Yurii Illienko

AKA: Іллєнко Юрій Герасимович, Yuriy Illyenko, Ю. Ильенко
0.4401

1936-05-09

Cherkasy, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Ukraine]

Biography

Yuri Illienko (18 July 1936 – 15 June 2010) was a Ukrainian film director and screenwriter. He directed twelve films between 1965 and 2002. His 1970 film The White Bird Marked with Black was entered into the 7th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize. Illienko was one of Ukraine's most influential filmmakers. His films represented Ukraine and what was happening to it. His films were banned in the USSR for their suspected anti-Soviet symbolism. Only in the recent years have his films been re-released and open to the public. Illienko was born in Cherkasy in 1936 but during World War II his family was evacuated to Siberia while his father was in the Red Army. He graduated high school in Moscow and Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in 1960. From 1960 till 1963 he worked as a director of photography at the Yalta Film Studio. In 1963 Illienko started his work as an operator and then a director at Dovzhenko Film Studios. His 1965 film Spring for the Thirsty (written by Ivan Drach) and 1968 film Vechir Na Ivan Kupala where both banned by the Soviet authorities till 1988. His 1971 film The White Bird Marked with Black, received the grand prize of the Moscow Film Festival, but at the 24th Congress of the Communist Party of Ukraine the film was (also) banned and branded "the most harmful movie that has ever been made in Ukraine, specifically for young people". His next film, To dream and to live (written in collaboration with Ivan Mykolaichuk), was stopped 42 times at various stages of production. Illienko then emigrated to Yugoslavia, where he shot the film To live in spite of everything. The film won "Silver" at Pula Film Festival and the prize for best actor. In the Ukrainian SSR, the picture was not allowed to be shown. His 1983 film Lisova pisnia. Mavka won the FIPRESCI Prize. In 1987 Illienko received the title of People's Artist of Ukraine. Yuriy Ilyenko created the independent film studio Fest-Zemlya, where he made the first non-state film in Ukraine. His 1990 film "Swan Lake "The Zone"" again won the FIPRESCI Prize. In 1991 and 1992 Illienko was Chairman of the Ukrainian Cinema Foundation. in 1991 he was awarded the Shevchenko National Prize. His 1994 documentary about Serhiy Parajanov received the "Golden Knight" at the film festival Cinema City. In 1996 he became a member of the Academy of Arts of Ukraine. His 2002 film A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa was banned from rental in Russia. Illienko died of cancer on 15 June 2010 at the age of 74.

Crew Roles

A Spring for the Thirsty
Director
A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa
Director
A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa
Screenplay
A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa
Director of Photography
The Last Bunker
Screenplay
Swan Lake: The Zone
Director
Defying Everybody
Director
The White Bird Marked with Black
Director
A Story of the Forest: Mavka
Director
A Story of the Forest: Mavka
Screenplay
The Eve of Ivan Kupalo
Director
The Eve of Ivan Kupalo
Writer
A Strip of Uncut Wild Flowers
Director
Paradzhanov: Christ score in C major
Director
Paradzhanov: Christ score in C major
Director of Photography
Straw Bells
Director
Straw Bells
Screenplay
Straw Bells
Director of Photography
Mirgorod and Its Inhabitants
Screenplay
The Legend of Princess Olga
Director
The Legend of Princess Olga
Writer
The Feast of the Baked Potato
Director
To Dream and to Live
Director
A Story of the Forest: Mavka
Director of Photography
Ave Maria
Director of Photography
To Dream and to Live
Screenplay
Out of Boredom
Screenplay
The White Bird Marked with Black
Writer
A Strip of Uncut Wild Flowers
Writer
My Son is Somewhere
Director of Photography
Swan Lake: The Zone
Director of Photography
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors
Director of Photography
Farewell, Doves
Director of Photography
Swan Lake: The Zone
Writer
A Spring for the Thirsty
Director of Photography
Cast RolesCast Roles Played = {9}