Valéry Inkijinoff (Russian: Валерьян (Валерий) Иванович Инкижинов; 25 March 1895 – 26 September 1973) was a French actor of Russian-Buryat origin. His strong facial features made him a favourite villain of French cinema for exotic adventure films and crime movies.
Inkijinoff was born to a Christian Buryat father and a Russian mother in Irkutsk gubernia.
He studied at the Polytechnical Institute of Saint Petersburg and was for a time one of the resident actors of an imperial theater of this city. At the beginning of his career in Russia, he appeared first as stuntman in a few movies and then as director and as actor. His major lead role during the Russian part of his career is The Son in Storm Over Asia by Vsevolod Pudovkin in 1928, a major Soviet propaganda film about a fictional British consolidation of Mongolia.
He was also an actor in the troop of Vsevolod Meyerhold and was then appointed as director of the movie and theater school of Kiev in Ukraine.
In 1930, while in France on a European tour, he refused to return to the USSR. According to Boris Shumyatsky, after Stalin learned Inkijinoff had never returned in 1934, said: "Too bad that the man escaped. Now he, probably, is dying to come back but, alas, too late." He starred in 2 movies while living in the Soviet Union, and contrary to Stalin's assumption, Inkijinoff became immensely popular in Europe, arguably the most successful Soviet actor abroad, starring in a total of 44 French, British, German, and Italian films.
In France he frequently played the part of Asian villains. His most active period was in the thirties, when he appeared in Les Bateliers de la Volga and the G. W. Pabst film Le drame de Shanghai. He played for Fritz Lang in 1959, in Der Tiger von Eschnapur and its sequel Das indische Grabmal, in which he played the role of the high priest Yama. In 1965, Philippe de Broca cast him as Monsieur Goh, the wise but scary Chinese who guarantees to the Jean-Paul Belmondo character a certain death in Les tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine.
His last movie was with Brigitte Bardot and Claudia Cardinale, where he played the role of Indian chief Spitting Bull in Les pétroleuses.
He was a great friend of Charles Dullin and Louis Jouvet, and had a long career in French theater, appearing for instance in Marie Galante by Jacques Deval.
He died at his home in Brunoy, Essonne, France, aged 78.
Source: Article "Valéry Inkijinoff" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
1971
as Spitting Bull
1968
as Mafia Guy in Sauna (uncredited)
1967
as Fang Ho Kung
1967
as Kyobaski, producer
1966
as Yekota
1964
as Dr. Krishna
1964
as Li-Hang (as Inkijinoff)
1962
as Gladiator
1962
as The old Indian
1961
as Yusuf Ben Amektal
1961
1961
as High Priest
1960
as Yama, High Priest
1960
as Priester
1959
as Yama
1959
as Yama
1958
1956
as Chin
1956
as Feofar Khan
1954
as Naos
1949
as Cachemire
1948
as Moktar
1938
as Lee Pang
1938
as Louis Stinner
1938
as Wang
1937
as General Ling
1935
as Kommissar Tschernoff
1935
1934
as Dr. Nitobe Tokeramo
1934
as Hirata
1934
as Maté / Amok-afflicted Native
1934
as Silatschoff
1933
as Doctor Nitobe Tokeramo
1933
as Radek
1930
1928
as Bair