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User / Truus, Bob & Jan too! / Sets / Cinema of the Baltic States
Truus, Bob & Jan too! / 39 items

N 1 B 6.6K C 0 E Nov 11, 2017 F Apr 27, 2021
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German postcard for the Estonian silent film Noored kotkad/The Young Eagles (Theodor Luts, 1927), released in Germany as Drei junge Adler (Three Young Eagles). Juhan/ Johannes Nõmmik as the blacksmith Laansoo.

Plot: Estonia shortly after the end of World War I: the young republic has proclaimed its independence from Soviet Russia. Now it is put to the test and must assert its independence militarily in the Estonian War of Independence (1918-1920) against the old rulers. Three young men join the Estonian Armed Forces (Eesti Rahvavägi) as war volunteers: a farmer's son, a blacksmith and a student. Together they are sent on reconnaissance missions and have to prove themselves in battles. They are able to beat back the enemy in fierce battles with courage, bravery and some feints. The farmer falls in the decisive battle, the other two return home. Together they now set about building the young state of Estonia.

Johannes Linkhorst (since 1926 Johannes Nõmmik; February 14, 1895 Mäo Parish, Järva County - April 23, 1941) was an Estonian Communist. He was a former worker at the Dvigatel military factory, who had been operating undercover since 1918, under the party nickname "Cast Iron". In 1921 he was elected a member of the Central Committee of the ECB. On June 11, 1920, he participated in the killing of Richard Tammerik, a collaborator of the Security Police. He was the organizer of the land demonstration on May 1, 1922, but was caught on the same day. During the chase, he wounded police officer Johannes Tuchermi, who died on 6 May. On May 2, he was sentenced to death for killing a police officer. On May 11, the Minister of War changed the punishment to life imprisonment. Viktor Kingissepp and other communists were captured on the basis of his testimony. On January 28, 1925, the Government of the Republic changed his sentence to 10 years of forced labor, and the following year Linkhorst was released prematurely under the name of Johannes Nõmmik. He was arrested by the Soviet authorities on September 4, 1940 and executed half a year after. Noored kotkad was his only film known. He was also assistant-director of the film.

Source: Estonian Wikipedia.

Tags:   Noored kotkad Drei junge Adler Estonia Estonian 1927 Theodor Luts Juhan Nõmmik 1920s Vintage Vedette Postcard Postkarte POstale Postkaart Postal Picture independance war Estonian War of Independence Cinema Carte Cartolina Cine Carte Postale Card Celebrity Costume Film Film Star Movies Movie Movie Star Muet Muto Screen Star Silent Sepia SChauspieler Stummfilm Darsteller Drama DEutsch Deutschland German Germany Ansichtkaart Ansichtskarte Actor Acteur Attore Period piece Historical film

N 5 B 2.7K C 0 E Nov 10, 2017 F Apr 27, 2021
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German postcard for the Estonian silent film Noored kotkad/The Young Eagles (Theodor Luts, 1927), released in Germany as Drei junge Adler (Three Young Eagles). Juhan Nõmmik as the blacksmith Laansoo, defending his sister Hilja (Elly Põder-Roht).

Plot: Estonia shortly after the end of World War I: the young republic has proclaimed its independence from Soviet Russia. Now it is put to the test and must assert its independence militarily in the Estonian War of Independence (1918-1920) against the old rulers. Three young men join the Estonian Armed Forces (Eesti Rahvavägi) as war volunteers: a farmer's son, a blacksmith and a student. Together they are sent on reconnaissance missions and have to prove themselves in battles. They are able to beat back the enemy in fierce battles with courage, bravery and some feints. The farmer falls in the decisive battle, the other two return home. Together they now set about building the young state of Estonia.

This rare Estonian silent war film was shot for the production company Siirius Film in the summer of 1927 in Tartu. The film was directed by Theodor Luts, one of the most renowned Estonian directors of the interwar period. He had himself fought in the Estonian War of Independence, including the battles of Paju and Cēsis. The film studio stood in the courtyard of Luts' house at Aia tänav 19, while location shooting was done in Tartumaa, near Mustvee, in Värska and in Petserimaa. The original length of the film was about one hundred minutes. In the original, the film has ten parts, eight of which are preserved. Luts developed the negatives in his laboratory in Tartu. The copies were made by Geyer-Werke in Berlin.

