Zurab Sotkilava

This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Lavrentievich and the family name is Sotkilava.
Zurab Sotkilava
Birth name Zurab Lavrentievich Sotkilava
Born (1937-03-12) 12 March 1937
Sukhumi, Georgian SSR
Occupation(s) Opera singer
Years active 1965-present

Zurab Lavrentievich Sotkilava (Russian: Зураб Лаврентьевич Соткилава, Georgian: ზურაბ სოტკილავა; March 12, 1937) is a Georgian opera singer and People's Artist of the USSR recipient who was born in Sukhumi and was a 1960 graduate of the Tbilisi State Polytechnical Institute.

Biography

Football

Since childhood, he played football, was in Dynamo Sukhumi at age 16, where he played on the site full-back, many joined the attack. In 1956 he became captain Sotkilava Georgia under the age of 20 years. Two years later, he was in the main part of Dynamo Tbilisi.[1] Severe injuries he received in 1958 in Yugoslavia, and in 1959 led to the end of his sports career in Czechoslovakia.

Music

In 1965 he graduated from the Tbilisi Conservatory where he was under guidance from David Andguladze and from 1965 to 1974 was a soloist of the Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theatre named after Zakaria Paliashvili. From 1966 to 1968 he was a student at La Scala where his teacher was Dinaro Barra and following that became a teacher at the Moscow Conservatory where he remained till 1988. Six years later he became chairman of the International Tchaikovsky Competition and was a member of the Bologna Academy of Music at which he became known for his singing of Giuseppe Verdi's works. By 2000 he became Kinoshok chairman of Anapa Film Festival which was hosted throughout the CIS and Baltic States.[2]

Disease

In July 2015, Zurab Sotkilava said that the seriously ill cancer patient. Doctors have diagnosed - a malignant tumor of the pancreas.[3] After the operation in Germany and the course of treatment in the Russian singer returned to creative activity. His first concert took place after recovery 25 October 2015 in Sergiev Posad.

Family

Bolshoi Theatre

Awards

References

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