In the twenties and thirties of the last century, Soviet cinema successfully competed with American. The directors and actors, inspired by the revolutionary impulse, created masterpieces that the whole creative world admired. It was during that period that the dreams of Soviet people about a fulfilling life were embodied on the screen. Ivan Fedorovich Pereverzev made his feasible contribution to the development of domestic cinema.
Village roots
For many centuries, the Russian Power rested on a peasant foundation. People's Artist of the Soviet Union Ivan Fyodorovich Pereverzev was born in the summer of 1914 into a peasant family. Parents lived in a village in the Oryol province. Strong guys were regularly recruited from these places to serve in the Navy. A child from young nails was brought up in the traditional rules. They did not shout at him, did not flog him with a belt, but accustomed to work and modest behavior in everyday life.
At first, Ivan's biography developed as a standard. The boy, inspired by the stories of the elders about the service of the sea and about the friendship of men, dreamed of becoming a sailor. But the circumstances were such that the young man had to go to Moscow and take a course at a factory school. Pereverzev, having received a professional education, got a job at a factory for the production of bearings. The young man watched how his comrades live in a dormitory and what achievements they dream of.
In 1936, Pereverzev was tempted by the persuasion of a friend and ventured to go to college at the Theater of the Revolution. Two years later, he completed his studies and got a job on the stage. He was invited to various roles in the Leningrad Drama Theater. Filmmakers noticed the textured guy and began to invite him to the set. Before the war, Ivan Pereverzev starred in several films, and they began to recognize him on the street.