Lyubetskii Fedor Ivanovich

Lyubetsky Fyodor Ivanovich "Cultural Worker", "Labor Veteran" Born on April 16, 1943, in the city of Odintsovo, Molavsk SSR, Fyodor Lyubetsky studied at the Semey Theater Studio from 1975 to 1978. When the second breath opened, the Honored Worker of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Fyodor Lyubetsky, easily makes us believe that he is not just an actor of the F.M. Dostoevsky Theater here and now on stage, but a simple commissioner Misho ("Lovers in Vernon"), a beloved pastor ("Monsieur Amédée"), or an unreliable husband ("The Flickering Lamp"). The high level of our master's craftsmanship was once again confirmed in September 2011 when the family lyceums participated in the Republican Theater Festival in Almaty with the play "The Death of Otrar" and received high praise from the jury, while Fyodor Lyubetsky received a Diploma for Best Male Role. According to Fyodor Ivanovich, as a child, he dreamed not of becoming an actor but of becoming an investigator. Immediately after leaving the orphanage, he set off for Tselina, coming to Kazakhstan from Moldova. After the army, he participated in the performances of the "Enthusiast" people's theater while serving in the police. Gradually, he began to understand his true purpose, and Lyubetsky, at the age of 33, took the risk of listening to the advice of those around him and "applying" to the professional stage. Enduring a large competition, Fyodor Ivanovich came under the hand of Viktor Mazhurin, the chief director of the F.M. Dostoevsky Theater, who trusted newcomers despite their lack of special education and the role of the main plan. "The theater is a wonderful living organism," says F. Lyubetsky. "Even if there are only three people left, plays for three actors will still be staged. For me and all my colleagues, the theater is a second home. Here we create, have fun, and grieve (without it, we cannot!). We have a wonderful team. There are no intrigues or hidden struggles. We are one family!" The actor believes that he performs well in roles that are characteristic of him, especially in "dynamic," principled characters filled with powerful energy. One of his favorite characters is Santa Claus, as performing in front of children is always the most complex and responsible exam for an artist. In fact, Fyodor Ivanovich is an example of both internal and external flexibility, without which it is hard to imagine a true artist. He truly enjoys the roles of "real men," capable of cutting through the truth, but he is also so organic in other images, and their hundreds are filled with applause in the actor's life. By the way, F. Lyubetsky had the opportunity to appear twice in the films "Cannibal" (1992) and "Golgotha," shot near Semey in the early 2000s, but which have not yet been released on screen. Interestingly, in "Cannibal," he played a political prisoner - Hungarian Istvan Korda, and in "Golgotha," he played an operative capturing escaped prisoners. According to the actor, it is a great tragedy for him when he cannot immediately reach the audience. And if an invisible connection occurs, then an impulse comes to the stage that opens the second breath of the artists, which helps not only to play but also to live!
