Mikhail Porechenkov
Mikhail Evgenevich Porechenkov (Russian: Михаи́л Евге́ньевич Поре́ченков; born 2 March 1969, in Leningrad, Soviet Union)[1] is a Russian film actor, producer, director. He became famous after his lead role as FSB Agent Alexey Nikolayev in the TV series National Security Agent (1999–2005). In 2008, Porechenkov produced, directed and starred in D-Day (День Д), a Russian remake of the 1985 American action film Commando.[2]
Mikhail Porechenkov | |
---|---|
Born | Mikhail Evgenevich Porechenkov 2 March 1969 |
Occupation | Actor, director, producer |
Years active | 1994–present |
Spouse(s) |
|
Children | 5 |
Biography
Porechenkov was born in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) in the Russian SSR on 2 March 1969, to parents Evgeny Mikhailovich Porechenkov and Galina Nikolayevna Porechenkova. His father was a Soviet Navy officer, and his mother was a building engineer. Since his parents were busy at work, he, in general, was raised until the age of 5 by his grandmother in a village of Pskov Oblast, and then, before going to school, he returned to Leningrad.[1] In the late 1970s, his father was appointed as an inspector of the Polish Gdańsk Shipyard, where Soviet ships were built, thus, in the first years of schooling, Porechenkov had to leave Leningrad and move, along with his family, to the Polish People's Republic. There, he began to study in a Soviet Embassy boarding school in Warsaw.[3] During the education period, he became interested in sports, especially boxing.[4] After graduating from school in 1986, he went to the Estonian SSR, where he entered the Tallinn Higher Military-Political Construction School to earn a political officer degree. Despite sporting achievements—Porechenkov earned the rank of the Candidate for Master of Sport in Boxing after his successful performance at the college championship and municipal tournament in Tallinn,[4] he was dismissed from the college in 1990, just 10 days before his graduation.[1] When he returned home from Estonia, he worked in a picture framing studio,[5] and attended Armen Dzhigarkhanyan's class in the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography (VGIK), which he did not graduated from.[1] In 1991 he entered the Leningrad State Institute of Theatre, Music and Cinematography (LGITMiK), Veniamin Filshtinsky's class, and graduated in 1996.[1]
Controversy
In October 2014, Porechenkov was wanted by Ukrainian authorities for allegedly engaging in terrorist activities in Donetsk.[6] Porechenkov was filmed firing a heavy weapon while wearing protective clothing with 'Press' markings.[6][7][8] Ukrainian officials said they would charge him with "participation in terrorist activities of the so-called DNR" and participation in activities of "armed gangs."[6] Since 2015 Porechenkov is banned from entering Ukraine.[9]
Awards and nominations
Awards
- Golden Mask, 1996 – for the role of Pozzo in Yuri Butusov's play Waiting for Godot
- Golden Sofit, ????
- Sozvezdie, ????
- Vladislav Strzhelchik Prize, 1999 – Ensemble cast (Yuri Butusov's play Waiting for Godot)[10]
- FSP Prize, 2008 - Acting Work (for the lead role in TV series Liquidation and the creation of Russian officer characters in other films)
- Oleg Tabakov Prize, 2009 (for the lead role in Anton Yakovlev's play The Kreutzer Sonata)[11]
Nominations
- Golden Eagle Award, 2006 – Best Leading Actor (The 9th Company)
- Golden Eagle Award, 2006 – Best Supporting Actor (Soldier's Decameron)
- Nika Award, 2006 – Best Supporting Actor (The 9th Company)
- MTV Russia Movie Awards, 2006 – Best Male Performance (The 9th Company)
- MTV Russia Movie Awards, 2007 – Best Kiss (Svyaz)
- Golden Eagle Award, 2009 – Best TV Actor (Liquidation)
- MTV Russia Movie Awards, 2009 – Best Male Performance (Realnyy papa)
- MTV Russia Movie Awards, 2009 – Best Comedic Performance (Realnyy papa)
- Georges Awards, 2015 – Russian Actor of the Year (Poddubny)[12]
- Georges Awards, 2015 – Russian Hero of the Year (Poddubny)[12]
Filmography
Film
- Women's Property (1999)
- National Security Agent (1999)
- Gangster Petersburg: Baron (2000)
- Peculiarities of the National Hunt in Winter Season (2000)
- Mechanical Suite (2001)
- Spetsnaz (2002)
- Peculiarities of National Politics (2003)
- The 9th Company (2005)
- The Fall of the Empire (2005)
- The Storm Gate (2006)
- The Great Love (2006)
- 1612 (2007)
- Liquidation (2007)
- D-Day (2008)
- Isaev (2009)
- Dr. Tyrsa (2010)
- Without Men (2010)
- Counter-Game (2011)
- Fairytale.Is (2011)
- The Marathon (2013)
- Iron Ivan (2014)
- The Shadow (2017)
TV
- Lines of Fate (2003) as Igor
- Deadly Force (2006) as Nikita Uvarov
- Heavenly Court (2011, 2014) as Veniamin
- The White Guard (2012)
- Crisis (2014) - episode 8 "How Far Would You Go" as Russian victor vries mercenary army (AK-47)
- The Bridge (2017)
- Trotsky (2017) as Alexander Parvus
References
- "Biography of Mikhail Porechenkov" (in Russian). Porechenkov.com (official website). Archived from the original on 10 March 2009. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
- Sokolov, Maria (2007-12-14). Настал "День Д" - фоторепортаж. Nezavisimaya Gazeta (in Russian). Retrieved 2007-07-18.
- http://www.paparazzi.ru/stars/90212/
- http://www.uznayvse.ru/znamenitosti/михаил-пореченков.html
- Interview with Porechenkov Bulvar Gordona
- Miller, Christopher (31 October 2014). "Russian action star in hot water after eastern Ukraine shooting". Mashable.
- Dolgov, Anna (31 October 2014). "Russian Actor Slammed on Twitter for Firing Weapon in Ukraine (Video)". The Moscow Times.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsfnVkyceo0
- http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/director-nikita-mikhalkov-speaks-ukraine-818987
- Лауреаты С.-Петербургской независимой актерской премии имени В.И.Стржельчика (1999-2013) (in Russian). Retrieved 2015-04-04.
- Премии благотворительного фонда Олега Табакова вручены в Москве (in Russian). RIA Novosti. 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
- Cписок номинантов на премию «Жорж 2015»
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mikhail Porechenkov. |
- Official website (in Russian)
- Mikhail Porechenkov at AllMovie
- Mikhail Porechenkov on IMDb