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Pyotr Zubrov

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Pyotr Zubrov
Portrait by Pyotr Borel. Vsemirnaya Illyustratsia, 1873
BornPyotr Ivanovich Zubrov
Пётр Иванович Зубров
1822
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died9 December 1873
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Occupationstage actor

Pyotr Ivanovich Zubrov (Russian: Пётр Иванович Зубров; 1822, in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia – 9 December 1873, in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia) was a Russian stage actor, associated with the Alexandrinsky Theatre.

Having debuted on stage in 1851, he achieved his first success as Gordey Tortsov in Alexander Ostrovsky's Poverty is No Vice, and since then excelled in many of the latter's plays' productions, as well as the works by Alexey Pisemsky (Nikashka in A Bitter Fate) and Nikolai Gogol (Gorodnichy in Revizor). Zubrov translated several plays into Russian and authored two original vaudevilles, The Deaf One Is to Blame (Глухой всему виной) and Honestly (Честное слово).

References

  1. Пётр Иванович Зубров at the New Russian Biographical Dictionary


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