Childhood
Pyotr Fedorov was born in 1982, on April 21, in Moscow. He is the successor of the acting dynasty, the grandson of Evgeny Fedorov, Honored Artist of Russia, the elder brother of the famous Alexander Zbruev. The boy’s father, Pyotr Fedorov Sr., known to Russian viewers from the films “Starfall” and “At the Dangerous Line,” died young. Petya was raised in Altai until the eighth grade and had virtually no contact with his father. The boy was fond of painting and dreamed of becoming a student at the Moscow State University of Art and Industry. S. G. Stroganova. However, the death of his father changed Peter’s plans, and in 1999 he submitted documents to the B. Shchukin Theater Institute.
Coming from an acting dynasty. Biography
Family of Peter Fedorov
The current star of Russian cinema was born in Moscow on April 21, 1982. Peter's closest relatives are famous Soviet artists. The grandfather of the modern Russian sex symbol, Honored Artist of Russia Evgeny Fedorov, was lucky enough to work all his life in the legendary Moscow Theater named after. Vakhtangov. His younger brother on his mother’s side is the famous Soviet actor Alexander Zbruev.
In the photo: Peter Fedorov Sr.
The older generation of viewers remembers the father of the “Stalingrad” star, Pyotr Fedorov Sr., from “Starfall,” a film directed by the famous Soviet director Igor Talankin. The parent of the current celebrity was at one time the host of popular television programs for children. He also organized the first Moscow Roerich Society.
Life in the village
The personal life of Pyotr Fedorov Jr. changed when his parents divorced. The boy ended up in the Altai Territory with his mother. The future actor spent his childhood in a village located on the territory of the beautiful Uimon Valley. Local residents considered the guy a hooligan who, with his friends, often stole apples from neighbors' orchards.
The biography of Pyotr Fedorov took a new turn after his mother’s decision to move to Moscow. The teenager was already fourteen years old at that time. In the capital, he became an eighth-grader in one of the Moscow schools. As a child, Petya was fond of drawing and planned to become a student at Stroganov.
Admission to the theater institute
The personal life of Pyotr Fedorov took another sharp turn after his father, who was only forty years old, died of cancer in the early spring of 1999. The guy decided that he would continue the acting dynasty.
In the same year he became a student at the Theater Institute. Shchukin. True, during the examination tests Fedorov was unable to reveal all his talents due to excessive anxiety and poor preparation, since before that he had completely different plans for the future.
But teacher Pavel Lyubimtsev managed to discern acting talent in the insecure young man. Rodion Ovchinnikov became his teacher on the course. Fedorov’s graduation from the institute took place in 2003.
First roles
Pyotr Fedorov began acting in films while still a student at a theater university. His debut took place in the comedy “DMB”, where the actor played the cameo role of a conscript. Then Peter was involved in the film “The 101st Kilometer”, where he played the main role. His hero is the son of a banned writer, Lenka, who falls into the company of criminals. The actor claims that filming in this crime drama by Leonid Maryagin became for him the starting point in his creative biography and, perhaps, the greatest success in his career. Pyotr Fedorov, whose filmography includes more than forty works, graduated from Pike in 2003. He played the role of student Belyaev in the graduation performance “Beautiful People”. This production received a prize from the Moskovsky Komsomolets publication in the Beginners category as the best performance of the season. After graduating from the institute, Peter entered the service at the theater. K. S. Stanislavsky.
Filmography
By the end of his studies, Pyotr Fedorov showed himself to be a talented actor, because even in his student years he managed to perfectly cope with the role of a young guy living with criminals in the film “The 101st Kilometer”. And the graduation theater production, according to critics of the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, won in the “Beginners” category. For the young man, everything went like clockwork. Soon his talent was noticed, and Fedorov was invited to join the troupe. Stanislavsky.
