Vasili Lanovoy was a notable Russian actor best known as Captain Grey in
Alye parusa (1961) and as Anatol
Kuragin in
War and Peace (1965).
He was born Vasili Semenovich Lanovoy on January 16, 1934, in Moscow,
Russia, USSR. His parents were Ukrainian peasants from Odessa region.
They escaped from death in the famine of 1931 and survived by moving to
Moscow. At the age of 7, Lanovoy went to visit his relatives near
Odessa, but there he was caught by the advancing Nazi Armies during the
Second World War. Young Lanovoy was abused by the Nazis who fired
machine guns above his head to scare him, so he stammered for several
years as a consequence. However, he had a dream of being an actor,
regardless of his stammer and his heavy Ukrainian accent. He attended
the acting class of Sergei Lvovich Stein at Moscow ZIL club, and made
his stage debut in a play by
Lev Kassil.
Young Lanovoy was torn between two professions, acting and journalism,
and entered to study both. In 1953, at age 18, while a Journalism
student of Moscow University, he was cast in
Problem Child (1954),
making his film debut. From 1953 - 1957 he studied acting at Shchukin
Theatrical School of Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow. There his classmate
was
Tatyana Samoylova, and they
married in 1955, and later became co-stars in
Anna Karenina (1967) by director
Aleksandr Zarkhi. He also
appeared as Anatol Kuragin in
War and Peace (1965) by director
Sergey Bondarchuk.
Since 1957 Vasili Lanovoy has been member of Vakhtangov Theatre in
Moscow. There his stage partners were such actors as
Mikhail Ulyanov,
Ruben Simonov,
Boris Zakhava,
Mikhail Astangov,
Varvara Popova,
Irina Kupchenko,
Natalya Tenyakova,
Yuliya Borisova,
Lyudmila Maksakova,
Lyudmila Tselikovskaya,
Marianna Vertinskaya,
Nina Ruslanova,
Nikolai Plotnikov,
Yuriy Yakovlev,
Vladimir Etush,
Vyacheslav Shalevich,
Andrei Abrikosov,
Grigori Abrikosov,
Boris Babochkin,
Nikolai Gritsenko,
Nikolai Timofeyev,
Aleksandr Grave,
Evgeniy Karelskikh,
Sergey Makovetskiy, and
Ruben Simonov, among others. His
most memorable stage performances were as Protasov in 'Deti Solntsa'
(1968), as Oktavian in 'Antony and Cleopatra' (1975), and the title
role in 'Kasanova' (1985). Since taking the role as Prince Calaf in
1963, Lanovoy has been delivering acclaimed performances in the
legendary Vakhtangov's production of Carlo Gozzi's comedy 'Princess
Turandot'.
Vasili Lanovoy was designated People's Actor of the USSR, was awarded
Lenin's Prize (1980), and received numerous awards and decorations for
his works on stage and in film. Outside of his acting profession Lanovoy was fond of
classical music and Ukrainian songs together with his friends
and family. In his 70s and 80s, he was maintaining a good physical form
through sports and pesco-vegetarian diet. He was married three times, and had two sons with actress
Irina Kupchenko. Lanovoy was prominent member of the Communist Party of USSR and Russia, he also supported president Putin and Moscow mayor Sobyanin in their re-elections. He died of Covid-19 complications 12 days after his 87th birthday, on the 28th of January 2021
in Moscow, Russia.