Rostislav Yankovsky

Rostislav Ivanovich Yankovsky[1] (Belarusian: Расціслаў Іванавіч Янкоўскі, Russian: Ростислав Иванович Янковский;[1] 5 February 1930 – 26 June 2016) was a Belarusian actor. He was born in Odessa on 5 February 1930, studied in Leninabad[2] and debuted in the Tajik theatre in 1951. Since 1957, he worked in the Minsk Drama Theatre. Yankovsky was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1978. He is the older brother of the more famous Oleg Yankovsky.[1] His son Igor Yankovsky is also an actor. In 1994 he became the Chairman of the Minsk International Film Festival Listapad.

Rostislav Yankovsky
Yankovsky in 2008
Born
Расціслаў Іванавіч Янкоўскі
Rostislav Ivanovich Yankovsky

5 February 1930
Odessa, Ukraine
Died26 June 2016(2016-06-26) (aged 86)
Minsk, Belarus
RelativesOleg Yankovsky
(brother)
Igor Yankovsky
(son)
AwardsPeople's Artist of the USSR
(1978)

He died in Minsk on 26 June 2016 in Minsk, Belarus, aged 86.[3][4]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1968 Two Comrades Were Serving Hon. George d'Alroy
1970 Waterloo Flahaut
1984 Copper Angel Leo, the carpenter
1984 Time and the Conways Gerald Thornton
1985 Battle of Moscow General Vasily Smirnov
1986 Pryzhok
1986 The Dolphin's Cry minister
1991 Prizrak Konstantin Grigoryevich
1992 Bezumnoy strastyu ty sama ko mne pylayesh Vladimir Frantsevich
1992 Solnechnyy den v kontse leta Professor short
1997 A Friend of the Deceased Igor Lvovich
2005 The State Counsellor General Khrapov

Honours and awards

Belarus
  • Order of Francisc Skorina (2000)
  • Skorina Medal (1995)
  • State Prize of the Republic of Belarus (1998)
  • Honorary Citizen of the Hero City of Minsk (2000)
  • Award "For Spiritual Revival" (2003)
  • Award Theatre Forum "Golden Knight" (For outstanding contribution to the performing arts) (2005)
Soviet Union
Russia
  • Pushkin Medal (2007)[1]* International Academy of Theatre
gollark: If the chest is adjacent to your turtle then one of those directions will be the right one though I don't think you can conveniently determine which.
gollark: Okay. You can pullItems from north/east/west/south (it uses absolute directions I think; maybe check getTransferLocations).
gollark: If it isn't adjacent, do the second thing.
gollark: You didn't specify where the chest was exactly.
gollark: I mean that if the chest is adjacent you can push/pull from it using north/east/whatever.

References


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