Bolot Beishenaliev (Russian: Болот Бейшеналиев; June 25, 1937 — November 18, 2002) was a Soviet cinematographer, film and theater actor. People's Artist of Kyrgyzstan.[1][2] Father of actor Aziz Beyshenaliyev.[2]Beyshenaliyev studied at the studio of the Kyrgyz State Theater of Opera and Ballet, graduating in 1957, and at the Aleksandr Ostrovsky Institute of Theater Art in Tashkent until 1963. He subsequently worked as an assistant director at Kyrgyzfilm.[1]The actor’s first starring role was of Duishen, in Andrei Konchalovsky’s The First Teacher (1965), adapted from a novella by Chingiz Aitmatov. Beyshenaliev portrayed the passionate Bolshevik whose unshakeable convictions border on fanaticism. The international success of The First Teacher brought the actor several notable roles, among them the, Tatar khan in Andrei Tarkovsky’s Andrei Rublev (1966) and the Red Army soldier Chingiz in Hungarian director Miklós Jancsó’s The Red and the White (1967).Ali Khamraev cast Beyshenaliev in his controversial contemporary drama White, White Storks (1966). The actor subsequently appeared in dozens of Russian, Kyrgyz, Kazakh, Uzbek, Mongolian, and Czech films of all genres, often playing stoic men and occasionally heroic characters, for example, in the Ukrainian World War II blockbuster Where Is 042? as the Yakut survivor Nomokonov. Among Beyshenaliev’s later roles are the lead in Ardak Amirkulov’s historical epic The Fall of Otrar (1991) and the village senior in Aleksei Balabanov’s Kafka adaptation The Castle (1994). His final performance was in Dalmira Tilepbergenova’s short film The Falcon’s Hood (2001) as a disillusioned old man who sells birds on the ******.
博洛特·贝舍纳利耶夫、娜塔莉亚·阿玲巴萨洛娃
博洛特·贝舍纳利耶夫、Nurtai Borbiyev
亚历山大·米哈伊洛夫、安德烈·罗斯托茨基
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博洛特·贝舍纳利耶夫、鲍里斯拉夫·布隆杜科夫
Andro Kobaladze、Cegmedijn Timurbator
图恩谷什拜·扎马恩库罗夫(Тұңғышбай Жаманқұлов)、多卡·肯德尔雷夫(Доха Қыдыралиев)
Юрий Шевчук、Boris Golyatkin
Lyutfi Sarymsakova、Sairam Isayeva
鲁斯塔姆·萨格杜拉耶夫、博洛特·贝舍纳利耶夫
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