The filmography of the Soviet actor Valentin Zubkov includes over forty works in cinema. The audience remembered him more for the paintings dedicated to the Great Patriotic War. The biography and creative path of the artist of Soviet cinema Valentin Zubkov is the topic of the article.
He played mainly episodic roles. He came to the cinema without any special education. Valentin Zubkov, whose biography ended in 1979, could play many more interesting roles. But the family tragedy crippled the he alth of the artist.
Fighter Pilot
Zubkov Valentin Ivanovich - an actor who appeared on the set, seemingly by accident. The future artist was born in 1923, in a simple peasant family. He dreamed of becoming a builder, erecting beautiful high-rise buildings. However, when Zubkov turned nineteen, the war began. She ruthlessly broke human destinies, changed plans, destroyed dreams. But if not for the war, the audience would never have seen the actor Valentin Zubkov in such famous films as The Cranes Are Flying, Ivan's Childhood.
In 1942, the future actor graduated from the flight school,received the profession of a fighter. Zubkov was reluctant to talk about these years. He did not become a hero like those to whom books and films were dedicated in the post-war years. Just honestly doing my duty.
Nina
After the end of the war, Zubkov met a girl who later became his wife. Valentin Ivanovich lived with Nina for more than thirty years. Their marital happiness could have lasted longer. However, the general grief that the actor's wife was able to endure, Zubkov himself could not bear. Valentin and Nina lived peacefully. The first years of their happiness was overshadowed only by the fact that the woman could not get pregnant. Seven years after the wedding, the long-awaited son was born in the family of Valentin Zubkov.
The beginning of the creative path
Everything in their life was measured. Home, family, child. The only thing that distinguished Zubkov from other employees of the organization in which he worked was a selfless love for the theater, cinema and amateur art. Zubkov read monologues and poems from the stage. He was one of the brightest participants in artistic productions in the local circle.
One day a theater director accidentally wandered into one of the performances. He saw a tall, stately man with an open, kind face and advised him to try his hand at cinema. At the same time, the theatrical figure noted that Zubkov should not count on the main roles. But a participant in amateur performances will, no doubt, be able to become a supporting actor. Valentin Ivanovich was not an excessivelyambitious. In addition, he selflessly loved theater and cinema. And so the thought of playing at least one episodic role in the movie inspired him incredibly.
Valentin Zubkov heeded the advice. He began to attend auditions, auditions, as they say now. Director Konstantin Yudin liked his face. After an episodic role in the film "Gemini", he was increasingly invited to shoot. Zubkov became a supporting actor. One of those whose names the viewer does not remember, but without which a great movie is unthinkable. What films did Valentin Zubkov play in?
Movies
In the late forties, the actor starred in the films "Gemini", "Russian Question". The first significant work of Zubkov was the role of Stepan in the film The Cranes Are Flying. Before the release of this brilliant picture on the screens, Soviet viewers associated the actor with the image of the fist that he created in the film "Communist", that is, with a negative character.
But Kulidzhanov, despite this, invited Zubkov to audition. The role of Stepan is one of the brightest in the artist's work. No matter how talented the game of Alexei Batalov is, Zubkov is not much inferior to him. Thanks to his hero, the image created by Batalov becomes more convex, expressive. Among other films in which Valentin Zubkov took part, it is worth mentioning the following:
- "Over Tisza".
- May Stars.
- Father's House.
- "Northern Tale".
- Evdokia.
- "Happy Day".
- "Ivan's Childhood".
- "Mercy Train".
- "I'm a soldier, Mom."
Ivan's Childhood
In the early sixties, Andrei Tarkovsky began work on a new painting based on the novel by V. Bogomolov. The role of Captain Kholin in the film "Ivan's Childhood" was played by Zubkov. The audience first saw him in the image of a complex person. The actor proved that he can play not only loyal positive friends or pronounced villains, but also more controversial characters. Actor Valentin Zubkov was not as simple as his colleagues perceived him at the beginning of his career.
Family grief
In 1977, Zubkov's only son died. The young man was only twenty-three years old when, during a boat ride, he drowned with his friend. Valentin Ivanovich outlived his son by two years. After this tragedy, working in the cinema was out of the question. A few months after the funeral of his son, Zubkov ended up in the hospital with a heart attack. The actor passed away in 1979.