Vasily Livanov was born into a famous theatrical family. His paternal grandfather Nikolai Aleksandrovich Livanov (1874–1949) was a
Volga Cossack from
Simbirsk who moved to Moscow in 1905 and performed at the Struysky Theatre under a pseudonym of Izvolsky; after the
revolution he worked at the
Mossovet and
Lenkom Theatres. Vasily's father
Boris Livanov (1904–1972) was also a prominent actor and stage director who served at the
Moscow Art Theatre all his life, while his mother Eugenia Kazimirovna Livanova (née
Prawdzic-Filipowicz) (1907–1978) was an artist who belonged to
Polish szlachta. Vasily was brought up in the artistic milieu. Many famous actors who worked with his father, like
Olga Knipper,
Alla Tarasova,
Vasily Kachalov (whom Livanov was named after), as well as
Pyotr Konchalovsky,
Boris Pasternak,
Valery Chkalov were frequent guests at their house. In 1940 his family was staying in
Chernivtsi along with other Moscow actors, and his Polish nanny took him to the local
Catholic church where he was
baptized, presumably with his mother's permission. Today he belongs to the
Russian Orthodox Church despite never officially converting. His family spent the first
war years in evacuation and in 1943 returned to Moscow. In 1954 Vasily graduated from the Moscow Secondary Art School under the
USSR Academy of Arts, and in 1958 he finished the acting courses at the
Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute. His film career started in 1959 with one of the leading roles in the
Letter Never Sent. The movie was shot in
taiga at −40 °C, and the director
Mikhail Kalatozov decided that Livanov and
Samoilova should voice their characters crying not in the studio, but outside, right in the woods. As a result, Livanov lost his voice, and in two weeks it returned as a unique hoarse timbre that would become one of Livanov's trademarks ever since. ==Animation==