Dimitri Buchowetzki

Russian film director
Dimitri Buchowetzki
Born
Dmitry Savelyevych Bukhovecky

1885
Russian Empire
Died1932 (aged 46–47)
Los Angeles, California
United States
Occupation(s)Film director
Film actor
screenwriter
Years active1918 - 1931

Dimitri Buchowetzki (1885–1932),[1] born Dmitry Savelyevych Bukhovecky, was a Russian film director, screenwriter, and actor in Germany, Sweden, United States, United Kingdom, and France.[2][3]

Life and career

Initially Buchowetzki studied law. Later he starred in a number of silent films, mostly playing antagonistic characters, including Yakov Protazanov’s melodramas Giant of the Spirit (1918) and Maidservant Jenny (1918). He played the hussar officer Minski in Aleksandr Ivanovski’s Pushkin adaptation The Stationmaster (1918) and appeared in the title role of Aleksandr Razumnyi’s pro-Bolshevik film Comrade Abram (1919). In 1919, Buchowetzki immigrated to Germany, via Poland, where he directed his most artistic works: the expressionistic Fedor Dostoevsky adaptation The Brothers Karamazov (1921), the historical drama Danton (1921, based on Georg Büchner’s play), and Othello (1922), all starring Emil Jannings. Bukhovetski also made high-budget period pictures such as Peter the Great (1922). Pola Negri, whom Buchowetzki had directed in the German-made Sappho (1924), invited him to Hollywood, where he directed her in a series of erotic melodramas, including Men (1924), Lily of the Dust (1926), and The Crown of Lies (1926).

Buchowetzki began work at MGM on Love (1927) with Greta Garbo and Ricardo Cortez. However, producer Irving Thalberg was unhappy with the early filming, and replaced Buchowetzki with Edmund Goulding, cinematographer Merritt B. Gerstad with William H. Daniels, and Cortez with John Gilbert.[4]

Selected filmography

Director

Screenwriter

References

  1. ^ Rollberg, Peter. The A to Z of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2010, p. 123.
  2. ^ BFI Database entry
  3. ^ IMDB entry
  4. ^ IMDB entry
  5. ^ UCLA Film and Television Archive has partial or complete copies of Danton, Sappho, Othello, and Midnight Sun
  6. ^ Antti Alanen Film Diary entry
  7. ^ Norma Talmadge webpage

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dmytro Bukhovetskyi.
  • Dimitri Buchowetzki at IMDb
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The films of Dimitri Buchowetzki
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • FAST
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
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  • WorldCat
National
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
  • Israel
  • United States
  • Poland
People
  • Deutsche Biographie


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