
Viktor Avdyushko
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Male
Birthday
1925-01-11
Day of Death
1975-11-19 (50 years old)
Place of Birth
Moscow, Russian Empire [now Russia]
Viktor Avdyushko
Biography
Viktor Antonovich Avdyushko (Russian: Виктор Антонович Авдюшко; January 11, 1925 – November 19, 1975) was a Soviet actor and a People's Artist of the Russian SFSR.
Known For
Acting
(1977)
While the Mountains Still Stand...
as Валентин Славунец
(1976)
Jarosław Dąbrowski
as Wladislaw Ozierow
(1975)
(1975)
(1975)
(1975)
(1975)
(1974)
(1974)
Происшествие
as фотоохотник
(1973)
(1973)
I Don't Want to Make You Wait
as Fyodor
(1972)
Когда расходится туман
as Пётр Дьяконов
(1972)
Sun Seekers
as Sergei Melnikow
(1972)
The Dawns Here Are Quiet
as помкомвзвода
(1972)
Janus Head
as Slatkow
(1970)
Liberation: Direction of the Main Blow
as Maximov
(1970)
The End of Ataman
as Suvorov
(1970)
(1970)
(1969)
Subject for a Short Story
as peasant
(1969)
The Song of Manshuk
as Sukov
(1969)
Strange People
as председатель колхоза
(1969)
Ambush
as Pirozhenko (voice)
(1968)
(1968)
Liberation: The Fire Bulge
as Maksimov
(1967)
The Red and the White
as Sailor
(1967)
(1966)
Farewell
as Матвей Подымахин
(1966)
A Traveller with Luggage
as Chistov
(1966)
The Worker's Settlement
as Shalagin
(1965)
Thirty-three
as Misha
(1965)
(1965)
While Defending the Front Line
as Shaternikov
(1964)
Strict Game
as Aleksey Zadorozhny
(1964)
Ordinary Wonder
as трактирщик
(1963)
The Alive and the Dead
as старшина Шестаков, командир орудия
(1963)
Naked Among Wolves
as Bogorski
(1962)
(1962)
My Son is Somewhere
as Sailor
(1961)
Peace to Him Who Enters
as Виктор Авдюшко
(1961)
At the Beginning of the Century
as Prokhor Baskakov
(1960)
Russian Souvenir
as Spikhnulin
(1960)
(1959)
Gloomy Morning
as Ivan Gora
(1959)
Fathers and Sons
as Евгений Базаров
(1959)
(1958)
(1958)
(1957)
They Have Met on the Way
as Makar
(1957)
The Tight Knot
as Pavel Mansurov
(1956)
Hostile Whirlwinds
as Kovalyov
(1956)
(1955)
Heroes of Shipka
as Osnobishin
(1955)
(1954)
«Bogatyr» Goes to Marto
as inzhener Aleksey Kolos
(1951)