Nikolai Petrovich Batalov was born on December 6, 1899, in Moscow,
Russia, into the family of a clerk. From 1910-1915 he studied at the
Moscow Mercantile School named after the Czar Aleksander III. His
interest in theatre and literature was supported by his grandmother,
who encouraged his voracious reading. In 1916, he started his acting
career at the Moscow Art Theatre under Konstantin Stanislavski and
Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko.
At the same time he worked at the MKhAT-2, where his partner and
artistic director was
Michael Chekhov.
Nikolai Batalov's first stage work was the role of 'Petia-the
bookbinder' in the play 'Zelenoe Koltso' (The Green Ring 1916) by
Zinaida Gippius. His best remembered
stage work was the title role in the Moscow Art Theatre's classic
production 'Zhenitba Figaro', where Susanna was brilliantly played by
his wife
Olga Androvskaya.
He made his film debut in silent film as Gusev in
Aelita, the Queen of Mars (1924) directed by
Yakov Protazanov, then as Pavel Vlasov
in
Mother (1926) directed by
Vsevolod Pudovkin, an adaptation of
the eponymous book by
Maxim Gorky. His
leading role in the notable silent film-comedy 'Tretya meshchanskaya'
(1927) by writer-director
Abram Room had a
significant critical and public success. At that time Batalov suffered
from the onset of progressive form of tuberculosis, which interrupted
his stage career, but he still worked in film. His best known film role
was Nikolai Sergeiev in
Road to Life (1931) directed
by the Latvian writer/director
Nikolai Ekk,
who won the Most Convincing Director Award at the Venice Film Festival
(1932). The film was produced under the leadership of
Osip Brik, who introduced Nikolay Batalov to
the prototype of his film character, the head of the real Russian
juvenile correction colony Pogrebinsky. After this role Nikolay Batalov
was awarded and received the title of the Honorable Actor of Russia in
1933.
Nikolai Batlov was suffering from the progressive form of tuberculosis.
The disease limited his mobility and affected his acting career in the
mid 1930s. He was undergoing the best treatment available then; he was
sent to convalesce at the Russian Black Sea resort for patients with
tuberculosis, but doctors still recommended that he should be treated
in Europe, where tuberculosis was treated with better results. The
rigid Soviet system did not allow Batalov to go abroad for the foreign
medical help. He died on November 19, 1937, in Moscow.
Batalov was married to actress
Olga Androvskaya (nee Schulz). She was
the leading actress of the Moscow Art Theatre and also a stage partner
of Batalov, and a distinguished film actress. They had a daughter,
Svetlana Nikolaevna Batalova, who also became an actress of the Moscow
Art Theatre (MKhAT).