Noored kotkad was Luts' first feature film - and after the tragicomedy Kevade unelm by Voldemar Päts, the first real feature film from Estonia ever. Luts wrote the screenplay together with his wife Aksella and (according to the film's publicity) with his brother, the well-known folk writer Oskar Luts. The male choir of the Vanemuine Theater and members of the Estonian Armed Forces participated as extras in the crowd scenes. An original score to Noored kotkad has not been preserved. It is known that pieces of music by Estonian composers were put together. The first performances in Tallinn were played by the orchestra of the premiere theater Gloria-Palace, conducted by Voldemar Tago. The premiere took place on November 19, 1927 in the Tartu cinema "Apollo". In Tallinn the film was shown for the first time on December 14, 1927 in the cinema "Gloria-Palace.

Noored kotkad was very positively received among the Estonian population and in the feuilleton. In particular, the subject of the Estonian War of Independence seven years after its end and the struggle against the Bolsheviks served as a founding myth of the young Estonian state. The three main characters - a peasant, an artisan, a student - could be identified with by the majority of the Estonian population, many of whom had fought for the goals of the Republic in the War of Independence themselves. The mixture of exciting war film garnished with love and Estonian humor appealed to the audience. The film was also exported abroad and was shown in Paris as Les Aiglons, in Warsaw, and probably in Berlin (as Drei junge Adler, in 1928. During the Soviet occupation of Estonia, the film was not banned, but it was not released in theaters either.

Noored kotkad was restored and digitized in Estonia and Finland in 2008 with a total length of 87 minutes. The restored version with new musical score was premiered on February 22, 2008. The new score was composed by Aare Tammsesalu from pieces by Estonian composers (Heino Eller, Artur Kapp, Villem Kapp, Raimund Kull, Villem Reimann).

Source: German Wikipedia.

Tags:   Noored kotkad Drei junge Adler Estonia Estonian 1927 Theodor Luts Juhan Nõmmik 1920s Vintage Vedette Postcard Postkarte POstale Postkaart Postal Picture independance war Estonian War of Independence Cinema Carte Cartolina Cine Carte Postale Card Celebrity Costume Film Film Star Movies Movie Movie Star Muet Muto Screen Star Silent Sepia SChauspieler Stummfilm Darsteller Drama DEutsch Deutschland German Germany Ansichtkaart Ansichtskarte Actor Acteur Attore Period piece Historical film Baltic

N 2 B 6.7K C 0 E Sep 17, 2017 F Sep 16, 2017
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Soviet collectors card. Photo: publicity still for Faktas/Facts (Almantas Grikevicius, 1981).

Regimantas Adomaitis (1937) is a Lithuanian film and stage actor. He is known in Russia, Germany, and other countries besides Lithuania.

Regimantas Adomaitis was born in Šiauliai, Lithuania in 1937. He graduated from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at Vilnius University. Later he studied acting at the acting department of the Vilnius Conservatory. He made a debut in the theatre, and had engagemenrs in Vilnius, Kaunas and Kapsukas. His film debut was Vienos dienos kronika/The Chronicle of one Day (Vytautas Zalakevicius, 1963) with Donatas Banionis. In 1966 he had his breakthrough with Niekas nenorėjo mirti/Nobody Wanted to Die (Vytautas Žalakevičius,1966). This action drama is set in a small Lithuanian farming community after the Second World War. The village is divided as the communists battle those in favor of national independence. When the leader of the community is killed, the man's four sons, including Adomaitis, set out to avenge his death. Adomaitis, director Žalakevičius. and cinematographer Jonas Gricius were awarded the USSR State Prize for the film in 1967. That year, he also acted in the a-typical Soviet war film Vostochny koridor/Eastern Corridor (Valentin Vinogradov, 1966) with Lyudmila Abramova. In the historical drama Sergey Lazo (Aleksandr Gordon, 1968), he played the title role of the Communist leader Lazo. He appeared as Edmund in the Soviet Shakespeare adaptation Korol Lir/King Lear (Grigori Kozintsev, Iosif Shapiro, 1971), starring Juri Jarvet. The Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich composed the score. Jugu Abraham at IMDb: “Kozintsev is one of least sung masters of Russian cinema. His cinema is very close to that of Tarkovsky and Sergei Paradjanov. Kozintsev's Lear is not a Lear that mourns his past and his daughters--his Lear is close to the soil, the plants, and all elements of nature. That's what makes Kozintsev's Shakespearean works outstanding.” In 1973, Adomaitis appeared in the Soviet drama Eto sladkoe slovo - svoboda!/That Sweet Word: Liberty! (Vytautas Žalakevičius, 1973). The film was shot in Chile shortly before 1973 Chilean coup d'état. The basis for the plot is a real story: the escape from San-Carlos prison in Venezuela of three political prisoners. The film was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize. Velnio nuotaka/Devil's Bride (Arūnas Žebriūnas, 1974) is the first Lithuanian musical about the victory of love over the trickery of the Devil based on the book Baltaragio malūnas (Whitehorn Mill) by Kazys Boruta. Due to its popularity it is sometimes called a Lithuanian Jesus Christ Superstar rock opera.