Then he was involved in the films “Count Krestovsky”, “Reel in the Fishing Rods” and some other films. The actor became truly popular thanks to his filming in one of the most successful TV series in Russia, “The Club.” Playing the role of handsome major Danila, Peter shared the stage with many pop stars. Dima Bilan, Seryoga, Lazarev, Semenovich and many others appeared in the series. The series has 8 successful seasons, but Peter only starred in three, as he was already busy with a new global project. Working in one of the main roles in the film “Inhabited Island” by the famous director Fyodor Bondarchuk brought great popularity and the first decent fees.
This was followed by very hard and responsible work on the film “Russia 88”. Young Pyotr Petrovich Fedorov managed to prove himself as a director and composer. The film tells about a group of skinheads who provoked and agitated people with aggressive videos with violence. However, their order is disrupted when the sister of one of the gang members begins a relationship with a person of Caucasian nationality. Here Peter played the leader named Bayonet. After its premiere in 2008, the film immediately became known due to the scandal. Newspapers wrote about the lawsuit from the Samara prosecutor's office. The film was considered extremist. However, the claim was rejected.
After the release of the film “Russia 88”, journalists noticed some similarities between the characters Bayonet and Guy Gaal. Both of them find themselves trapped in prejudice and false information. Some critics call the heroes extremists. However, Peter himself claims that this is just a coincidence. The actor is happy to talk about his work during both filming processes. For the sake of Bondarchuk, Fedorov had to abandon all other projects, since the work was titanic. But when filming ended, the question arose about where to move next. Having lived the life of his hero, the artist himself matured significantly internally, and it was after this that he decided to make a truly deep movie. Subsequently, the film “Russia 88” appeared. Hard work on the verge of complete bankruptcy was still crowned with success and was even awarded several awards.
The next successful project in the career of Pyotr Petrovich Fedorov was the role of Captain Gromov in another successful film by Fyodor Bondarchuk “Stalingrad”. The film tells the story of several surviving soldiers and a young girl who, in spite of everything, without sparing themselves, continued to resist the enemy.
The young actor showed a new side when he played with Paulina Andreeva in the film “Locust”. A large number of sex scenes gave the film the name of the first erotic thriller of Russian cinema. This was the story of one young, kind guy from the outback, suffering from a strong sexual attraction to a spoiled Muscovite.
Working with Elizaveta Boyarskaya in the film “The Runaways,” Peter played the role of a young man who, together with a fellow traveler, is forced to overcome the taiga and go through all the related tests. The new action-packed adventure film was received with a bang by the audience.
Recognition and another dose of popularity brought Peter the role of a young foreman in the new film adaptation of the already famous film “The Dawns Here Are Quiet...”. Having brilliantly played the role of Vlasov, who commanded a group of five young snipers, Fedorov received the love and recognition of the public. Journalists wrote that it was his character who helped to accept the new version of the beloved film.
Peter played the foreman in the film “The Dawns Here Are Quiet...”
This was followed by a series of works in other films, and the actor also took part in the dubbing of foreign films in Russian.
Diverse images
At the very beginning of his acting career, Pyotr Fedorov established himself as an artist capable of creating a wide variety of images. In the film “Reel in the Fishing Rods,” he, together with Dmitry Bukhankin, played the roles of crazy guys Al and Max, who accidentally discovered a suitcase with a million dollars and, thanks to this, got into a very unpleasant story. In another film, the series “Tourists,” Peter appears in the image of the indecisive and timid Hera, who came on vacation to Turkey and fell under the influence of the active and cheerful guy Kolyan.
After working in the television project “Club,” actor Pyotr Fedorov became incredibly popular. The role of the rich and handsome playmaker, Major Danila, was very popular with television viewers. It was a very fashionable look. However, over time, the artist began to feel burdened by working in the series - filming dragged on, the script never ended. In addition, Peter was afraid of becoming a hostage to the image. However, Fedorov was lucky; immediately after filming “The Club,” he was offered a job in another interesting project.
