Alexander Dyachenko (actor)
Alexander Dyachenko | |
---|---|
Born |
Alexander Stanislavovich Dyachenko 12 June 1965 Leningrad, RSFSR, USSR |
Nationality | Russian |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 2000-parents |
Spouse(s) | Vera Dyachenko [1] |
Alexander Stanislavovich Dyachenko (Russian: Александр Станиславович Дьяченко; born June 12, 1965, Leningrad) is an actor, musician and producer.
Biography
Alexander Dyachenko was born on June 12, 1965 in Leningrad. He studied at Saint Petersburg Electrotechnical University.
He started acting in small roles in films and commercials and worked as a model for posters and publications. In 1994, he received an offer to try his hand in sports management. As a child Dyachenko loved hockey, he immediately agreed to work as an agent of the Russian hockey players. In 1998, Alexander left his job and moved to the U.S. where he received an actor's education, training in Los Angeles under the teacher Milton Katselos. He acted on stage in Chicago. [2]
His acting career in Russia began with the film Brother 2. In the film, he played the twin brothers Dmitry and Konstantin Gromov. He was cast in a number of Russian films and serials. From his youth Dyachenko has also been a musician; composing, arranging and performing on the guitar and singing. He has recorded some of his songs in a Chicago studio with well-known musicians. In 2012, Alexander, together with drummer Boris Lifschitsem Antigo created a musical project.
Selected filmography
- 2000 - Brother 2 as Dmitry Gromov / Konstantin Gromov
- 2001 - The lion's share as Musa Mahmaev
- 2002 - The Star as Galiev
- 2003 - Bajazet as Nazar Minayevich Vatnin, esaul
- 2004 - Women's intuition as Alexander
- 2005 - Women's Intuition 2 as Alexander
- 2006 - Wolfhound as Kanaon
- 2006 - Leshiy as Alexey Nikitin
- 2006 - Friend or foe as Denis Volkov
- 2008 - On the roof of the world as Dmitry
- 2011 - Seven men as Nikolai Voronsky
- 2012 - Hunting for Gauleiter as Yakov
- 2013 - Ash as Diego, Spaniard
- 2014 - Mazhor as Vladimir Yakovlevich Sokolovsky [3]