Vitali Dmitrievich Golovin was born into the family of a famous Russian
actor. His father, Dmitri Golovin, was a leading Opera soloist of the
Bolshoi Theater in Moscow and an Honorable Actor of Russia. Vitali
Golovin was a student at the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied as a
pianist and majored as an Opera Director. The Golovins family were
friends with singer
Feodor Chaliapin Sr. and director
Vsevolod Meyerhold. Meyerhold and
Golovin were neighbors in the prestigious building No. 12 on Bryusovsky
(now renamed Nezhdanovoi) Street in Moscow, and both families were
prominent in the Moscow intellectual elite.
Massive repressions and executions of innocent people surged during the
1930s under the dictatorship of
Joseph Stalin. In 1939 Meyerhold's wife,
actress Zinaida Raikh, was found dead. In 1940
Vsevolod Meyerhold was executed on
political charges. In 1943
Vitali Golovin
and his father were falsely accused of murder of Meyerhold's wife and
both were arrested. The real reasons for their arrest were political.
Golovin's father was accused of giving performances at the Paris Opera
when Denikin and other prominent anticommunist figures were in the
audience. Additional accusation was that Vitali Golovin and his father
were telling political jokes. They were exiled in Gulag prison camp in
Siberia. There, in the prison camp, they assembled a group of exiled
actors, and started a theater of prisoners and performed for prisoners.
After the death of
Joseph Stalin in 1953
some efforts were made to liberate people in the Soviet Union.
Nikita Khrushchev denounced the crimes
and dictatorship of Stalin in his secret speech to the 20th Congress of
the Communist Party in 1956. Later
Vitali Golovin and his father were
cleared of all charges. They were rehabilitated in their rights to
return to Moscow and to comeback to their professional careers.