New Horizons
A little time passes, the young actor Pyotr Fedorov, whose photo you can see in the article, comes to his senses and decides to continue his studies, but already at the Higher Theater School named after B.V. Shchukin. There he meets the head of the course, Rodion Yuryevich Ovchinnikov, a professional teacher who raised such actors as Alexander Lymarev, Irina Gorbacheva, Alexander Semchev, Grigory Antipenko.
Meanwhile, the skills of actor Pyotr Petrovich Fedorov are being honed, and his skill and knowledge of the artistic field is increasing. In 2003, he was about to graduate, where the actor played in the production “Beautiful People,” based on the work of the great Turgenev I. S. He had to get used to the role of student Belyaev, which turned out well. Soon the production wins the prize of the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper and is recognized as the best in its category.
Painting "Inhabited Island"
Director Fyodor Bondarchuk offered the actor a role in his new feature film “Inhabited Island.” According to Peter, when auditioning for the role of a strange alien warrior, he had little idea who he actually needed to portray. He had not read the book by the Strugatsky brothers, but only glanced at an excerpt from the script. How Bondarchuk managed to see Guy Gahal in the short and thin guy is unknown, but the director was not mistaken. Peter quit drinking and smoking, started going to the gym and in a short time gained the necessary muscle mass. Fedorov admits that his role in “The Inhabited Island” made him a man, because for the sake of this work he had to take great care of himself. The image of the space warrior Gaahl was one of the most convincing in the film; viewers and critics liked Peter’s performance.
Filmography of actor Pyotr Fedorov
After graduating from college, the guy is immediately taken to the Stanislavsky Theater, where his professional career begins. Peter's appearance was always outstanding and attractive, which allowed him to quickly be remembered by the public. Films such as “Count Krestovsky”, “Men’s Season”, “101 Kilometers”, “Reel in the Fishing Rods” were the first in the actor’s filmography.
However, it gained particular popularity thanks to the cult series on the MTV channel “The Club”. The ratings for this series are amazing and are a record for the channel's existence. The series is a film consisting of 156 episodes and 8 seasons. Pyotr Fedorov received the main role and became famous throughout Russia. Many believe that the image of Danila’s club “honeypot” has not left the actor to this day.
The next important step in Peter’s life was his collaboration with the cult Russian director Fyodor Bondarchuk. The role was one of the main and at the same time responsible. Corporal Guy Gaal from the film “Inhabited Island” will be remembered for a long time.
Film "Russia 88"
In his interviews, Pyotr Fedorov, whose filmography includes films of various genres, claims that he is interested in controversial roles. Heroes in whose souls there is an internal struggle, whose reputation cannot be called absolutely positive or negative. In the film “Russia 88” the actor played the head of a neo-Nazi group nicknamed Bayonet. In this tape, skinheads beat people, film the process and post the videos on the Internet. Bayonet finds out that his sister is dating a Caucasian man and tries to deal with the guy. A family conflict arises, which develops into tragedy. A pseudo-documentary about the life of neo-Nazis caused a negative reaction among some viewers. In 2010, the prosecutor's office of the Samara region filed a lawsuit to confiscate all the footage as extremist. The filmmakers were dragged through the courts for three years before being left alone. The film collected many awards at various film festivals.
Movie
Peter began acting in films in 2000, while still a student. The first episodic role was in the comedy “DMB”. In the drama “The 101st Kilometer” the aspiring actor appeared in his first leading role. Peter played Lenka, the son of a banned writer who falls into bad company. The actor's real popularity came from filming the youth series "Club". The actor starred in this project for several seasons. Peter's hero is a spoiled young man, the son of an oil tycoon and club owner. He is handsome, rich and charming.
