lead in Surrender (1927). However, his stint in Hollywood was not a success, due to numerous pressures from the studio's producers who insisted on his taking the stage name John Moskin. In addition, Mozzhukhin and his female co-star Mary Philbin did not get along at all, and that was quite apparent from the footage that they had no chemistry whatever. Ats Hollywood at that time was just making the transition from silent films to talkies, Mozzuhkhin--who did not speak English--was not offered any further roles, and he returned to Europe. Soon Aleksandr Vertinskiy began to comment that Mozzhukhin's troubles in Hollywood were the results of a conspiracy by the powers in Hollywood to destroy a strong competitor.

By 1939 Mozzhukhin had made over 100 films in Russia, France, Italy, the US, Germany and Austria. He continued starring in the talkies of the 1930s, although not as successfully as he had during the silent era. He also wrote screenplays for several of his films, and planned to direct a film in France, but the project was abandoned because he contracted a severe form of tuberculosis and was hospitalized. Mozzhukhin died of tuberculosis in a Paris clinic on January 17, 1939, and was laid to rest in the Russian Cemetery at Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois, in Paris, France.

Mozzhukhin's home in Kondol, Penza province, is now restored as the public Memorial Museum of Ivan Mozzhukhin. There, since the 1990s, the museum has annual showing of Mozzhukhin's films, also known as Mozzhukhin's Festivities.
BornSeptember 26, 1889
DiedJanuary 18, 1939(49)
BornSeptember 26, 1889
DiedJanuary 18, 1939(49)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

L'angoissante aventure (1920)
L'angoissante aventure
6.6
  • Henri de Granier(as Ivan Mosjoukine)
  • 1920
Le lion des Mogols (1924)
Le lion des Mogols
6.6
  • le prince Roundghito-Sing(as Ivan Mosjoukine)
  • 1924
Feu Mathias Pascal (1925)
Feu Mathias Pascal
7.0
  • Mathias Pascal(as Ivan Mosjoukine)
  • 1925
Ivan Mozzhukhin in Kean ou Désordre et génie (1924)
Kean ou Désordre et génie
6.5
  • Edmund Kean(as Ivan Mosjoukine)
  • 1924

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Actor



  • L'agonie du sous-marin (1936)
    L'agonie du sous-marin
    5.6
    • L'officier Meuter (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1936
  • L'enfant du carnaval (1934)
    L'enfant du carnaval
    8.1
    • Henri Strogonoff (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1934
  • Jeanne Boitel in Casanova (1934)
    Casanova
    6.8
    • Casanova (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1934
  • La mille et deuxième nuit (1933)
    La mille et deuxième nuit
    5.9
    • Prince Tahar (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1933
  • Le sergent X (1932)
    Le sergent X
    8.2
    • Jean Renault (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1932
  • Le diable blanc (1930)
    Le diable blanc
    7.4
    • Hadschi Murat (as Ivan Mosjukin)
    • 1930
  • Brigitte Helm and Ivan Mozzhukhin in Manolesco, prince des sleepings (1929)
    Manolesco, prince des sleepings
    7.3
    • Manolescu
    • 1929
  • Au service du Tsar (1929)
    Au service du Tsar
    7.2
    • Prince Boris Kurbski
    • 1929
  • Lil Dagover, Ivan Mozzhukhin, Agnes Petersen, Gennaro Righelli, Hubert von Meyerinck, and Josef Fenneker in Le rouge et le noir (1928)
    Le rouge et le noir
    6.1
    • Julien Sorel (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1928
  • Der Präsident (1928)
    Der Präsident
    • Chico
    • Pepe Torre, ein Bauer (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1928
  • Ivan Mozzhukhin and Mary Philbin in Surrender (1927)
    Surrender
    5.9
    • Constantine (as Ivan Mosjukine)
    • 1927
  • Casanova (1927)
    Casanova
    7.1
    • Casanova (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1927
  • Michel Strogoff (1926)
    Michel Strogoff
    7.2
    • Michael Strogoff
    • 1926
  • Feu Mathias Pascal (1925)
    Feu Mathias Pascal
    7.0
    • Mathias Pascal (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1925
  • Le lion des Mogols (1924)
    Le lion des Mogols
    6.6
    • le prince Roundghito-Sing (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1924

Writer



  • L'enfant du carnaval (1934)
    L'enfant du carnaval
    8.1
    • Writer (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1934
  • Casanova (1927)
    Casanova
    7.1
    • scenario (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1927
  • Michel Strogoff (1926)
    Michel Strogoff
    7.2
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1926
  • Le lion des Mogols (1924)
    Le lion des Mogols
    6.6
    • idea
    • 1924
  • Ivan Mozzhukhin in Les ombres qui passent (1924)
    Les ombres qui passent
    6.9
    • scenario
    • 1924
  • Ivan Mozzhukhin in Kean ou Désordre et génie (1924)
    Kean ou Désordre et génie
    6.5
    • screenwriter
    • 1924
  • Le brasier ardent (1923)
    Le brasier ardent
    7.3
    • scenario
    • 1923
  • La maison du mystère (1923)
    La maison du mystère
    7.5
    • writer (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1923
  • Georges Méliès in Nuit de carnaval (1922)
    Nuit de carnaval
    • writer
    • 1922
  • Justice d'abord (1921)
    Justice d'abord
    6.4
    • Writer
    • 1921
  • L'enfant du carnaval (1921)
    L'enfant du carnaval
    6.7
    • Writer (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1921
  • L'angoissante aventure (1920)
    L'angoissante aventure
    6.6
    • screenplay
    • story
    • 1920
  • Grekh (1916)
    Grekh
    5.0
    • Writer
    • 1916

Director



  • Le brasier ardent (1923)
    Le brasier ardent
    7.3
    • Director
    • 1923
  • L'enfant du carnaval (1921)
    L'enfant du carnaval
    6.7
    • Director (as Ivan Mosjoukine)
    • 1921

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Ivan Mosjoukine
  • Height
    • 1.80 m
  • Born
    • September 26, 1889
    • Penza, Russian Empire [now Russia]
  • Died
    • January 18, 1939
    • Neuilly-sur-Seine, France(tuberculosis)
  • Spouse
    • Nathalie Lissenko(divorced)
  • Publicity listings
    • 7 Articles
    • 3 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    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.
  • Nickname
    • Ivan Mozukin

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