
Actor
Alasgar Alakbarov
Born 1910 · Baku, Bakinskaya guberniya, Russian Empire
Alasgar Hajiagha oglu Alakbarov (Azerbaijani: Ələsgər Ələkbərov) PAU (People's Artist of the USSR), was a Soviet and Azerbaijani actor. He was born to a family of a poor merchant. He developed passion for acting and music while still a child by watching street performances and listening to dervishes' singing. In 1920 his father deceased and he along with his siblings was raised by his mother the tailor. Until age 15 he attended a drama club where he learned basics about acting and theatre. Alasgar Alakbarov received his postsecondary education at a performance arts college in Baku in 1930. During the next three years he worked with the troupes at various Azeri theatres in Azerbaijan and Georgia. Starting in 1933 until his death, he worked at the Azerbaijan State Academic Drama Theatre. He specialized mostly in tragical roles. His most famous roles were those of Vagif (Vagif by Samad Vurghun) and Othello (Othello by William Shakespeare). During his 30-year career he played Vagif around 700 times. Critics characterised his performance as extremely spirited and emotional. Along with theatre, Alakbarov also pursued career in film. Alakbarov's first movie appearance was made in Vulkan uzarinda ev in 1929. He also starred in renowned Azerbaijani films such as Latif, Almaz, Kandlilar, Stepmother, On Distant Shores, The Great Support, etc. In 1961 Alakbarov became People's Artist of the USSR after participating in a 1959 cultural event in Moscow dedicated to the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic.
Acting

Heirs
падре Агила · 1960

On Distant Shores
Ferrero · 1958

The Shadows are Crawling
Rashid Sardarli · 1958

Fatali Khan
Fatali Khan · 1947

Stepmother
Huseyn · 1958

The House on the Volcano
Hasan · 1929

The Peasants
Aşıq Göydəmir · 1939

The New Skyline
Aslanov · 1941

Almas
Fuad · 1936

The Great Support
Rustam · 1962

Leyli and Majnun
Sheikh Amiri · 1961
Sovgat
Ayaz · 1942

The Sixth Sense
Heydar · 1935

The Morning
Rahim bey · 1960
The Black Stones
Gudrat Ismailzadeh · 1956