In 2007, Pyotr Fedorov starred for ten months in Fyodor Bondarchuk’s science fiction films “Inhabited Island” and “Inhabited Island. Fight." He approached the role of Guy Gaal with all seriousness. To resemble his character, Peter increased his sports activities, quit smoking and drinking, and gained the necessary muscle mass. He admits that he would never have had enough willpower to do this, but thanks to the role he was able to achieve results.
Next was the dramatic film by Pavel Bardin “Russia 88”. In this project, Peter acted not only as an actor, but as a producer and composer. The film about a gang of skinheads turned out to be very controversial; the creators were accused of promoting extremism. Pyotr Fedorov said about these events: “It seems wild to me that the film is so literally identified with reality. We tried with all our might to avoid any kind of visual cruelty - there wasn’t even blood, everything was done as nicely as possible. Nevertheless, we were dragged through the courts for three years - it’s a funny story: they wanted to assign the label “Extremist materials” and remove it from circulation throughout the country.” The film received many awards: a special prize “Event of the Year” at the National Award of Film Criticism and Film Press “White Elephant”, a special jury prize and the prize of the Guild of Film Critics and Film Critics at the “Spirit of Fire” festival, and the premiere of the film “Russia 88” was a success at Berlinale 2009 as part of the “Panorama” program.
In 2011, a film about the most adventurous machinations of the end of the last century, “PiraMMMida,” was released, in which Fedorov got one of the key roles. His partners on the site were Alexey Serebryakov and Fyodor Bondarchuk.
Peter played in such war films as “Stalingrad” and “The Dawns Here Are Quiet...”. The filmography of this young actor already includes more than 55 films, in half of which Peter plays leading roles.
Other roles
In 2009, Pyotr Fedorov received an invitation to star in the film “PiraMMMida”, where he brilliantly played one of the main roles - the child prodigy Anton. The plot for this film was the creation of the same name by Sergei Mavrodi. In 2010, the actor had the opportunity to star in two films - the American film “Phantom” in the role of cadet Batkin Anton and the TV series “Diamond Hunters”. Fedorov appeared in the same frame with Elizaveta Boyarskaya in the film “The Witch’s Key” based on the story of the same name by Gleb Pakulov. The film takes place among taiga forests, in protected areas, at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. There was no cell service at the filming location, and the filmmakers felt truly cut off from the world. Comedy roles in the films “Yolki-2” (2011), “Moms” (2012), “A Man with a Guarantee” (2012), “Yolki-3” (2013) brought great success to Peter. In 2012, Fedorov starred in F. Bondarchuk’s feature film “Stalingrad,” which in 2013 was nominated by Russia for the Oscar for best foreign language film. Together with Peter, the main roles in this film were played by Yanina Studilina, Thomas Kretschmann, Maria Smolnikova. “The Habit of Parting” is another interesting film with Fedorov’s participation. This picture appeared in Russian box office in 2013. It tells about the psychology of relationships between a man and a woman, about how different points of view on the same situation can be among representatives of the opposite sex.
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His hero was surrounded in life only by criminals and outcasts.
The Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper awarded a prize in the “Beginners” category to the graduation performance “Beautiful People,” in which Pyotr Fedorov took part.
After graduating from the institute, the aspiring actor began working in the theater. Stanislavsky.
Films starring Pyotr Fedorov
The biography of Pyotr Fedorov in cinema is very rich. Now he is regularly offered leading roles in the highest-rated Russian films and TV series. The actor’s first audience success came after the premiere of the popular youth television project “Club,” which was recognized as the best series on the MTV Russia channel.
In the photo: Pyotr Fedorov in the TV series “Club”
Fedorov became the “golden boy” in him, the capital’s playboy Danila, whose father runs a famous Moscow nightclub. Even before meeting the actor, Pyotr Fedorov’s future common-law wife Nastya Ivanova watched this series with interest.
In “The Inhabited Island,” Fyodor Bondarchuk entrusted the rising star of Russian cinema to embody one of the central images of this story on the screen. The young actor became Corporal Guy Gaal.
