Background
Mikhail Andreyevich Gluzsky was born in Kiev in 1918.
Mikhail Andreyevich Gluzsky was born in Kiev in 1918.
He graduated from the studio in 1940 and joined the troupe of the Central Theater of the Red Army, fought as a soldier in World World War II, and worked in Moscow after his discharge.
He starred in the 1972 film, Monologue, which was entered into the 1973 Cannes Film Festival. He worked at a factory before World World War II and made his film debut as a Mosfilm acting studio student, appearing diverse episodic roles in Grigory Roshal"s The Oppenheim Family, Konstantin Yudin"s A Girl with a Personality, and Vsevolod Pudovkin"s Minin and Pozharsky in 1939. His prolific career in film reached its height during the post-war period.
Gluzsky often appeared in the role of a headstrong leader but also successfully took on the depiction of reflective intellectuals.
One of the most recognizable faces of Soviet and Russian cinema, Mikhail Gluzsky continued to work as an actor even amid the economic crisis of the 1990s, which hit Boris Yeltsin"s Russia hard and affected the film industry harshly. He appeared in more than 130 roles between his debut in 1939 and death in 2001.
He died in Moscow at the age of eighty-two. 1973 - Vasilyev Brothers State Prize of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic for the role of Ivan Stepanovich in the movie Came the Soldiers from the Front (1971).
Cinematographers’ Union of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics.