Vladimir Petrovich Zamansky (Russian: Ð'ладимир
Петрович Ð—Ð°Ð¼Ð°Ð½Ñ ÐºÐ¸Ð¹; born 6 February 1926, in
Kremenchuk, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR) is a Russian
film and theater actor, People's Artist of the RSFSR (1988), citizen
of Murom (2013), and a Recipient of the Order of the Patriotic War,
2nd class.As a boy, Zamansky grew up without a father, and in 1941,
when the Germans entered Kremenchuk, he was left without a mother.
Deceiving the commission and adding to his age, he joined the Russian
Army and volunteered to go to the front. In the winter of 1942 he
became a student of the Tashkent Polytechnic, Communications, and in
1943 he was drafted into the Red Army. He fought from May 1944, and in
one occasion saved his commander from their burning M10 Wolverine. In
June 1944 he served as a radio operator in 1223th self-propelled
artillery regiment of the 3rd Belarusian Front during a breakthrough
near Orsha. As part of the regiment with a short break due to injury
he served until the end of the war. After the war, as part of a
military unit p / n 74256 in the Northern Group of Forces (Poland) he
continued to serve in the Soviet Army.In 1950, for participating in
the beating of a platoon commander he was sentenced by the Military
Tribunal to nine years imprisonment under article 193-B of the
Criminal Code of the RSFSR. Among other prisoners he worked on
construction sites in Kharkov, Moscow University building. For
high-altitude life-threatening operation his prison term was reduced.
He was released in 1954. After the amnesty, for admission to theater
school.In 1958, he graduated from the Moscow Art Theatre School
(course Gerasimov). From 1958â€"1966, he was an actor in the Moscow
theater Sovremennik Theatre. From 1972â€"1980 years, he was a
theatre-studio movie actor, and, since 1992 he was at the theater
Yermolova.
Петрович Ð—Ð°Ð¼Ð°Ð½Ñ ÐºÐ¸Ð¹; born 6 February 1926, in
Kremenchuk, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR) is a Russian
film and theater actor, People's Artist of the RSFSR (1988), citizen
of Murom (2013), and a Recipient of the Order of the Patriotic War,
2nd class.As a boy, Zamansky grew up without a father, and in 1941,
when the Germans entered Kremenchuk, he was left without a mother.
Deceiving the commission and adding to his age, he joined the Russian
Army and volunteered to go to the front. In the winter of 1942 he
became a student of the Tashkent Polytechnic, Communications, and in
1943 he was drafted into the Red Army. He fought from May 1944, and in
one occasion saved his commander from their burning M10 Wolverine. In
June 1944 he served as a radio operator in 1223th self-propelled
artillery regiment of the 3rd Belarusian Front during a breakthrough
near Orsha. As part of the regiment with a short break due to injury
he served until the end of the war. After the war, as part of a
military unit p / n 74256 in the Northern Group of Forces (Poland) he
continued to serve in the Soviet Army.In 1950, for participating in
the beating of a platoon commander he was sentenced by the Military
Tribunal to nine years imprisonment under article 193-B of the
Criminal Code of the RSFSR. Among other prisoners he worked on
construction sites in Kharkov, Moscow University building. For
high-altitude life-threatening operation his prison term was reduced.
He was released in 1954. After the amnesty, for admission to theater
school.In 1958, he graduated from the Moscow Art Theatre School
(course Gerasimov). From 1958â€"1966, he was an actor in the Moscow
theater Sovremennik Theatre. From 1972â€"1980 years, he was a
theatre-studio movie actor, and, since 1992 he was at the theater
Yermolova.
Share this

SUBSCRIBE OUR NEWSLETTER
SUBSCRIBE OUR NEWSLETTER
Join us for free and get valuable content delivered right through your inbox.