The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Soviet star and New Year's icon Andrei Myagkov dies at 82

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MOSCOW: Andrei Myagkov, a Russian actor whose box office hits including New Year's Eve favourite ‘The Irony of Fate' became iconic across the Soviet Union, has died in Moscow aged 82.

Myagkov starred in some of the biggest classics of Soviet cinema and ‘The Irony of Fate' – a 1976 romantic comedy – continues to be watched across Russia and the countries of the ex-Soviet Union on every New Year's Eve.

The press service of the Moscow Art Theatre (MKhAT), where Myagkov worked for decades, said that the ‘great artist who was loved by the people' passed away in the early hours of Thursday morning. The statement did not specify the cause of death.

Myagkov was born in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in 1938, as a child surviving the prolonged siege of the city during World War II.

At the start of his acting career Myagkov joined the troupe of the free-thinking Sovremenni­k Theatre in Moscow that was founded by young actors in the years of the ‘thaw' following the death of Joseph Stalin.

In 1977, Myagkov moved to MKhAT, the country's bestknown drama theatre, where he worked as an actor for many years, later becoming a teacher and director there.

However, it was Myagkov's roles in cinema that truly gained him popularity in the USSR.

He collaborat­ed with renowned director Eldar Ryazanov for a number of films including ‘The Irony of Fate', where Myagkov plays a Moscow surgeon who after drinking with friends on New Year's Eve is put on a plane to Leningrad and arrives thinking he is still in the capital. — AFP

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