Ivan Pyryev

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1901-11-17

Deathday 1968-02-07 (66 years old)

Place of Birth Kamen, Tomsk Governorate, Russian Empire

Also Known As Ivan Pyrev, I. P'ryev, Ivan Pyriev, Iwan Pyrjew, I. Pyryev, Ivan A. Pyryev, Іван Олександрович Пир'єв

Ivan Pyryev

Biography

Ivan Aleksandrovich Pyryev (17 November 1901 – 7 February 1968) was a Soviet-Russian film director and screenwriter remembered as the high priest of Stalinist cinema. He was awarded six Stalin Prizes (1941, 1942, 1946, 1946, 1948, 1951), served as Director of the Mosfilm studios (1954–57) and was, for a time, the most influential man in the Soviet motion picture industry. Pyryev was born in Kamen-na-Obi, in the Tomsk Governorate of the Russian Empire (now Altai Krai, Russia). His early career included acting on stage directed by Vsevolod Meyerhold in The Forest and by Sergei Eisenstein in the Proletcult Theatre production The Mexican. Pyryev also acted in Eisenstein's first short film Glumov's Diary. Pyryev's early career included production jobs behind the camera, such as work for director Yuri Tarich. He débuted as a director in the age of silent film, with Strange Woman (1929). During the 1930s and 1940s Pyryev rivaled Grigori Aleksandrov as the country's most successful director of musical comedies, all of which starred his wife Marina Ladynina. Even during wartime, when the Soviet film industry had been evacuated to Alma-Ata, Pyryev made popular and light-hearted features. In Six O'Clock after the War is Over the Romantic characters (played by Ladynina and Yevgeny Samoilov), when separated by war, arrange a date at 6 PM on the Victory Day, and the victory celebrations are shown towards the end of the film (which was released in November 1944).

Known For

Director

2019
Rich Bride

as Director

1969
1965
1959
White Nights

as Director

1958
The Idiot

as Director

1954
Devotion

as Director

1951
1950
1942
1941
1940
The Beloved

as Director

1939
Tractor Drivers

as Director

1936
Anna

as Director

1933
Conveyor of Death

as Director

1931
The Civil Servant

as Director

1928
Bulat-Batyr

as Assistant Director

Writer

1965
1961
Sovershenno seryozno

as Creative Producer

1961
1961
Dog Barbos and Unusual Cross

as Creative Producer

1961
1959
White Nights

as Writer

1958
The Idiot

as Writer

1954
Devotion

as Writer

1951
1931
Turner Alekseev

as Screenplay

1930
Be Like This

as Writer