Oleg Valerianovich Basilashvili was born on September 26, 1934, in
Moscow, USSR. His father, named Valerian Basilashvili, was a director
of the Moscow Polytechnical College. His mother, named Irina
Ilyinskaya, was a teacher of linguistics.
His father made up a story that his grandfather was a Colonel in the
Imperial Army of the
Tsar Nicholas II, then married a Polish lady, and settled
down, becoming a policeman. He also fabricated a story that grandfather
once arrested a dangerous criminal, named Dzhugashvili, who was really
Joseph Stalin. In reality Basilashvili's maternal grandfather was a Russian
orthodox priest and an architect, who participated in the construction
of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow. During the Second
World War young Oleg Basilashvili was evacuated from Moscow to the
Transcaucasian republic of Georgia. There went to a primary school and
lived with his paternal grandfather until the end of WWII.
In 1956 Oleg Basilashvili graduated from the Acting School of the
Moscow Art Theatre. He made his film debut as a young groom in
'Nevesta' (The Bride, 1956) by director
Grigori Nikulin, based on a story by
Anton Chekhov. At that time together with his first wife,
Tatyana Doronina,
Basilashvili joined the troupe at the Bolshoi Drama Theatre (BDT) in
St. Petersburg (then Leningrad) under the leadership of the legendary
director
Georgi Tovstonogov. Since 1959 Basilashvili has been a permanent member
of the troupe at the BDT in St. Petersburg. There his stage partners
were such stars as
Kirill Lavrov,
Tatyana Doronina,
Alisa Freyndlikh,
Lyudmila Makarova,
Svetlana Kryuchkova,
Zinaida Sharko, Valentina Kovel,
Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy,
Sergey Yurskiy, and many other remarkable
Russian actors. Basilashvili's most memorable stage works were in 'Gore
ot Uma' by the playwright
Aleksandr Griboyedov, 'Uncle Vanya', a play by
Anton Chekhov,
'Kholstomer', based on story by
Lev Tolstoy, 'Na Dne', a play by
Maxim Gorky,
and other classic plays, directed by
Georgi Tovstonogov at the BDT in St.
Petersburg.
Oleg Basilashvili has been one of the favorite actors of film director
Eldar Ryazanov. They collaborated in such popular films as Sluzhebny Roman
(1977), Vokzal Dlya Dvoikh (1982), Nebesa obetovannye (1991), and
Predskazanie (1993), which became significant box-office hits. His film
partners were
Alisa Freyndlikh,
Lyudmila Gurchenko, Nikita Mikhalkov,
Nonna Mordyukova,
Evgeniy Leonov,
Natalya Gundareva, and many other Russian film actors.
One of his most famous film works was made in collaboration with
director
Georgiy Daneliya in a remarkable film
Autumn Marathon (1979). The film is a
cross-genre comedy and melodrama with a bitter humor and satire of the
Soviet life. In it Basilashvili plays a man in his mid-life crisis, who
is torn between two nice women, his wife and his mistress, and all
three of them become entangled in the game of lies and personal
demands, being at the same time strangled by the stagnant Soviet
reality. Basilashvili co-created a memorable acting ensemble with such
actors, as
Natalya Gundareva,
Evgeniy Leonov,
Marina Neyolova, and
Nikolay Kryuchkov. The film became a
Soviet classic, and director
Georgiy Daneliya was awarded at International film
festivals in Berlin and San Sebastian.
Oleg Basilashvili made a comeback with an impressive performance in the
role of Woland in
Master i Margarita (2005), an adaptation of the eponymous novel of
Mikhail A. Bulgakov by director
Vladimir Bortko. In his own words, Basilashvili played the
character of Woland in resemblance of an authoritarian and manipulative
bureaucrat, alluding to a Soviet-era dictator. Basilashvili created a
powerful interplay with a stellar ensemble of actors, such as
Aleksandr Abdulov,
Kirill Lavrov,
Anna Kovalchuk,
Aleksandr Galibin, and other notable Russian actors.
Oleg Basilashvili received the title of People's Artist of the USSR. He
was awarded the State Prize of the Soviet Union and was decorated by
the Russian government. Basilashvili was elected the representative of
Leningrad (St. Petersburg) in 1990. He was a supporter of president
Boris Yeltsin and a member of the parliamentary group of democratic
representatives. Oleg Basilashvili was a proponent of returning the
original name to the city of St. Petersburg. He quit politics after
2000, and focused on his acting career.
Basilashvili is currently residing in St. Petersburg, Russia, with his
second wife, Galina Mshanskaya, who is a popular TV show
hostess.