In the film "Inhabited Island"
The creative biography of Pyotr Fedorov contains a scandal associated with the film “Russia 88”, for which the actor wrote the script and music. The main characters of the film are skinheads.
In the photo: Fedorov in the film “Russia 88”
Critics were not too favorable to this work by Fedorov. In the film, he became the leader of the criminal group Bayonet. The film was released in 2009, and a year later the Samara prosecutor's office opened a criminal case. The creators of Russia 88 were accused of extremism.
The trial lasted for three years. At the same time, the film received the National Film Critics Award “White Elephant” as “Event of the Year”, however, audiences never saw it at the box office. During this period, Pyotr Fedorov’s personal life was not entirely successful. Problems came at him from all sides.
Salvation came from Fyodor Bondarchuk, who offered the actor one of the main roles in his “Stalingrad”. So Fedorov became captain Gromov. It is worth noting that this film by Bondarchuk was the first in Russia to be shot in IMAX 3D format.
In the photo: in the film “Stalingrad”
In less than two weeks, “Stalingrad” earned over 1 million rubles at the box office. It was the highest-grossing film in Russia in 2013. He was among the Oscar nominees.
Two years later, Fedorov became Sergeant Major Vaskov in the military drama “The Dawns Here Are Quiet...”.
Awards
Director Pyotr Fedorov twice received awards at the Independent International Film Festival “Pure Dreams-DeboshirFilmFest” for his work on the film “BLOOD” in 2005 and the film “PER RECTUM” in 2006. The actor became a laureate of the Triumph 2009 award and was awarded the Actor of the Year award at the GQ Man of the Year 2009 ceremony. For the film “Russia 88”, created together with Pyotr Bardin, he was awarded the “Georges” Prize for the most daring film and a special prize from the organizing committee of the “Cut!” in 2010 year. Fedorov’s main role in the film “Gop-Stop” was awarded the New York Academy of Film Award at the “Smile, Russia!” festival. The actor received another Georges award for dubbing the film Buried Alive in 2011.
“All kinds of rabble go to the cinema”
For the third time we meet Fedorov on Gogolevsky Boulevard after shooting the cover of this issue and, to end the conversation, we go to the nearest bar. For the actor, who disappears for six months on set, the variety of wine bars is new, but he does not dwell on this thought for long, obsessively returning to the same questions. Where do actors have “that fucking line” between their profession and life? How to talk about people if you don’t have time for them? And when time appears, how to communicate with people without turning this communication into a benefit? And, most importantly, how to film and act in a country where there is no film industry?
Suit, BRUNELLO CUCINELLI T-shirt, BOSS
Throughout his 17-year film career, Fedorov returned to these thoughts and once reached the point of psychosomatic disorder. The advertising campaign for “Inhabited Island” in 2008 was more like carpet bombing: every day for a month, Vasily Stepanov, Yulia Snigir, Pyotr Fedorov and other actors gave three, four, sometimes five interviews. The car picked up the actors in the morning and delivered them to TV channels, radio stations, and tabloid editorial offices. A month passed, and Fedorov fell ill. The sound of his own voice made him sick. “For almost a year I was systematically afraid of meetings, feasts - God forbid they ask me something and I have nothing to answer. I suffered wildly, I thought it would last my whole life.” The frustration has passed, but now he sets a condition in every contract - no more than three interviews dedicated to the release of the film. He formulated his rejection of excessive publicity as follows: “An actor is a phantom, these are your images. Your instrument is your nuances, why waste them? There is no need to create a relative effect among the whole country.”
