Born
3 May 1900 (125)
Place of Birth
Pryluky, USSR
Also known as
Nikolay Yakovchenko
Mykola Fedorovych Yakovchenko (April 20 (May 3), 1900, Pryluky — September 11, 1974, Kyiv) was an outstanding Soviet Ukrainian theater and film actor who played character roles. He was named a People's Artist of the Ukrainian SSR in 1970. He was born in Pryluky (now Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine, then Poltava Governorate, Russian Empire) into the family of an assistant manager of the Astrakhan fishing industry. His mother had four other children besides him. His family had its origins in the Don Co...
Mykola Fedorovych Yakovchenko (April 20 (May 3), 1900, Pryluky — September 11, 1974, Kyiv) was an outstanding Soviet Ukrainian theater and film actor who played character roles. He was named a People's Artist of the Ukrainian SSR in 1970. He was born in Pryluky (now Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine, then Poltava Governorate, Russian Empire) into the family of an assistant manager of the Astrakhan fishing industry. His mother had four other children besides him. His family had its origins in the Don Cossacks — the family moved to the Poltava province from Rostov-on-Don and had a patriarchal structure, where a penchant for art was not particularly encouraged. In 1912, he enrolled in the Second Prilutsk Higher Primary School named after Kislov. In 1916, he enrolled in the city Jewish gymnasium, where he became interested in amateur art, performing his first roles in the gymnasium theater. At the same time, he thoroughly studied the Greek language. During the revolutionary events, he went to the front. His grandson, Mykola Bohonko-Yakovchenko, said, "It is not known for certain on whose side he fought — for the Reds or the Whites. According to documents, he spent the entire war on a Red Army medical train. However, over time, he became enthusiastic about talking about General Shkuro's cavalry; he once obtained two well-hidden St. George's Crosses." In 1918, he made his debut on the amateur stage in Pryluky. From the amateur group, he moved to the troupe of Pylyp Khmara's theater, which was Russian at the time, and from 1919 — Ukrainian, then Soviet. At this time, he played in plays by Leonid Andreyev — Tyukha in Savva and Second Lieutenant Grigory Mironov in Days of Our Lives. From 1920 to 1927, he worked in theaters in Lubny, Pryluky, Simferopol, Cherkasy, Chernihiv, Dnipro, and Kharkiv. From 1927, he was an actor at the Frank Ukrainian Academic Theater in Kyiv (with breaks).
The Great Actor M. F. Yakovchenko
2003
Here We Live
1973
Cheerful Frogscreamers
1973
The Grandfather of the Left Winger
1973
Trust
1972
Zakhar Berkut
1972
Where are you, Knights?
1971
Party Secretary
1971
Lada from the Berendeyev Country
1971
Adventures of Tarapunka and Shtepsel
1971
That Very Night
1970
Varka's Land
1970
Димка-велогонщик
1969
Malevolent Fate
1969
The Kyiv Direction
1968
Viy
1967
The Star of the Ballet
1965
The Month of May
1965
Lushka
1964
A Dream
1964
Pharaohs
1964
A Great Road Ahead
1963
Gas Station Queen
1963
Chasing Two Hares
1961
Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka
1961
Carrot Head
1961
Save Our Souls
1960
The First Lad
1959
The Kyiv Resident
1958
Years of Young
1958
Coordinates Unknown
1957
Maksim Perepelitsa
1955
Nesterka
1955
Earth
1954
Martyn Borulya
1953
In The Ukrainian Steppe
1952
Stolen Happiness
1952