Vladimir Yegorov(1878-1960)
- Production Designer
- Art Director
- Director
Vladimir Yegorov is a renowned production designer who worked for over
four decades for the Russian turned Soviet cinema. Born of a peasant
family and trained at a school of commercial art, he started by
painting murals and frescoes. He later became a designer at the famous
Moscow Art Theater led by Stanislawsky. With him, he explored the new
ideas which would revolutionize the theatre, the settings becoming an
integral part of a production. In 1915, Yegorov turned to cinema, a new
medium to which he applied the results of his own research work. That
marked the beginning of a long and fruitful career, during which he
designed about fifty movies, some having acquired the status of
classic, in a variety of styles. They could be stories of the
Revolution
(My iz Kronshtadta (1936)), war
films (Admiral Nakhimov (1947)),
literary adaptations
(Dubrovskiy (1936)), etc. but they all
have a common denominator, Yegorov's intimate knowledge of Russian
people and their way of life. In 1944 Vladimir Yegorov was given the
title of People's Artist. (Abridged from "Scenic Design in the Soviet
Cinema", an article by Catherine de la Roche published in The Penguin
Film Review # 3, London, August 1947)