Vladimir Belokurov

Vladimir Vyacheslavovich Belokurov (Влади́мир Вячесла́вович Белоку́ров; July 8, 1904 – January 28, 1973) was a Soviet and Russian actor and pedagogue. He was a People's Artist of the USSR (1965) and won the Stalin Prize of the second degree.

Selected filmography

 * The House of the Dead (1932) as Stammering Announcer
 * Dawn of Paris (1937) as Prosecutor Rigot
 * Valery Chkalov (1941) as Valery Chkalov
 * Sabuhi (1941) as Bestujev
 * Military Secret (1945) as Peter Weininger, aka Petrov, aka Petronescu
 * The Village Teacher (1947) as Bukov, kulak
 * Zhukovsky (1950) as Sergey Chaplygin
 * Secret Mission (1950) as Bormann
 * Belinsky (1953) as Barsukov
 * Silvery Dust (1953) as Upton Bruce
 * A Fortress in the Mountains (1953) as Morrow
 * The Great Warrior Skanderbeg (1953) as King
 * The Boys from Leningrad (1954) as Vasiliy Tsvetkov, film director
 * Mikhaylo Lomonosov (1955) as Prokop Andreevitch
 * Son (1955) as Lavrov
 * A Weary Road (1956) as Latkin
 * Duel (1957) as Dits
 * Avalanche (1959) as Ataman Shkuro
 * Gloomy Morning (1959) as Lyova Zadov
 * Vasily Surikov (1959) as Kuznetsov
 * Dead Souls (1960) as Chichikov
 * Resurrection (1960) as Maslennikov
 * Striped Trip (1961) as boatswain
 * Flower on the Stone (1962) as father of Christina
 * Queen of the Gas Station (1963) as Medved
 * Moscow — Genoa (1964) as David Lloyd George
 * Across the Cemetery (1964) as Sazon Ivanovich Kulik
 * Poka front v oborone (1965) as Shorokhov
 * The Salvos of the Aurora Cruiser (1965) as Ministr
 * Alpine Ballad (1966) as Austrian
 * They're Calling, Open the Door (1966) as Sergey Korkin
 * The Elusive Avengers (1967) as Otets-filosof
 * The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers (1968) as bandit, named "holy father-philosopher
 * Honore de Balzac's Mistake (1969) as Zaritskiy
 * Däli Kür (1969) as Semyonov
 * Paytyun kesgisherits heto (1969)
 * Crime and Punishment (1970) as innkeeper (uncredited)
 * The Crown of the Russian Empire, or Once Again the Elusive Avengers (1971) as bandit, named holy father-philosopher
 * Chipollino (1973) as Tomato (final film role)