Bryleev Valentin Andreevich - a famous episodic actor of Soviet cinema. He almost did not get the main roles, but thanks to numerous film works, every spectator in the Soviet Union knew him in person.
Biography
The future actor was born in the ancient Russian city, which is mentioned in the annals of the XVI century - in Tula, on the first May day of 1926 in the most ordinary working-class family. When the child was 11 years old, because of the repression, the family moved to Lianozovo near Moscow.
Parents chose an engineering path for their offspring, and in 1943, Valentin entered the Moscow Construction College, after which he worked as a designer at a large plant. Then Bryleev understood the need for the country of a large number of engineers, designers and workers, who, who grew up within the framework of ideology, were driven by patriotism and love for the homeland.
Actor career
By 1950, peaceful life in the country began to improve, and Valentine began to think about his future and what really attracted him. Cinema was his passion, and in the same year he makes an attempt to enter the VGIK. To his own surprise, all entrance exams easily pass and quickly fall into the field of view of directors who invite a young promising student actor to episodic roles.
After graduating from an educational institution, Bryleev Valentin Andreevich becomes an artist of the State Theater of Film Actors, where he quickly becomes one of the most sought-after professionals. Basically, the roles in which Valentin starred were small, but in the loudest, most popular films and among the best directors. Working side by side with the stars of the time, Bryleev quickly becomes famous.
In his filmography, 179 works with vivid names: "Ivan da Marya", "Hussar Ballad", "Carnival Night", "Earthly Love" and dozens of other, various genres and styles. In his acting piggy bank there are military dramas, and wonderful tales and funny comedies of those years.
He performed on the stage several times. In addition, Valentin worked a lot with dubbing films, and in the nineties he was one of the actors in the entertaining and cognitive television game Wheel of History, showing himself to be a true master of theatrical reincarnation.