Georgi Yungvald-Khilkevich

His paternal grandfather came from Polish szlachta and owned railroads in Western Ukraine, while his wife Elena Cavalieri was an Italian; she was said to be the sister of the famous opera singer Lina Cavalieri who was very popular in the Russian Empire and regularly visited Kyiv with concerts.His first major breakthrough happened in 1969 with the musical film Dangerous Tour loosely based on the memoirs of Alexandra Kollontai.The screenplay was written with Vladimir Vysotsky in mind, who eventually played the main part, wrote all the songs and did some uncredited contribution to the final draft.[7] His 3-part made-for-TV adventure musical D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers was an ultimate success, with many songs and catchphrases becoming part of the popular culture.[3] His last film in the Musketeer series directed in 2007 and screened in 2009 was met with harsh critique and became a box office bomb.
TashkentUzbek SSRMoscowFilm directorscreenwriterRussiantheatre directorAlexandre DumasRussian SFSRUkraineImperial Russian ArmycommandantWarsawBolsheviksUzbek National Theater of Opera and BalletszlachtaItalianLina CavalieriOstrovsky Tashkent Theatrical InstituteMosfilmOdessa Film StudioDangerous TourAlexandra KollontaiVladimir VysotskyNikolai GrinkoYefim KopelyanIvan PereverzevGeorgi YumatovD'Artagnan and Three MusketeersThe Prisoner of Château d'IfThe Count of Monte CristoMark ZakharovAlexander GradskyThe Odessa TalesIsaac Babelpost-Soviet yearsTroyekurovskoye CemeteryThe Formula of RainbowHigher Than RainbowMusketeers Twenty Years AfterThe Secret of Queen Anne or Musketeers Thirty Years AfterThe Return of the Musketeers, or The Treasures of Cardinal MazarinRIA NovostiDmitry GordonSergey KudryavtsevMoskovskij KomsomoletsKinoPoiskThe Return of the Musketeers, or The Treasures of Cardinal Mazarini