The next after the dystopia of Fyodor Bondarchuk was the low-budget pseudo-documentary drama “Russia 88” by Pavel Bardin, whom Fedorov met on the TV series “Club”. The script, written jointly, was based on a common interest—research, the actor emphasizes—in subcultures in general and the Nazi skinhead subculture in particular. The film showed with amazing authenticity the life and morals of neo-Nazi teenagers, busy implementing their complex ideas, in which “Mein Kampf” became related to the “Veles Book”, and British rock - with domestic shit-punk. To finish the film, Pavel Bardin had to sell his apartment. Many actors who auditioned refused to film after learning that the immediately announced fee of $50 per shift was no joke. As a result, they selected people they knew: relatives of the Caucasian Robert were played by artists Georgy and Konstantin Totibadze, and the role of one of the skinheads was played by Race to Space participant Alexander Turkunov. The editing director was Pyotr Fedorov himself.
Having gained 20 kilograms of muscle mass for filming in “Inhabited Island,” Fedorov appeared in “Russia 88” as a young man bursting with adrenaline with a square chin and a look in which any absence of fear and reflection could be read—“blue eyes and a hot forehead,” according to Mandelstam. Living with his mother and sister in Tushino, 21-year-old Shtyk is the leader of a neo-Nazi gang. He leaves behind a small mountain of corpses: his sister Yulia, who is dating a Caucasian man named Robert, Robert himself, and his comrades who died in a shootout with his relatives - a mentor in the “white revolution” Kliment Klimentovich, who is also a school teacher of life safety, and his beloved pit bull.
In 2009, the film received the Nika Award as the discovery of the year and was well received at the Berlin Film Festival, but none of the major Russian companies rented it. And in December of the same year, the prosecutor’s office of the Samara region filed a lawsuit for the confiscation and removal from civil circulation of the film “Russia 88” as extremist. The formal reason was the operational search activities of the local FSB: they revealed that citizens Valeev O.R. and Rustamkhanov R.A. independently watched “Russia 88” and saw signs of extremism in it. Bardin and Fedorov went to the trial in Samara and even found Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences Shamil Makhmudov - previously sentenced to seven years probation for bribery - who, commissioned by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, became the author of an expert report and found “incitement of hatred and enmity” in the film: “Moral and aesthetic an unformed reader may take this material as a signal to fight for the establishment of the Russian nation in competition with representatives of other nationalities on the principle of “me and the world.” A year later, the prosecutor’s office withdrew the lawsuit, but in February 2016, by decision of the Naryan-Mar court, the film “Russia 88” was again declared extremist. Pavel Bardin then argued that the reason for the persecution should not be considered the depiction of neo-Nazis itself, but rather their cooperation with the state: in “Russia 88” the Bayonet gang is protected by a local police officer, and a conditional deputy played by Andrei Merzlikin offers participation in serious business - protecting rallies and marches, propaganda work among young people. Also in 2009, human rights activist Stanislav Markelov and journalist Anastasia Baburova were killed by neo-Nazis - this murder formed the basis of the case of BORN, the “military organization of Russian nationalists.” At the trial, the militants spoke about their connections with employees of the Presidential Administration and pro-Kremlin youth movements.
It did not succeed in wide release, and the filmmakers did not prevent its distribution on the Internet. Downloaded on torrents by the majority of its viewers, the drama became perhaps the main event of Russian cinema for several years and ideologically ended the 2000s, which began with “Brother 2”. Bardin managed to go beyond admiring shaved heads and panel high-rise buildings - “Russia 88” talks about teenagers who grew up without fathers from a residential area, past which the financial flows of the “fat” 2000s passed by, but corruption, drugs, cheap vodka and an ideological vacuum never went away. Fedorov smiles, remembering all the times when on the street he was recognized as Bayonet - much more often than Guy Gaal from The Inhabited Island.
After Russia 88, Fedorov said that he would continue to act only in original films. Did not work out. By the age of 34, the actor’s biography was adorned with a free adaptation of Sergei Mavrodi’s autobiography “PiraMMMida”, and the role of Captain Gromov in “Stalingrad” by the same Bondarchuk, and participation in the remake of the Soviet classic “The Dawns Here Are Quiet”, and a comedy with characteristic titles “A Man with guarantee" and "Odnoklassniki: call for luck." However, now the actor takes it calmly: “I can’t help but participate in craft work at all. But there should be absolutely free work that you do yourself with like-minded people. Since I have my own personal audience, I must comply. You can't just make money from these people. What's worse: advertising or a fucking TV series? In my opinion, the series is fucked.”
