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Viktor Tourjansky(1891-1976)

  • Director
  • Writer
  • Actor
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Viktor Tourjansky was a Russian film director who emigrated after the communist revolution of 1917, and worked in France, Germany, USA, UK, and Italy.

He was born Viacheslav Konstantinovich Turzhanski on March 4, 1891, in Kiev, Ukraine, Russian Empire (now Kiyiv, Ukraine). Studied painting and art history. In 1911 he moved to Moscow and studied acting under Konstantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. In 1912-1914, Tourjansky worked for Aleksandr Khanzhonkov. He made his film debut as an actor in 'Tragedia pereproizvodstva' (1912), and co-starred in 'Brothers' (1913) by director Pyotr Chardynin, and in several other silent films. From 1914-1919 he worked in Yalta for Joseph N. Ermolieff, owner of one of the most successful Russian silent-film companies. At that time Tourjansky directed over twenty silent films in Russia.

Tourjansky suffered terribly from the loss of his property after the Communist Revolution of 1917. However, he continued working in Yalta with Ermolieff until the end of 1919. But when the Red Army advanced in Crimea and reached Yalta, he joined the White Russians and fled the communist Russia at the end of the Civil War. Tourjansky 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, actors Ivan Mozzhukhin, Nicolas Koline and Nicolas Rimsky, actress Nathalie Lissenko, his wife Nathalie Kovanko, cinematographer Nikolai Toporkoff and producer Joseph N. Ermolieff. They emigrated together to Paris, France, and started a Russian-French film company.

In Paris, Tourjansky changed his first name to Viktor (Victor) and continued his collaboration with Russian producers Alexandre Kamenka and Joseph N. Ermolieff. During 1920s and 1930s he also collaborated with producer Gregor Rabinovitch and directed films for various French, British, and German studios. Tourjansky often filmed his wife, Russian actress Nathalie Kovanko. She starred in fourteen of his films made in Russia and Europe. Eventually Tourjansky separated from Nathalie Kovanko, and later she returned to the Soviet Union.

Bethween WWI and WWII, Tourjansky directed over thirty French, British, American, and Franco-German films. He collaborated with director Abel Gance on the innovative film Napoléon (1927). In 1927 Tourjansky came to Hollywood. There, from 1927 - 1930, he worked at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios where he re-united with his former teacher, Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, who visited from Russia. Tourjansky was co-director of the Academy Award-winning film Tempête (1928), albeit he was uncredited. In Hollywood Tourjansky was hired to direct After Midnight (1927), but he questioned the talent of Norma Shearer, mentioning that the "Queen of MGM" had a cross-eyed stare, without knowing that she was about to marry Irving Thalberg, the powerful MGM producer. Tourjansky was fired from the project, and was sent to co-direct a western, The Adventurer (1927), on location in the inhospitable Mohave Desert. After he suffered for several weeks working in the sandy, windy, and hot desert, and dealing with nerve-wrecking logistical problems, Tourjansky did not achieve the result he wanted for the film. He became disillusioned and dissatisfied, and never wanted to direct another Hollywood film.

Back in Paris, Tourjansky opened his own office and re-established himself among the French-Russian film community. He was tirelessly wooing investors for his new projects, networking among intellectuals and businessmen of all backgrounds, including famous Russian émigrés in Paris, such as Aleksandr Kuprin and Yevgeni Zamyatin, as well as French, German, and British producers. Eventually his persistence and determination produced successful results. In 1931, Tourjansky spotted then unknown 21-year-old Simone Simon on the terrace of the Café de la Paix. He made her a famous actress after their first film together, Le chanteur inconnu (1931) (The Unknown Singer 1931). Tourjansky and Simon worked together again in Les yeux noirs (1935).

In 1936 he was hired by UFA-Film and moved to Potsdam-Babelsberg, then to Munich, Bavaria. There he worked for the rest of his life as film director and producer. Tourjansky made success with La belle Hongroise (1938) (The Blue Fox 1938), a comedy starring Swedish actress Zarah Leander, who was rumoured to be a Soviet-controlled agent and a mistress of Adolf Hitler. Tourjansky himself had several personal meetings with the Reichskanzler during the late 1930s, and was summoned to make several propaganda films, such as Feinde (1940). As a consequence his reputation among the cosmopolitan film community had suffered.

After the Second World War, he lived in Munich, and worked for various film studios with various results. His last film made in the Nazi Germany, a criminal drama Orient-Express (1944), was released after the war. In 1950, he directed Der Mann, der zweimal leben wollte (1950) (The Man Who Wanted to Live Twice 1950), a film starring the famous Russian émigré actress Olga Tschechowa. Later Tourjansky directed period epic films, such as Le roi cruel (1959), Les bateliers de la Volga (1959), Les Cosaques (1960), and La princesse du Nil (1960), some of which were considered among his better works. During the 1950s and 1960s he was wintering in Italy and worked there as producer and writer under the artistic name Arnaldo Genoino. Viktor Tourjansky died on August 13, 1976, in Munich, Germany.
BornMarch 4, 1891
DiedAugust 13, 1976(85)
BornMarch 4, 1891
DiedAugust 13, 1976(85)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Add photos, demo reels
  • Awards
    • 2 nominations total

Known for

Christian Casadesus, Raymond Galle, and Lisette Lanvin in Hôtel des étudiants (1932)
Hôtel des étudiants
  • Director(as Victor Tourjanski)
  • 1932
Les Cosaques (1960)
Les Cosaques
6.2
  • Director
  • 1960
Willy Birgel, Walter Franck, Emmerich Groh, Brigitte Horney, Hannelore Schroth, Viktor Tourjansky, Ernst von Klipstein, Rolf Weih, and Wolfgang Zeller in Der Gouverneur (1939)
Der Gouverneur
3.2
  • Director
  • 1939
Sylvia Lopez and Edmund Purdom in Le roi cruel (1959)
Le roi cruel
4.7
  • Director(as Arnaldo Genoino)
  • 1959

