Bruno Arturovich Freindlikh was born on October 10, 1909, in Russia.
His German ancestors were invited to Russia by Tsar Peter the Great and
settled in St. Petersburg around 1700's. The Freindlikh family started
a successful glass-making factory in the Russian capital. Young Bruno
Freindlikh received an excellent private education and was amateur
actor at school. From 1931-1934 he studied acting at the Leningrad
Theatrical School, then studied at the Leningrad Institute of Arts from
which he graduated in 1938 as an actor.
Freindlikh worked on stage at the Leningrad State Theatre named after
Komsomol, which was evacuated to the city of Tashkent during the Second
World War. During the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, all
members of the Freindlikh family were arrested "as German suspects"
upon the order from
Joseph Stalin. Actor
Bruno Freindlikh escaped the arrest because he was evacuated with the
theatre to the city of Tashkent, Uzbekistan. From 1941-1945 he worked
at the Leningrad Theatre for the Young Audience in evacuation, and
returned back to Leningrad after the end of the siege in 1945. From
1946-1948 he worked with the Leningrad Bolshoi Drama Theatre.
From 1948-2002 Bruno Freindlikh was the leading actor of the Pushkin
Drama Theatre in Leningrad (St. Petersburg). There his best role was
his highly acclaimed portrayal of
Ivan Turgenev in the biographical play
'Elegy'. His stage partners at the Pushkin Drama Theatre were
Nikolay Cherkasov,
Nikolai Simonov,
Konstantin Skorobogatov,
Yuriy Tolubeev,
Aleksandr Borisov,
Vasiliy Merkurev, Leonid Vivyen,
Olga Lebzak,
Nina Urgant,
Igor Gorbachyov,
Valentina Panina, and other notable
Russian actors. In 1941 Bruno Freindlikh played Hamlet on stage, in
what was the first collaboration of director
Grigoriy Kozintsev and writer
Boris Pasternak, before they made the
legendary film.
Bruno Freindlikh was awarded the State Prize of the USSR for his film
work, and received many other awards and decorations from the State of
the USSR. He was honored with the title of the People's Artist of the
USSR. He died on July 9, 2002, in St. Petersburg, and was laid to rest
in the "Literatorskie mostki" Necropolis of The Masters of Art at
Volkovskoe Cemetery in St. Petersburg, Russia.