Mikhail Tarkhanov (actor)


Mikhail Mikhaylovich Moskvin was a Russian and Soviet stage actor and theatre director, better known by his stage name Mikhail Tarkhanov.
Having made his stage debut in 1898 on stage the Ryazan Theatre, he performed in numerous troupes before joining the Moscow Art Theatre in 1922 where he soon became one of the leading actors and, in the late 1920s, a stage director. In 1935 he started to teach drama and in 1942-1948 was the head of Russian Academy of Theatre Arts.
In 1937 Tarkhanov was awarded the prestigious People's Artist of the USSR title. He was the recipient on numerous high-profile Soviet state awards, including the Order of Lenin and the Order of the Red Banner of Labour as well as the Stalin Prize laureate.
In 1923-1937 he was cast in 9 films, most of them the Russian classics adaptations, including Raskolnikow, The Storm, The Youth of Maxim, Dubrovsky and Pyotr Pervyy.
The actor Ivan Moskvin was his younger brother.