Baadur Tsuladze

Baadur Tsuladze (Georgian: ბაადურ წულაძე; 5 March 1935 – 13 May 2018)[1] was a Georgian actor, film director, writer and broadcaster. Honored Artist of the Georgian SSR (1979).[2]

Baadur Tsuladze
Born
Baadur Sokratovich Tsuladze

(1935-03-05)5 March 1935
Died13 May 2018(2018-05-13) (aged 83)
Occupationactor
film director
screenwriter
theater teacher
Years active1954-2018

Biography

In 1961, Tsuladze graduated from the Directing Department of VGIK (workshop of Alexander Dovzhenko and Mikheil Chiaureli). Actor and director of the film studio Kartuli Pilmi.[2] He worked as the director of dubbing. President of the Screen Actors Guild of Georgia, Member of the Board of the Union of Cinematographers of Georgia. She teaches acting at the Institute of Theatre and Cinema of Shota Rustaveli.[3]

Baadur Tsuladze was a former presenter of culinary transmission on Georgian TV.

Death

Tsuladze died on 13 May 2018 in Tbilisi.[4] He never married and had no children.

Selected filmography[5]

as actor
  • 1954 — Strekoza as Professor
  • 1966 — Falling Leaves as Archil
  • 1966 — He Did Not Want Тo Кill as Khvicha
  • 1968 — Serenada as warehouse worker
  • 1969 — Do Not Worry! as Vano, fisherman
  • 1971 — I, The Investigator as Vaso Kobidze
  • 1973 — Melodies of Vera Quarter as politsmeyster
  • 1975 — The Adventures of Buratino as the owner of the inn
  • 1977 — Love at First Sight as gardener
  • 1977 — Night Over Chile as Mary's husband
  • 1978 — The Comedy of Errors as Balthazar
  • 1979 — The Gypsy as seller caps
  • 1980 — Teheran 43 as Deryush
  • 1984 — The Blonde Around the Corner as Rashid Rashidovich
  • 1993 — The Alaska Kid as Carlucci
  • 2000 — 27 Missing Kisses as Miki's friend grandfather
  • 2005 — Tbilisi — Tbilisi as Professor Otar Eristavi
as director
  • 1962 — Three Songs
  • 1965 — Nagrada
  • 1970 — Feola
  • 1972 — Gladiator
  • 1975 — Waltz on Mtatsminda
  • 1978 — Break
  • 1980 — Good Luck
  • 1982 — For Lovers To Solve Crosswords
  • 1986 — Our Тurn, Guys!
as screenwriter
  • 1982 — For Lovers To Solve Crosswords
gollark: You can annoy the predictor and make them need more CPU time by basing your prediction on facts like "what is the least significant bit of the latest block on the bitcoin blockchain" and "what is the value of [SOME STOCK MARKET PARAMETER]", depending on how early they fill the boxoids.
gollark: Regardless of what choice you make, the contents of the boxes are fixed, thus pick mildly more money. This probably sounds unsmart to you, which is either because you (and the server generally) are/is right, or because you fell into one side and now think it's obvious.
gollark: As I said, in general apparently both sides are split pretty evenly, have fairly convincing arguments each way, and both think that their answer is obvious and the other is wrong.
gollark: Perhaps we are HIGHLY smart unlike random internet people and OBVIOUSLY picked the correct® answer, or perhaps we just hold similar philosophical/intellectual/whatever views which make us more inclined to one-box.
gollark: I mean, maybe the average internet rabble is just bad at understanding what "perfect prediction" means, but you could probably argue that it's "rational" at the time of choosing to take both, even if it's... acausally...? worse for you. Nobody here appears to have.

References

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