In East-Germany, Regimantas Adomaitis starred in Wolz - Leben und Verklärung eines deutschen Anarchisten/ Wolz - Life and Illusion of a German Anarchist (Günter Reisch, 1974) with Heidemarie Wenzel. Tom Dooley at IMDb: “Part comedy at one point, part political statement and a definite swipe at National Socialism, it is very ambitious and it pulls it all off. It has a great musical score too and the music adds to the moods tenfold. The acting is superb and Regimantas Adomaitis as Wolz is a power house.” For the DEFA, he also starred in Mann gegen Mann/Man Against Man (Kurt Maetzig, 1976). In the historical drama Yuliya Vrevskaya/Between the Tsar’s Court and the Battlefield (Nikola Korabov, 1978), Adomaitas played opposite Lyudmila Saveleva and Stefan Danailov. Other films were the Maxim Gorky adaptation Vrag/Enemies (Rodion Nahapetov, 1978) with Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy, the Soviet-Italian drama La vita è bella/Life Is Beautiful (Grigoriy Chukhray, 1979) with Giancarlo Giannini and Ornella Muti, and Poloska neskoshennych dikikh tsvetov/ A strip of unclosed wild flowers (Yuri Ilyenko, 1980). He returned to East-Germany for the drama Die Verlobte/The Fiancee (Günter Reisch, Günther Rücker1980) with Jutta Wachowiak as a woman sentenced in 1934 to ten years in prison for antifascist activities. The love between her and her fiancée enables her to survive it. He co-starred with Donatas Banionis in the Soviet Lithuanian-language war film Gruppa krovi nol/Faktas/Facts (Almantas Grikevicius, 1981). At the 1981 Cannes Film Festival, actress Yelena Solovey won the award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film. Other films include Iz zhizni otdykhayushchikh/Life on Holidays (Nikolay Gubenko, 1981), Skrydis per Atlanta/ The Flight Across the Atlantic Ocean (Raimondas Vabalas, 1984), Es ist nicht leicht ein Gott zu sein/It’s Hard to be a God (Peter Fleischmann, 1989), the war drama Angely smerti/Angels of Death (Yuriy Ozerov, 1993), with Fedor Bondarchuk and Powers Boothe, and the French-Russian drama Tu es.../You are… (Vladimir Makeranets, 1995). On TV, he appeared in the Soviet musical miniseries Trest, kotoryy lopnul/The Trust That Went Bust (Aleksandr Pavlovsky 1983) based on short stories by O. Henry. In 1985, Regimantas Adomaitis was a member of the jury at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival. Adomaitis has received many a Soviet Lithuanian-language war film wards of recognition. In 1988 he with other 34 prominent people created Sąjūdis Reform Movement, which eventually led to the declaration of independence of Lithuania on 11 March 1990. Regimantas Adomaitis now lives in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, where he works as an actor at the Lithuanian National Drama Theatre and regularly appears in TV series. His most recent film is the Norwegian drama Iskyss/The Ice Kiss (Knut Erik Jensen, 2008) with Ellen Dorrit Petersen. Adomaitis was married to singer Eugenia Baerite, who died in 2011. They have three children.

Sources: Jugu Abraham (IMDb), Tom Dooley (IMDb), Roman A. Ivanov (IMDb), Mubi, AllMovie, Wikipedia and IMDb.

