Tale About Czar Pyotr Arranging Arap's Wedding (1976)
June 6, 1976Release Date
Tale About Czar Pyotr Arranging Arap's Wedding (1976)
June 6, 1976Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Vladimir Vysotsky
Ibrahim
Aleksey Petrenko
Czar Peter I
Irina Mazurkevich
Natasha Rtishcheva
Semyon Morozov
Mikhailo Govorov
Valeriy Zolotukhin
Филька
Ivan Ryzhov
Gavrila Afanasyevich Rtishchev
Mikhail Kokshenov
Sergunka Rtishchev
Evgeny Mitta
Ванечка Ртищев
Mikhail Gluzskiy
Balakirev
Oleg Tabakov
Yeguzhinskiy
Lyudmila Chursina
Tsarina
Andrey Fayt
Abbot
Aleksandr Barushnoy
дипломат
Vladimir Kashpur
корабельный плотник
Vasiliy Kornukov
хозяин пушечного дела
Yuri Komarov
Де Кавиньяк
Viktor Makhov
придворный
Vladimir Menshov
офицер
Yury Martynov
офицер
Tatyana Nepomnyashchaya
дама на балу
Anatoliy Obukhov
Никишка Маслаков
Irina Pechernikova
Луиза Де Кавиньяк
Aleksandr Pyatkov
Иван
Klara Rumyanova
жена Гаврилы Ртищева
Yelena Rubtsova
бабушка Наташи
Nikolai Sergeyev
Афанасий Ртищев
Stanislav Chekan
маршал
Leonid Chubarov
придворный
Lyudmila Davydova
придворная дама, в титрах не указана
Andrey Vasilev
гардемарин, в титрах не указан
Aleksandr Pashutin
художник, в титрах не указан
Villor Kuznetsov
в титрах не указан
Media.
Details.
Release DateJune 6, 1976
Original NameСказ про то, как царь Пётр арапа женил
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 40m
Genres
Wiki.
How Czar Peter the Great Married Off His Moor (Russian: Сказ про то, как царь Пётр арапа женил, Skaz pro to, kak tsar Pyotr arapa zhenil) is a 1976 musical film directed by the Russian filmmaker Alexander Mitta. The film features Vladimir Vysotsky as the protagonist Abram Petrovich Gannibal, the African godson of Peter the Great. Also starring in the film are Aleksei Petrenko as Czar Peter, and Irina Mazurkevich as Natasha Rtishcheva. It is an adaptation of the book The Moor of Peter the Great by Gannibal's great-grandson Alexander Pushkin, written in 1827 and published in 1837. The music for the film was written by the composer Alfred Schnittke. In 1976, the film was the sixth most popular film in the Soviet Union, being seen 33,100,000 times.