As a child, Lazarov performed as a professional tap dancer in musicals. After graduating from the High School of Arts as a ballet dancer and serving as a singer in a military band, he danced with the
Batsheva Dance Company for four years. He studied theater at the Actors’ Centre in London before joining the
Gesher Theatre and the
Cameri Theatre as an actor. His leading roles include Tevye in the 2018 Broadway National Tour of
Fiddler on the Roof, Mack the Knife in
The Threepenny Opera at the Gesher Theatre (winning the
Israeli Theatre Award for best actor), Lysander in
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Figaro in
The Marriage of Figaro, Avigdor in
Yentl, Alexander Pen in
Was It a Dream?, Rudi in
The Aristocrats, the titular roles in Sholom Aleichem's
Stempenyu and
The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Zach in
A Chorus Line. In addition to his work as an actor, Lazarov has served as the in-house choreographer at the Gesher Theatre and Cameri Theatre. Lazarov has played leading roles in more than 40 films and television productions, including
The Mentalist,
Mama’s Angel (Series Mania – Official Competition, France), the Israeli films
The Kindergarten Teacher and
The Debt,
Fragile, Russian episodic series
Mata Hari,
The Fifth Heaven,
Waltz with Bashir (winning the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film),
Three Mothers,
A Touch Away, and
The Dybbuk (nominated for best actor). As a theater director, Lazarov has served as the adapter, set designer, and choreographer for all his projects, including
Lolita / Joan of Arc, Fathers and Sons, Alice, Falling Out of Time (based on the
David Grossman novel) at the Gesher Theater,
The Picture of Dorian Gray at the Habima Theatre, and
Igloo (written by Lazarov), which premiered at the
Israel Festival and won the Best Director award. Lazarov is the artistic director and founder of Studio Ankori Middle and High School for Creative Thinking and Entrepreneurship.
He is the co-founder, artistic director, and curator of AZA13
, an art venue in Tel Aviv. Among his multidisciplinary exhibitions are "Hope", "Censorship", "Demonstration", and "The Art to Survive". As a visual artist, Lazarov's photography and video artworks have been shown in several gallery exhibitions. He has written and directed a number of short films, including
Snow and
Lashabiya, which have been screened in many international film festivals. == Filmography ==