Tags:   Regimantas Adomaitis Regimantas Adomaitis Faktas 1981 Lituanian Actor Film Cine Kino Cinema Picture Screen Movie Movies Filmster Star Vintage Postcard Carte Postale Cartolina Tarjet Postal Postkarte Postkaart Briefkarte Briefkaart Ansichtskarte Ansichtkaart

N 4 B 5.5K C 0 E Sep 21, 2017 F Sep 20, 2017
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Soviet collectors card. Photo: publicity still for Vragi/Enemies (Rodion Nahapetov, 1979).

Regimantas Adomaitis (1937) is a Lithuanian film and stage actor. He is known in Russia, Germany, and other countries besides Lithuania.

Regimantas Adomaitis was born in Šiauliai, Lithuania in 1937. He graduated from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at Vilnius University. Later he studied acting at the acting department of the Vilnius Conservatory. He made a debut in the theatre, and had engagemenrs in Vilnius, Kaunas and Kapsukas. His film debut was Vienos dienos kronika/The Chronicle of one Day (Vytautas Zalakevicius, 1963) with Donatas Banionis. In 1966 he had his breakthrough with Niekas nenorėjo mirti/Nobody Wanted to Die (Vytautas Žalakevičius,1966). This action drama is set in a small Lithuanian farming community after the Second World War. The village is divided as the communists battle those in favor of national independence. When the leader of the community is killed, the man's four sons, including Adomaitis, set out to avenge his death. Adomaitis, director Žalakevičius. and cinematographer Jonas Gricius were awarded the USSR State Prize for the film in 1967. That year, he also acted in the a-typical Soviet war film Vostochny koridor/Eastern Corridor (Valentin Vinogradov, 1966) with Lyudmila Abramova. In the historical drama Sergey Lazo (Aleksandr Gordon, 1968), he played the title role of the Communist leader Lazo. He appeared as Edmund in the Soviet Shakespeare adaptation Korol Lir/King Lear (Grigori Kozintsev, Iosif Shapiro, 1971), starring Juri Jarvet. The Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich composed the score. Jugu Abraham at IMDb: “Kozintsev is one of least sung masters of Russian cinema. His cinema is very close to that of Tarkovsky and Sergei Paradjanov. Kozintsev's Lear is not a Lear that mourns his past and his daughters--his Lear is close to the soil, the plants, and all elements of nature. That's what makes Kozintsev's Shakespearean works outstanding.” In 1973, Adomaitis appeared in the Soviet drama Eto sladkoe slovo - svoboda!/That Sweet Word: Liberty! (Vytautas Žalakevičius, 1973). The film was shot in Chile shortly before 1973 Chilean coup d'état. The basis for the plot is a real story: the escape from San-Carlos prison in Venezuela of three political prisoners. The film was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize. Velnio nuotaka/Devil's Bride (Arūnas Žebriūnas, 1974) is the first Lithuanian musical about the victory of love over the trickery of the Devil based on the book Baltaragio malūnas (Whitehorn Mill) by Kazys Boruta. Due to its popularity it is sometimes called a Lithuanian Jesus Christ Superstar rock opera.

