Nurmukhan Zhanturin

Birthday: 1928-04-22
Deathday: 1990-05-02
Birthplace:
Gender: Male
Owned By: Unowned

Nurmukhan Zhanturin was born in the settlement of Kondaurovo, Guriev Region (now known as Atyrau Region, Kazakhstan) on April 22, 1928. At the age of 14 he started working as an operator's assistant in a Guriev oil prospecting group, and later attended motion picture operator courses in Alma-Ata. He graduated from Alma-Ata Movie School in 1950 and the Acting Dept. of the Ostrovsky Institute of Performing Arts (Tashkent) in 1952[4] and soon joined Auezov Theater. His first screen roles go back to 1948, while 1967 saw Zhanturin officially employed at Kazakhfilm Studios. He returned to the theater in 1988 and continued to work there until his death in 1990.

Zhanturin's best-known roles include Chokan Valikhanov (eponymous play by Sabit Mukanov), Kodar (Kozy Korpesh — Bayan Sulu by Gabit Musirepov), Kebek and Syrym (Enlik-Kebek and Karakoz by Mukhtar Auezov), Arman (One Tree Does Not Make a Forest by Abdilda Tazhibaev), Kaben (Unquenchable Fire by Zeinulla Kabdulov), Sanzhan (Unfunny Comedy by Akim Tarazi), Doctor (The Forgotten Man by Nâzım Hikmet), Sintaro (A Woman's Life by Kaoru Morimoto), Molière (The Cabal of Hypocrites by Mikhail Bulgakov), as well as Iago and Macbeth in Shakespeare's Othello and Macbeth (the latter in a production at the Seifullin Theater in Karaganda).

Mark Donskoy spotted Zhanturin's talent when scouting the Central Asia for actors for his movie Alitet Leaves for the Hills (after a 1950 novel by Syomushkin). Nurmukhan played the role of a young man named Tumatuge. This first screen role paved his way to popularity. Nurmukhan's other well-known roles included Kerim (Daughter of the Steppes, 1954), Dzhoomart (Saltanat, 1955), Alzhanov (On the Wild Coast of the Irtysh, 1959), Abakir (Heat, 1962), Tagay (Dzhura, 1964), Tanabay (The Trotter's Gait, 1968), Ablaykhanov (The End of the Ataman, 1970), Kurmangazy (Kurmangazy, 1974). He first appeared as Shoqan Walikhanov in the 1957 movie His Time Will Come (directed by Mazhit Begalin). Zhanturin's eponymous role in Sultan Baybars brought him a prize for Special Achievements in Acting (shared with Nonna Mordyukova) at Sozvezdie-90 USSR national festival. He performed a total of more than 50 roles on screen

Credits

Year Title Character
1991-04-01 Surzhekey: Angel of Death
1989-08-19 Sultan Beybars Sultan Baybars
1989-08-19 Beybars Sultan Beybars
1988-10-01 Amulanga
1988-02-10 Bizzare World of Hopes and Dreams
1987-07-28 Prince Danylo Halytskyi Batu Khan
1987-06-01 Golden Woman дядя Евдей
1985-08-01 Fly, Crane
1984-01-01 Fear, Enemy, the Ninth Son Tasbol
1983-11-13 The Invincible Dshuma
1982-08-01 White Shaman
1982-08-01 Native Steppes
1982-01-01 Grandma the General
1982-01-01 Солёная река детства Зейнулла-ата
1980-02-14 A Month to Think
1979-11-14 The Decisive Battle
1979-06-01 The Treasure of the Black Mountains
1979-04-01 The Wolverine's Trail
1979-02-01 Жнецы Keldenov
1975-04-12 Genie's Space Adventures
1975-02-25 Beloved
1975-01-01 The Choice
1975-01-01 Steppe Roar
1973-05-02 Epiphany Voice
1973-04-30 The Seventh Bullet
1973-01-01 Where the Mountains are White
1972-11-27 Listen, on the other side Kamutabara
1971-05-04 White Square Bit part
1971-03-05 Nomadic Front Лопзон
1970-01-01 The End of Ataman Ablaikhanov
1969-12-01 Goodbye, Gyulsary!
1968-08-12 Road of a Thousand Miles Sardarbek
1965-01-01 Plane Tree on the Rock Ilyas
1964-08-10 Dzhura Tagay
1963-06-04 Heat Abakir
1959-08-01 On the Wild Coast of the Irtysh Alzhanov
1958-12-17 His Time Will Come
1955-11-24 The First Echelon
1954-05-10 A Poem About Love Kodar
1954-01-01 Daughter of the Steppes
1953-05-25 Zhambyl
1950-04-10 Alitet Leaves for the Hills