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  1. Nikita Mikhalkov's children were not spoiled by the attention of the always busy director and were brought up in strictness, sometimes receiving a belt for misdeeds. Despite the lack of father's affection, they all grew up to be very worthy people.

  2. Mikhalkov's Anna: 6–18 (1993) documents his daughter Anna as she grows from childhood to maturity. Mikhalkov's most famous production to date, Burnt by the Sun (1994), was steeped in the paranoid atmosphere of Joseph Stalin's Great Terror.

  3. Nikita Mikhalkov's mother, Natalya Petrovna Konchalovskaya, was also a poet and daughter of famous painter Pyotr Petrovich Konchalovsky and his wife Olga Vasilievna Surikova, and by her the great granddaughter of another great painter Vasily Surikov.

    • January 1, 1
    • 1.87 m
    • Moscow, RSFSR, USSR [now Russia]
  4. Mikhalkov was born in Moscow into the noble and distinguished Mikhalkov family. His great-grandfather was the imperial governor of Yaroslavl, whose mother was a princess of the House of Golitsyn.

  5. Son of Sergey Mikhalkov, author of children's books and writer of lyrics to the Soviet national anthem. His great-grandfather, S.V. Mikhalkov, was chairman of noblemen assembly in Yaroslavl Governorate and son of princess Elizaveta Golitizine.

  6. Biography, career, personal life and other interesting facts. Nikita Sergeyevich Mikhalkov (Никита Сергеевич Михалков; born 21 October 1945) is a Russian filmmaker, actor, and head of the Russian Cinematographers' Union. Mikhalkov is a three-time laureate of the...

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  8. He almost never saw children for weeks, but he managed to educate them as good and self-sufficient people. Of all four children, only the youngest, Hope, now states that she had enough love for her father.

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