In East-Germany, Regimantas Adomaitis starred in Wolz - Leben und Verklärung eines deutschen Anarchisten/ Wolz - Life and Illusion of a German Anarchist (Günter Reisch, 1974) with Heidemarie Wenzel. Tom Dooley at IMDb: “Part comedy at one point, part political statement and a definite swipe at National Socialism, it is very ambitious and it pulls it all off. It has a great musical score too and the music adds to the moods tenfold. The acting is superb and Regimantas Adomaitis as Wolz is a power house.” For the DEFA, he also starred in Mann gegen Mann/Man Against Man (Kurt Maetzig, 1976). In the historical drama Yuliya Vrevskaya/Between the Tsar’s Court and the Battlefield (Nikola Korabov, 1978), Adomaitas played opposite Lyudmila Saveleva and Stefan Danailov. Other films were the Maxim Gorky adaptation Vrag/Enemies (Rodion Nahapetov, 1978) with Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy, the Soviet-Italian drama La vita è bella/Life Is Beautiful (Grigoriy Chukhray, 1979) with Giancarlo Giannini and Ornella Muti, and Poloska neskoshennych dikikh tsvetov/ A strip of unclosed wild flowers (Yuri Ilyenko, 1980). He returned to East-Germany for the drama Die Verlobte/The Fiancee (Günter Reisch, Günther Rücker1980) with Jutta Wachowiak as a woman sentenced in 1934 to ten years in prison for antifascist activities. The love between her and her fiancée enables her to survive it. He co-starred with Donatas Banionis in the Soviet Lithuanian-language war film Gruppa krovi nol/Faktas/Facts (Almantas Grikevicius, 1981). At the 1981 Cannes Film Festival, actress Yelena Solovey won the award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film. Other films include Iz zhizni otdykhayushchikh/Life on Holidays (Nikolay Gubenko, 1981), Skrydis per Atlanta/ The Flight Across the Atlantic Ocean (Raimondas Vabalas, 1984), Es ist nicht leicht ein Gott zu sein/It’s Hard to be a God (Peter Fleischmann, 1989), the war drama Angely smerti/Angels of Death (Yuriy Ozerov, 1993), with Fedor Bondarchuk and Powers Boothe, and the French-Russian drama Tu es.../You are… (Vladimir Makeranets, 1995). On TV, he appeared in the Soviet musical miniseries Trest, kotoryy lopnul/The Trust That Went Bust (Aleksandr Pavlovsky 1983) based on short stories by O. Henry. In 1985, Regimantas Adomaitis was a member of the jury at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival. Adomaitis has received many a Soviet Lithuanian-language war film wards of recognition. In 1988 he with other 34 prominent people created Sąjūdis Reform Movement, which eventually led to the declaration of independence of Lithuania on 11 March 1990. Regimantas Adomaitis now lives in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, where he works as an actor at the Lithuanian National Drama Theatre and regularly appears in TV series. His most recent film is the Norwegian drama Iskyss/The Ice Kiss (Knut Erik Jensen, 2008) with Ellen Dorrit Petersen. Adomaitis was married to singer Eugenia Baerite, who died in 2011. They have three children.

Sources: Jugu Abraham (IMDb), Tom Dooley (IMDb), Roman A. Ivanov (IMDb), Mubi, AllMovie, Wikipedia and IMDb.

Tags:   Regimantas Adomaitis Regimantas Adomaitis Lituanian Actor Film Cine Kino Cinema Picture Screen Movie Movies Filmster Star Vintage Postcard Carte Postale Cartolina Tarjet Postal Postkarte Postkaart Briefkarte Briefkaart Ansichtskarte Ansichtkaart Elena Solovey Elena Solovey Actress Russian American Vragi 1978 Collectors Card

N 3 B 4.5K C 0 E Oct 10, 2017 F Oct 9, 2017
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Soviet collectors card. Photo: publicity still for Yuliya Vrevskaya (Nikola Korabov, 1978).

Regimantas Adomaitis (1937) is a Lithuanian film and stage actor. He is known in Russia, Germany, and other countries besides Lithuania.

Regimantas Adomaitis was born in Šiauliai, Lithuania in 1937. He graduated from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at Vilnius University. Later he studied acting at the acting department of the Vilnius Conservatory. He made a debut in the theatre, and had engagemenrs in Vilnius, Kaunas and Kapsukas. His film debut was Vienos dienos kronika/The Chronicle of one Day (Vytautas Zalakevicius, 1963) with Donatas Banionis. In 1966 he had his breakthrough with Niekas nenorėjo mirti/Nobody Wanted to Die (Vytautas Žalakevičius,1966). This action drama is set in a small Lithuanian farming community after the Second World War. The village is divided as the communists battle those in favor of national independence. When the leader of the community is killed, the man's four sons, including Adomaitis, set out to avenge his death. Adomaitis, director Žalakevičius. and cinematographer Jonas Gricius were awarded the USSR State Prize for the film in 1967. That year, he also acted in the a-typical Soviet war film Vostochny koridor/Eastern Corridor (Valentin Vinogradov, 1966) with Lyudmila Abramova. In the historical drama Sergey Lazo (Aleksandr Gordon, 1968), he played the title role of the Communist leader Lazo. He appeared as Edmund in the Soviet Shakespeare adaptation Korol Lir/King Lear (Grigori Kozintsev, Iosif Shapiro, 1971), starring Juri Jarvet. The Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich composed the score. Jugu Abraham at IMDb: “Kozintsev is one of least sung masters of Russian cinema. His cinema is very close to that of Tarkovsky and Sergei Paradjanov. Kozintsev's Lear is not a Lear that mourns his past and his daughters--his Lear is close to the soil, the plants, and all elements of nature. That's what makes Kozintsev's Shakespearean works outstanding.” In 1973, Adomaitis appeared in the Soviet drama Eto sladkoe slovo - svoboda!/That Sweet Word: Liberty! (Vytautas Žalakevičius, 1973). The film was shot in Chile shortly before 1973 Chilean coup d'état. The basis for the plot is a real story: the escape from San-Carlos prison in Venezuela of three political prisoners. The film was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize. Velnio nuotaka/Devil's Bride (Arūnas Žebriūnas, 1974) is the first Lithuanian musical about the victory of love over the trickery of the Devil based on the book Baltaragio malūnas (Whitehorn Mill) by Kazys Boruta. Due to its popularity it is sometimes called a Lithuanian Jesus Christ Superstar rock opera.