Credits

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IMDbPro

Director



  • Pascale Petit in Cléopâtre une reine pour César (1962)
    Cléopâtre une reine pour César
    4.8
    • Director
    • 1962
  • Curd Jürgens in Le triomphe de Michel Strogoff (1961)
    Le triomphe de Michel Strogoff
    5.7
    • stage director (as W. Tourjansky)
    • 1961
  • La princesse du Nil (1960)
    La princesse du Nil
    6.2
    • Director
    • 1960
  • Les Cosaques (1960)
    Les Cosaques
    6.2
    • Director
    • 1960
  • Les bateliers de la Volga (1959)
    Les bateliers de la Volga
    5.4
    • Director
    • 1959
  • Sylvia Lopez and Edmund Purdom in Le roi cruel (1959)
    Le roi cruel
    4.7
    • Director (as Arnaldo Genoino)
    • 1959
  • Barbara Rütting in Herz ohne Gnade (1958)
    Herz ohne Gnade
    7.8
    • Director
    • 1958
  • Aphrodite, déesse de l'amour (1957)
    Aphrodite, déesse de l'amour
    5.2
    • Director
    • 1957
  • Beichtgeheimnis (1956)
    Beichtgeheimnis
    5.7
    • Director
    • 1956
  • Valse royale (1955)
    Valse royale
    5.5
    • Director
    • 1955
  • Will Williams in Die Toteninsel (1955)
    Die Toteninsel
    • Director
    • 1955
  • Elisabeth Müller and Hans Stüwe in Morgengrauen (1954)
    Morgengrauen
    • Director
    • 1954
  • Arlette erobert Paris (1953)
    Arlette erobert Paris
    6.8
    • Director (as V. Tourjansky)
    • 1953
  • Le Saut de la mort (1953)
    Le Saut de la mort
    6.9
    • Director
    • 1953
  • Ehe für eine Nacht (1953)
    Ehe für eine Nacht
    • Director
    • 1953

Writer



  • Grit Boettcher, Cathrin Heyer, Vittoria Prada, and Freddy Quinn in Freddy und der Millionär (1961)
    Freddy und der Millionär
    5.0
    • screenplay (as Arnaldo Genoino)
    • 1961
  • Les Cosaques (1960)
    Les Cosaques
    6.2
    • Writer
    • 1960
  • Les bateliers de la Volga (1959)
    Les bateliers de la Volga
    5.4
    • Writer (as Arnaldo Genoino)
    • 1959
  • Sylvia Lopez and Edmund Purdom in Le roi cruel (1959)
    Le roi cruel
    4.7
    • screenplay (as W. Tourjansky)
    • 1959
  • Les yeux noirs (1958)
    Les yeux noirs
    5.5
    • story (as Tourjanski)
    • 1958
  • Will Williams in Die Toteninsel (1955)
    Die Toteninsel
    • screenplay
    • 1955
  • Hans Albers, Heidemarie Hatheyer, and Lil Dagover in Vom Teufel gejagt (1950)
    Vom Teufel gejagt
    6.1
    • Writer
    • 1950
  • Der blaue Strohhut (1949)
    Der blaue Strohhut
    7.7
    • writer
    • 1949
  • Dreimal Komödie (1949)
    Dreimal Komödie
    5.9
    • screenplay (as V. Tourjansky)
    • 1949
  • Si te hubieses casado conmigo (1949)
    Si te hubieses casado conmigo
    5.6
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1949
  • Il sole di Montecassino (1945)
    Il sole di Montecassino
    4.3
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1945
  • Orient-Express (1944)
    Orient-Express
    6.6
    • Writer (as V. Tourjansky)
    • 1944
  • Tonelli (1943)
    Tonelli
    • writer
    • 1943
  • Illusion (1941)
    Illusion
    7.3
    • Writer
    • 1941
  • Feinde (1940)
    Feinde
    5.3
    • Writer
    • 1940

Actor



  • Georges Méliès in Nuit de carnaval (1922)
    Nuit de carnaval
    • King
    • 1922
  • La Fille sauvage (1922)
    La Fille sauvage
    • Robertson
    • 1922
  • La pocharde
    • Barillier (as Victor Tourjansky)
    • 1921
  • Grekh i iskuplenie
    • (as Vyacheslav Turzhansky)
    • 1919
  • Surogaty lyubvi
    • (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1918
  • Kozy.. kozochki.. kozly..
    • 1917
  • Ostrov zabveniya
    • 1917
  • Syn strany gde tsarstvo mraka
    • (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1915
  • Poymet kto lyubit
    • (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1915
  • Po trupam k schastyu
    • (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1915
  • Zhenshchina vampir
    7.0
    • (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1915
  • Velikiy Magaraz
    • Magaraz (as Viktor Turzhansky)
    • 1915
  • Terrible vengeance
    6.0
    • 1913
  • Le précipice (1913)
    Le précipice
    • Mark Volohov (as Vyacheslav Tourjansky)
    • 1913
  • Les chagrins de Sarah (1913)
    Les chagrins de Sarah
    5.5
    Short
    • Borukh (as Vyacheslav Tourjansky)
    • 1913

Personal details

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  • Alternative names
    • Arnaldo Genoino
  • Born
    • March 4, 1891
    • Kiev, Russian Empire [now Ukraine]
  • Died
    • August 13, 1976
    • Munich, Bavaria, Germany
  • Spouse
    • Nathalie Kovanko1917 - 1935 (divorced, 1 child)
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Article

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    Studied acting under Konstantin Stanislavski in Russia.

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