Viktor Verzhbitsky

Viktor Alexandrovich Verzhbitsky (Russian: Виктор Александрович Вержбицкий; born 21 September 1959) is an Uzbekistani-Russian film and stage actor.

In the theater, he played the role of Avrosimov in the Throat of Freedom by Bulat Okudzhava, Treplev in The Seagull by Anton Chekhov, Scipio in Caligula by Albert Camus, Obolyaninov in Zoykin's Apartment by Mikhail Bulgakov, Kolodzhero di Speleta in The Great Magic by Eduardo de Filippo and others.

In the Tashkent theater Ilkhom, Verzhbitsky played in the performances Dear Elena Sergeevna Lyudmila Razumovskaya (Volodya), The Scenes by the Fountain Semen Zlotnikov (Koshkin), The house that Swift built Grigory Gorin (Someone).

The list of the roles he played was supplemented by Guatinar in the "Revenge of the Queen" by Eugene Scribe and Ernest Leguwe, Dorant in the "Jourdain" by Jean-Baptiste Molière, Menshikov in the "Assembly" of Peter Gnedich.

They were filled with the role of the Lecturer in the "Guide for those wishing to marry" by Anton Chekhov, Okha in The Death of Tarelkin by Alexander Sukhovo-Kobylin, Lanchelot Gobbo and Antonio in William Shakespeare's "Shaylock", Henry Higgins in "My Fair Lady" Bernard Shaw, Beattie in "451 Fahrenheit" Ray Bradbury and others.

In cinema, Verzhbitsky was discovered by film director Timur Bekmambetov, who studied with the actor at the stage design department at the Tashkent Theater and Art Institute.

In the advertisement of the bank "Imperial" Verzhbitsky first played the emperor Nicholas I, whose character he later embodied in the series Poor Nastya and One Night of Love.