In East-Germany, Regimantas Adomaitis starred in Wolz - Leben und Verklärung eines deutschen Anarchisten/ Wolz - Life and Illusion of a German Anarchist (Günter Reisch, 1974) with Heidemarie Wenzel. Tom Dooley at IMDb: “Part comedy at one point, part political statement and a definite swipe at National Socialism, it is very ambitious and it pulls it all off. It has a great musical score too and the music adds to the moods tenfold. The acting is superb and Regimantas Adomaitis as Wolz is a power house.” For the DEFA, he also starred in Mann gegen Mann/Man Against Man (Kurt Maetzig, 1976). In the historical drama Yuliya Vrevskaya/Between the Tsar’s Court and the Battlefield (Nikola Korabov, 1978), Adomaitas played opposite Lyudmila Saveleva and Stefan Danailov. Other films were the Maxim Gorky adaptation Vrag/Enemies (Rodion Nahapetov, 1978) with Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy, the Soviet-Italian drama La vita è bella/Life Is Beautiful (Grigoriy Chukhray, 1979) with Giancarlo Giannini and Ornella Muti, and Poloska neskoshennych dikikh tsvetov/ A strip of unclosed wild flowers (Yuri Ilyenko, 1980). He returned to East-Germany for the drama Die Verlobte/The Fiancee (Günter Reisch, Günther Rücker1980) with Jutta Wachowiak as a woman sentenced in 1934 to ten years in prison for antifascist activities. The love between her and her fiancée enables her to survive it. He co-starred with Donatas Banionis in the Soviet Lithuanian-language war film Gruppa krovi nol/Faktas/Facts (Almantas Grikevicius, 1981). At the 1981 Cannes Film Festival, actress Yelena Solovey won the award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film. Other films include Iz zhizni otdykhayushchikh/Life on Holidays (Nikolay Gubenko, 1981), Skrydis per Atlanta/ The Flight Across the Atlantic Ocean (Raimondas Vabalas, 1984), Es ist nicht leicht ein Gott zu sein/It’s Hard to be a God (Peter Fleischmann, 1989), the war drama Angely smerti/Angels of Death (Yuriy Ozerov, 1993), with Fedor Bondarchuk and Powers Boothe, and the French-Russian drama Tu es.../You are… (Vladimir Makeranets, 1995). On TV, he appeared in the Soviet musical miniseries Trest, kotoryy lopnul/The Trust That Went Bust (Aleksandr Pavlovsky 1983) based on short stories by O. Henry. In 1985, Regimantas Adomaitis was a member of the jury at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival. Adomaitis has received many a Soviet Lithuanian-language war film wards of recognition. In 1988 he with other 34 prominent people created Sąjūdis Reform Movement, which eventually led to the declaration of independence of Lithuania on 11 March 1990. Regimantas Adomaitis now lives in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, where he works as an actor at the Lithuanian National Drama Theatre and regularly appears in TV series. His most recent film is the Norwegian drama Iskyss/The Ice Kiss (Knut Erik Jensen, 2008) with Ellen Dorrit Petersen. Adomaitis was married to singer Eugenia Baerite, who died in 2011. They have three children.

Sources: Jugu Abraham (IMDb), Tom Dooley (IMDb), Roman A. Ivanov (IMDb), Mubi, AllMovie, Wikipedia and IMDb.

Tags:   Regimantas Adomaitis Regimantas Adomaitis Lituanian Actor Film Cine Kino Cinema Picture Screen Movie Movies Filmster Star Vintage Carte Tarjet Card Collectors Sammelkarte Lyudmila Saveleva Lyudmila Saveleva Actress Russian Yuliya Vrevskaya 1978


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