Sergei Puskepalis
Sergei Vytauto Puskepalis (Russian: Сергей Витауто Пускепалис; born 15 April 1966) is a Russian actor and theatre director. He is best known for his roles in the award-winning movies Simple Things (2006) and How I Ended This Summer (2010), both directed by Alexei Popogrebski. For his performances, he won a Nika Award for Best Actor in 2008, as well as a Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival in 2010.[1]
Sergei Puskepalis Сергей Пускепалис | |
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Sergei Puskepalis actor at theater in Saratov. | |
Born | Sergei Vytauto Puskepalis 15 April 1966 |
Citizenship | Russian |
Occupation | Theatre director Film actor |
Years active | 2003–present |
Awards | Nika Award - 2008 Silver Bear - 2010 |
Early life
Sergei Puskepalis was born in 1966 to a Lithuanian father and a Bulgarian mother from Moldova, in Kursk, then Soviet Union.[2]
Sergei studied in Saratov, the Saratov Drama School, then went active duty in the Soviet Navy, worked as an actor in the Saratov Youth Theatre, studied at the Russian Institute of Theatre Arts, he graduated in 2001.
After graduating from the Moscow GITIS, he staged the play "Twenty-Seven" Alexey Slapovsky and this performance was one of the festival "Baltic House Festival Theatre|Baltic House". Afterwards, he put the play by Alexey Slapovsky "From red to green rat star" in Omsk "Fifth theater". Sergei Puskepalis repeatedly staged performances of Slapovsky's plays.
He worked as a director in the Samara theater "Monday". From May 2003 to 2007 Sergei Puskepalis - chief director of the Magnitogorsk Drama Theatre named after A. S. Pushkin. 2007 - production director of the Moscow theater studio under the direction of Oleg Tabakov. From June 2009 to February 2010 - chief director of the Russian State Academic Drama Theater named after Fyodor Volkov in city of Yaroslavl.
Puskepalis was invited to many famous Russian drama theaters to stage theater productions.
Career
In 2003 Puskepalis started to act in movies. His first role was a cameo in the film The Stroll. Sergei Puskepalis met the film director Alexei Popogrebski met on the set of the film Roads to Koktebel, in which his son, actor Gleb Puskepalis, played. Later Popogrebsky invited Sergei Puskepalis to star roles in the films Simple Things and How I Ended This Summer.
In 2015, the film Clinch which Sergei Puskepalis made as a film director had its premiere at the Yerevan International Film Festival. The picture is an adaptation of the play by Alexey Slapovsky which Sergei Puskepalis staged in Ufa.[3]
Personal life
Sergei Puskepalis married his wife Elena in 1991. Their son Gleb Puskepalis was born in 1992.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2003 | The Stroll | ||
2006 | Simple Things | Sergei Maslov, anesthetist | |
2009 | Spring is coming | Pavel Nikolaevich | |
2010 | Aptekar | Mikhail Streltsov | TV series |
2010 | How I Ended This Summer | Sergei Gulybin, head of the polar station | |
2011 | Sibir, Monamur | lieutenant colonel | |
2011 | Moy paren - Angel | father Sasha, volcanologist | |
2011 | Witness protection | Andrei Meshechko Major | TV series |
2011 | There Was Never a Better Brother | Jalil | |
2012 | Life and Fate | Ivan Grekov, Captain | TV series |
2012 | Divorce | Mikhail, Colonel police department | TV series |
2013 | Metro | Andrei Garin, surgeon | |
2013 | Owl Creek | Ivan Mitin, the captain of the State Security | TV series |
2013 | Eight | commander of the OMON | |
2014 | Black Sea | Zaytsev | |
2014 | Godfather | Ilya Alekhine, obstetrician-gynecologist | TV series |
2015 | Battle for Sevastopol | commander | |
2015 | Happiness is... | Oleg | |
2016 | The Icebreaker | Valentin Sevchenko | |
2016 | Sophia | Casimir IV Jagiellon | TV series |
2017 | Yolki 6 | Viktor Orlov | |
2017 | The Road to Calvary | General Romanovsky | TV series |