Pyotr Fyodorov

Pyotr Petrovich Fyodorov (Russian: Пётр Петрович Фёдоров, born 21 April 1982) is a Russian actor. He is known for playing the role of Guy Gaal in The Inhabited Island,[1] Gromov in Stalingrad and Yakovlev in The Duelist.

Pyotr Fyodorov
Fyodorov in 2011
Born
Pyotr Petrovich Fyodorov

(1982-04-21) 21 April 1982
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
NationalityRussian
Occupationactor
producer
screenwriter
Years active2000–present
Parent(s)Pyotr Evgenievich Fedorov

Biography

Pyotr Fedorov was born on April 21, 1982 in Moscow, into a family of actors. His father Pyotr Evgenievich Fedorov (October 27, 1959 - March 10, 1999), was a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, art critic, television presenter (died of cancer at the age of thirty-nine). Grandfather - Yevgeny Fyodorov (born March 3, 1924), is a Soviet and Russian theatrical actor, "Honored Artist of the RSFSR", artist of the Vakhtangov State Academic Theater (1945 to present).[2]

Pyotr spent his childhood in the Altai, Uimon Valley. He was fond of drawing and wanted to become an artist. The eight-grader moved with his family to Moscow. In 1997, after receiving an incomplete secondary education, he entered the Moscow Theater Art Technical School (MTTU), after which he planned to enter the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry, but after his father's death changed his decision and left the school after the second year of training.

In 1999, he entered the acting department of the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute. In 2003 he graduated from the institute. He played a student Belyaev in the graduation performance "Beautiful People" based on the play of Ivan Turgenev, where actors Grigory Antipenko and Olga Lomonosova were also engaged. In September 2003, the performance "Beautiful People" won the prize of the newspaper Moskovskij Komsomolets as the best performance of the season in the nomination "Beginners".[3]

After graduating from the Theater Institute, he served at the Moscow Stanislavsky Drama Theater.[4]

His first major role in film was of Lyonka in 101 km (2001), directed by Leonid Maryagin. Pyotr received wide popularity when he played Danila in the popular teen television series Club (2006), which became the most successful and rated project in the history of the television channel MTV Russia. After the third season, Pyotr left the project and began preparing for the shooting in the sci-fi film directed by Fyodor Bondarchuk Dark Planet (2008) based on the novel of the same name by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky.

In 2009, Pyotr appeared in one of his most significant projects at that time – Russia 88, a Russian pseudo-documentary film drama directed by Pavel Bardin about the youth subculture of the white power skinheads. It premiered 59th Berlin International Film Festival in the "Panorama" section.

In 2011 Pyotr acted in the film The PyraMMMid directed by Eldar Salavatov. The plot is based on the novel of the same name by Sergei Mavrodi, founder of the pyramid scheme MMM.

Fyodorov played the lead role in the film Stalingrad made in 2013 by director Fyodor Bondarchuk which broke box-office records for Russian films upon its release.

In the successful New Year comedies Yolki 2 (2011) and Yolki 3 (2013), Pyotr Fyodorov played Nikolai Kravchuk.

He played a supporting role in the 2014 film Territory by Alexander Melnik, a screen version of the novel of the same name by Oleg Kuvaev, which tells of the discovery of a gold-bearing deposit in the late 1950s of the 20th century.

In 2016, he had lead roles in the adventure-drama The Duelist and the disaster film The Icebreaker.

Filmography

Year Title Role
2001 101st Kilometer Leonid
2004 Graf Krestovsky (TV series) Timur
2004 Dasha Vasileva. A lover of private investigation Roman Vinogradov, the son of Katie
2005 Male Season: Velvet Revolution Oper
2005 Unmanaged skid Oleg
2006 Stealing Tarantino (mini-series) Maks Bogushev
2006 The Club (TV series) Danila Orlov
2008 The Inhabited Island Guy Gaal
2009 The Inhabited Island - 2 Guy Gaal
2009 Russia 88 Sasha "Shtyk"
2010 The Phobos Mayk
2010 GOP stop Vasyanya
2011 Hunters diamonds Anatoly Bessonov, "Bes"
2011 The PyraMMMid Anton
2011 Yolki 2 Nikolai Kravchuk
2011 The Darkest Hour Anton Batkin
2011 Boris Godunov Basmanov
2011 No men Kolya Volkov
2012 Moms Anton
2012 A man with a guarantee Vitalik
2013 Stalingrad captain Gromov
2013 Rehearsals Fedor Petrov
2013 Yolki 3 Nikolai Kravchuk
2013 Classmates: Click for Luck Alexey
2014 Territory uncle Kostya
2014 Priest San Pyotr Eremin
2015 Locust Artyom
2015 The Dawns Here Are Quiet Fedot Evgrafovich Vasco foreman
2015 Paws, Bones & Rock'n'roll Nikolai Kravchuk
2016 Duelist Officer Yakovlev
2016 The Icebreaker Petrov
2017 You All Infuriate Me Kirill Vitalievich
2019 The Blackout Yura
2020 The Pilot Pilot (main character)

Producer

  • Per rectum
  • Blood
  • Robotrip
  • Siberia - Bottomless Vial of Wishes (clip)
  • From the Forest by Сlick-Boutique
  • RACE TO SPACE - Endless Dream
  • RACE TO SPACE - Is This Home (feat.Victor Gorbachev)
gollark: UDP is just for sending small packets.
gollark: Nope. It runs over TCP.
gollark: Better than what? For what?
gollark: I don't see why you would want to stuff your entire request body in headers when there's a perfectly good request body system.
gollark: Primarily that some things won't be happy with it because nobody does it. Other than that:- servers may allocate limited-sized buffers for incoming request headers so you can't put too much in them (this is somewhat problematic for cookies)- headers have character set limits while bodies can be arbitrary bytes- request bodies are generated by forms and all sane clients so stuff is mostly designed to deal with those- request bodies can probably be handled more performantly because of stuff like the length field on them

References

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