At war's end, he studied filmmaking at
VGIK, the course led by
Sergei Yutkevich and
Mikhail Romm, and then developed his skills as a director's assistant at the
Kiev Film Studio. By the mid-1950s, he began writing and directing his own films at the
Mosfilm studio, gaining cinematic recognition outside the Soviet Union at the 1957
Cannes Film Festival with his film
The Forty-First (1956). Chukhray directed and co-wrote
Ballad of a Soldier (1959). Around the themes of love and the tragedy of war, the film received acclaim at home, earning the
Lenin Prize. It was heralded internationally for both its story and cinematic technique. At the 1960
Cannes Film Festival it was awarded a special jury prize for "high humanism and outstanding quality."
Ballad of a Soldier premiered in the
United States in 1960 at the
San Francisco International Film Festival. The film won the Festival's Golden Gate Award, for Best Picture and for Best Director for Grigory Chukhray. Playing worldwide, the following year, it earned the
BAFTA Award for Best Film. Grigory Chukhray and script co-writer
Valentin Yezhov were also nominated for the 1961
Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Chukhray's next film was
Clear Skies (1961). It told the story of a Soviet pilot who had survived
Nazi imprisonment during the war, but was accused of spying. It was one of the first Soviet films to deal with some of the repressive practices under the Soviet leadership of
Joseph Stalin. It won the Grand Prix (in a tie with
Kaneto Shindo's
The Naked Island) at the
2nd Moscow International Film Festival. Two years later Chukhray served as the president of the jury at the
3rd Moscow International Film Festival. Between 1966 and 1971, Chukhray headed the director's courses at
VGIK. In 1965, he founded and headed the Experimental Studio at Mosfilm that produced such films as
White Sun of the Desert (1970),
The Twelve Chairs (1971),
Ivan Vasilievich: Back to the Future (1973),
A Slave of Love (1976), and other popular movies. He also served as a member of the
State Committee for Cinematography between 1964 and 1991. In 2001, he published two volumes of memoirs entitled
My War and
My Cinema, dedicated to his war experience and his work in cinema, respectively. He was married to Iraida Chukhray (née Penkova), a teacher of Russian language and literature. They had two children:
Pavel Chukhray (born 1946), a Russian director, and Elena Chukhray (born 1961), an expert in
film studies. Grigory Chukhray died of heart failure in Moscow in 2001 at the age of eighty. He was buried at the
Vagankovo Cemetery, Moscow. ==Awards and honors==