Ivan Samarin (actor)


Ivan Vasilyevich Samarin was a Russian stage actor, associated with the Maly Theatre, who achieved his greatest success with the parts of Chatsky and later Famusov in Alexander Griboyedov's Woe from Wit, as well as Khlestakov in Gogol's Revizor. As a comic he excelled in several plays by William Shakespeare.

Life

In 1862 Samarin started to teach drama at the Shchepkin Theatre Institute. Among his best-known students there were future stars Glikeriya Fedotova and Nadezhda Nikulina. In 1874 he became the head of the Drama department at the Moscow Conservatory.
Moved by Samarin's 1879 production of his Evgeny Onegin at the Maly Theatre, Tchaikovsky in 1884 wrote a piece for string orchestra called "Privet blagodarnosti" later to be known as the "Elegy for Ivan Samarin".
Samarin authored several plays, among them Utro vechera mudreneye and Samozvanets Luba.

Literature