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Igor Starygin. Adjutant, Aramis and other
Igor Starygin always distinguished interior refinement and nobility inherent in a true intellectual. These qualities marked his best roles.
Igor Starygin born June 13, 1946 in Moscow.
His father was a civil pilot, his mother worked as a cashier at the theater.
After leaving school in 1963 Starygin going to enter the law faculty of Moscow State University, but before that, "for the company" decided to try to pass exams in theater. In the end, the only reading a poem, he immediately fell in the third round, and then became a student GITISa.
While studying Starygin began acting in movies, making his debut in the war drama "Retribution" (1967), which did not come out in the rolling, and soon played a larger role in the famous movie "We'll Live Till Monday" (1968).
Another student Igor first married - on his classmate, but the marriage lasted only a year. After graduating GITISa Starygin became an actor of the Moscow Youth Theater, where he worked until 1983, and, at the same time, he began to actively act for film and television.
First popularity brought him a role in the TV series "The adjutant of his excellency" (1969), and among his other roles of the early period it is worth noting the work in the drama "Red and Black" (1976).
True national recognition IgorStarygin acquired by playing Aramis in the television film directed by George Yungvald-Khilkevich "D'Artagnan and the Three Musketeers" (1979).
All the key cast - Mikhail Boyarsky, Valentine Smirnitsky Benjamin laughter and Igor Starygin - were surrounded by insanely popular, but because of the numerous love intrigues, pursuing "Musketeers" in life, Starygin had to part with his second wife, actress Mika Ardov from which he was born in 1978, daughter Anastasia. Two subsequent marriage of the actor were short-lived.
In 1980 Starygin changed several theaters, continuing periodically play and film. In the early 1990s, were removed two continuing adventures of the Musketeers, "Musketeers 20 Years Later" (1992) and "The Secret of Queen Anne or Musketeers 30 Years Later" (1993), but these tapes were not as successful as the first part of which became classics. Affected by ill-conceived plot, actors disagreements with the director and the lack of funding. Again on the screen Igor Starygin returned only in 2000 and then regularly appeared in various television serials.
He again played Aramis in the film "The Return of the Musketeers" (2008), for the fourth time to gather together the legendary heroes ...
This role was his last. In September 2009, Igor Starygin had a stroke, after which he never recovered. Outstanding actor died November 8, 2009 in a Moscow hospital.
Igor Starygin born June 13, 1946 in Moscow.
His father was a civil pilot, his mother worked as a cashier at the theater.
After leaving school in 1963 Starygin going to enter the law faculty of Moscow State University, but before that, "for the company" decided to try to pass exams in theater. In the end, the only reading a poem, he immediately fell in the third round, and then became a student GITISa.
While studying Starygin began acting in movies, making his debut in the war drama "Retribution" (1967), which did not come out in the rolling, and soon played a larger role in the famous movie "We'll Live Till Monday" (1968).
Another student Igor first married - on his classmate, but the marriage lasted only a year. After graduating GITISa Starygin became an actor of the Moscow Youth Theater, where he worked until 1983, and, at the same time, he began to actively act for film and television.
First popularity brought him a role in the TV series "The adjutant of his excellency" (1969), and among his other roles of the early period it is worth noting the work in the drama "Red and Black" (1976).
True national recognition IgorStarygin acquired by playing Aramis in the television film directed by George Yungvald-Khilkevich "D'Artagnan and the Three Musketeers" (1979).
All the key cast - Mikhail Boyarsky, Valentine Smirnitsky Benjamin laughter and Igor Starygin - were surrounded by insanely popular, but because of the numerous love intrigues, pursuing "Musketeers" in life, Starygin had to part with his second wife, actress Mika Ardov from which he was born in 1978, daughter Anastasia. Two subsequent marriage of the actor were short-lived.
In 1980 Starygin changed several theaters, continuing periodically play and film. In the early 1990s, were removed two continuing adventures of the Musketeers, "Musketeers 20 Years Later" (1992) and "The Secret of Queen Anne or Musketeers 30 Years Later" (1993), but these tapes were not as successful as the first part of which became classics. Affected by ill-conceived plot, actors disagreements with the director and the lack of funding. Again on the screen Igor Starygin returned only in 2000 and then regularly appeared in various television serials.
He again played Aramis in the film "The Return of the Musketeers" (2008), for the fourth time to gather together the legendary heroes ...
This role was his last. In September 2009, Igor Starygin had a stroke, after which he never recovered. Outstanding actor died November 8, 2009 in a Moscow hospital.