Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Her distant cousin Alexander Nekrassov broke the news that Pugachev was the father of Tolstoy's son. [11] By 2011, Tolstoy and Pugachev were reported to be a couple, with homes in Monaco, London, and Moscow, but Pugachev, by then living in exile in London, [12] remained married to his wife Galina, with whom he has children and grandchildren. [13]
Yemelyan Pugachev (c. 1742–1775), leader of the Cossack insurrection in Russia Sergei Pugachev (born 1963), Russian politician Shneur Zalman Pugachov [ he ] (1878–1934), Jewish Zionist educator active in Warsaw, Moscow, Berlin, and Palestine
Sergei Viktorovich Pugachev, also spelled Sergey Pugachyov (French: Sergueï Pougatchev; Russian: Сергей Викторович Пугачёв; born 4 February 1963), is a Russian-born French business magnate. [1] He is a doctor of technical sciences and a member of the International Engineering Academy. Pugachev moved to the United States ...
Gombo's drunk, horse-riding relative rides through the scene, stopping along the way to give them a movie poster for Cobra, which displays a muscular, gun-toting Sylvester Stallone. Shortly after, Sergei is rescued by Gombo and taken to his family's yurt. Gombo's young son is stunned by the tattoos on Sergei's back, which include music notes.
Pugachev (Russian: Емельян Пугачёв) is a 1978 historical drama film, directed by Alexey Saltykov and starring Yevgeny Matveyev and Vija Artmane. The film was honored with a special prize at All-Union Film Festival in 1979.
Pugachev (Russian: Пугачёв, romanized: Pugachyov) is a 1937 [1] [2] Soviet biographical drama film directed by Pavel Petrov-Bytov. [ 3 ] Don Cossack Pugachev, leader of the Peasant war of 1773–1775 in Russia.
In 1961 he finished director's courses led by Sergei Gerasimov. [3] His first feature film My Friend, Kolka! was released the same year, co-directed by Aleksander Mitta. It was seen by 23.8 million viewers. [4] Along with his next movie Bang the Drum it established him as one of the most promising children's film directors, but Saltykov decided ...
In comparison, the most expensive Soviet film until then, the 1952 The Unforgettable Year 1919, cost 1.093 million Rbls in prices adjusted to the 1961 monetary reform. [51] War and Peace remains the costliest picture made in the USSR. [52] On 20 March 1962, Furtseva set a preliminary budget of 1.395 million Rbls. [13]