Sergei Gerasimov was born in the village of Kundravy in Urals area of
the Russian Empire, in 1906. He studied at the Leningrad College of
Arts and graduated from the Actors Department of the Leningrad
Institute for Stage Arts in 1928. He started his film career in 1924 as
an actor, continued as an assistant director and joined the "FEKS" film
group, under the leadership of
Grigoriy Kozintsev,
Leonid Trauberg, and
Sergei Yutkevich. He taught acting
class at Lenfilm Studios, and employed his students in his film
Seven Brave Men (1936), which
became a success. His student Tamara Makarova became his wife and
partner in film-works.
Sergei Gerasimov directed the 1945 Victory Parade on the Red Square in
Moscow. His apprentice,
Nikolai Rozantsev, became a reputable
Russian director. His students
Sergey Bondarchuk,
Inna Makarova,
Sergei Gurzo,
Lyudmila Shagalova,
Nonna Mordyukova,
Vyacheslav Tikhonov became instant
celebrities after the success of his film
The Young Guard (1948). His
most acclaimed work was the epic film
Quiet Flows the Don (1957), based on the
eponymous book by
Mikhail Sholokhov. A
crowning finale to his career was the biographical film
Lev Tolstoy, in which Gerasimov starred as
the famous Russian writer. The oldest film school in the world, VGIK,
is named after Sergei Gerasimov.