5
42 min
This film was a true peculiarity, a filmed version of the great Feodor Chaliapin in one of his most famous roles; the fact that it was a silent film, with title cards, meant that audiences could only appreciate his acting. Another curiosity is that the film also included a minor role enacted by Richard Boleslavsky, who in 1932 directed “Rasputin and the Empress.”(9)
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Feodor Chaliapin Sr. | tsar Ivan IV the Terrible | Unowned |
Volk-Krachkovskaya | Olga | Unowned | |
Nikolai Saltykov | Tucha | Unowned | |
Glafira Chernova | Vera Sheloga | Unowned | |
E. Korsak | Perfilyevna | Unowned | |
Vladimir Bazilevskiy | Boris Godunov | Unowned | |
![]() |
Richard Boleslawski | Prince Vyazemskiy | Unowned |
Boris Sushkevich | Malyuta Skuratov | Unowned | |
![]() |
Mikhail Zharov | Soldier | Unowned |
Vladimir Karin | Soldier | Unowned |