Ivan Koval-Samborsky
Ivan Koval-Samborsky (1893–1962) was a Ukrainian stage and film actor. After establishing himself in the Soviet film industry in the 1920s, he briefly went to work in Germany during the late 1920s before returning to Russia following the arrival of sound. In 1938 he was arrested by the Soviet authorities leading to his most recent film, the anti-Nazi The Swamp Soldiers, having to be reshot to minimize his role.[1] He didn't appear in another film until 1957.
Ivan Koval-Samborsky | |
---|---|
Born | 16 September 1893 |
Died | 10 January 1962 |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1925-1961 (film ) |
Selected filmography
- Chess Fever (1925)
- His Call (1925)
- Mother (1926)
- Man from the Restaurant (1927)
- The Forty-First (1927)
- The Prince of Rogues (1928)
- Mary Lou (1928)
- Love in the Cowshed (1928)
- The Yellow Ticket (1928)
- Knights of the Night (1928)
- Mariett Dances Today (1928)
- When the Guard Marches (1928)
- Cagliostro (1929)
- My Heart is a Jazz Band (1929)
- Mascots (1929)
- Alraune (1930)
- Bookkeeper Kremke (1930)
- Busy Girls (1930)
- The Big Attraction (1931)
- Transit Camp (1932)
- Once in the Summer (1936)
gollark: The flat earth model is self-reinforcing if you buy into some flat-earthy stuff already, and it is somewhat hard to get out of such traps.
gollark: You could just not act on it.
gollark: If I say "Gibson, [MINORITY] bad, be violent toward them", it's your problem if you do stuff based on that.
gollark: You can choose whether to act on it.
gollark: Speech isn't coercion.
References
- Gershenson p.20
Bibliography
- Olga Gershenson. The Phantom Holocaust: Soviet Cinema and Jewish Catastrophe. Rutgers University Press, 2013.
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