Recently Fedorov was persuaded to star in the series “Bitch” for STS, directed by Oksana Bychkova. The producers assured that the channel had reformatted and was ready to create truly high-quality projects. But somewhere in the middle of filming at STS, the management changed, and after it the team of the series - Fedorov calls it a raider takeover. Even the operator changed: “Where was the last time I saw him? That's right, on the set of "Club". A production drama about employees of a city publication, hipsters from the outback, turned into a grotesque farce with stilted characters. But when Fedorov wanted to leave the project, it turned out that somewhere in the contract, in fine print, the payment of a huge penalty was written down - such that it would not even help to sell the car.
The need to finish filming brought the actor to the brink of despair, and he continued the experiments with alcohol that he had begun during a previous professional crisis. I came out of them rumpled and haggard, but with a sober understanding of the main problems of the domestic industry: “I always liked cinema better than theater, because all kinds of rabble come here: some have three degrees, some have none at all. But there was a time when many people brought their own - relatives, friends, fellow countrymen. It turns out that cinema is not a profession, but a resource from which you can make money. Half variety, half some kind of bullshit. Producers choose money projects, although this is still mathematics, but because of it there are more compromises and commercial films. And everything complicated is closed with the wording “this is the time.”
Personal life
Peter met his beloved girlfriend, Nastya Ivanova, in 2003 in the company of mutual friends. The girl attracted the guy's attention with pink UGG boots. It was love at first sight. Nastya turned out to be a very responsible and serious girl who has made a successful career in the modeling business. Ivanova is from a very wealthy family; her parents consider it a misalliance to marry a young actor, whose material wealth depends on the roles offered. However, Peter Fedorov’s personal life has been connected with Nastya for many years. Despite their busy work schedule, this beautiful couple finds time for each other. Many people learned about the relationship between the young people after a photograph of them together appeared on the cover of Sobaka.ru magazine. This photo shows the couple naked. Petya and Nastya reacted calmly to the scandal that arose, not seeing anything reprehensible in their action. The future wife of Peter Fedorov is a model and a very beautiful girl.
Biography and personal life of Peter Fedorov
The biography and personal life of Peter Fedorov is something that is worth paying special attention to. Peter was born in the capital and his future, it would seem, was already predetermined by the fact that the guy was born into an acting family. But we have already mentioned that, even despite this fact, the guy did not even think about continuing the dynasty, much less seriously succeeding in it. Soon after his birth, the family moved to Altai for some time, but in the eighth grade the boy went back to school in the capital. Petya was a rather restless boy, but he did not offend anyone. His whole rebellious nature consisted of climbing abandoned construction sites or stealing neighbor's apples.
In high school, Fedorov unexpectedly began to show interest in drawing. The guy even planned to enter the art academy, but fate ruined his plans. Even before Peter graduated from school, his father died. And to pay tribute to him, the guy entered the theater institute. The entrance exams were not that great, but one of the commission members was able to discern a talent in him that others did not see. That's why I gave him a chance to study.
If we talk about his personal life, Fedorov is not married yet, but he has a lover. The actor's girlfriend was model Anastasia Ivanova. The couple met about fifteen years ago, and their romantic relationship began then. Both are striving to develop their careers and are not even thinking about children yet. And needless to say, all these years Anastasia’s parents remain confident that their daughter did not choose the best groom for herself. Considering how fickle the demand for actors is. After all, in this case, your wealth is directly proportional to your employment on the set. But Nastya seems to still be happy with Peter, so the parents, it seems, will have to come to terms with their daughter’s choice.