The Day

Oleg Vidov, Soviet actor, defector, dies at 73

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Los Angeles (AP) — Oleg Vidov, a matinee idol in the Soviet Union who defected to the United States at the height of the Cold War and then enjoyed a long film and TV career in Hollywood, has died.

His wife, Joan Borsten Vidov, said he died Monday at their home near Los Angeles of complicati­ons from cancer. He was 73.

The blond, blue-eyed film star’s hero roles made Vidov a top box office draw in the U.S.S.R. starting in the 1960s. Russian audiences flocked to see him in fairy tales, romantic films and a 1972 cowboy movie called “The Headless Horseman,” which sold a reported 300 million tickets.

His work got attention from internatio­nal filmmakers, but his efforts to work abroad were blocked by the communist state, which also thwarted a foray into directing. So in 1985 Vidov orchestrat­ed an escape to the West through Yugoslavia. He was granted political asylum in the U.S. and landed in Southern California, where he was dubbed the “Soviet Robert Redford.”

He kicked off his Hollywood career with a small part in 1988’s “Red Heat” with Arnold Schwarzene­gger after director Walter Hill determined Vidov was too handsome to play the film’s bad guy, a Soviet drug kingpin.

“‘The camera just doesn’t think you are bad’,” Hill told Vidov, his wife recalled Tuesday. “But he loved working with Arnold.”

He went on to appear in 1990’s “Wild Orchid” with Mickey Rourke and Warren Beatty’s “Love Affair” in 1994. Days before his death, Vidov and his family re-watched “13 Days,” the 2000 political thriller in which he appeared alongside Kevin Costner as Valerian Zorin, the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

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