
Saksahansky, Panas
[Саксаганський,
Панас; Saksahans’kyj] (pseud of Panas
Tobilevych), b 15 May 1859
in Kamiano-Kostuvate, Yelysavethrad county, Kherson
gubernia, d 17 September 1940
in Kyiv. (Photo: Panas Saksahansky.) Theater director
and actor; brother of Mykola Sadovsky, Ivan Karpenko-Kary, and Mariia
Sadovska-Barilotti. After completing his education in Yelysavethrad (1880) he
worked in Mykhailo Starytsky's (from 1883), Marko Kropyvnytsky's (1885), and
Sadovsky's (1888) troupes; led his own Saksahansky's Troupe (1890–1909);
worked in Trokhym Kolesnychenko's troupe (1910–15)
and in the Society of Ukrainian Actors (1915–16); directed the People's
Theater (1918–22); worked in the Zankovetska Theater
(intermittently in 1922–6); and, from 1927, led a touring troupe with
Sadovsky. Saksahansky was an actor
of the realistic-psychological school, gifted in gesture and mimicry, whose
most famous roles were in satirical comedies, such as Ivan Kotliarevsky's Natalka
from Poltava, Ivan Karpenko-Kary's Sto tysiach (One Hundred
Thousand), Martyn Borulia, and Palyvoda XVIII st. (A Rogue of the
18th Century), and Mykhailo Starytsky's Za dvoma zaitsiamy (After Two
Hares). His best heroic-moralist role was Ivan in Karpenko-Kary's Suieta
(Vanity). In Ukrainian translation he staged Johann Christoph Friedrich von
Schiller's Die Räuber, Karl Gutzkow's Uriel Acosta (both in
1918), and William Shakespeare's Othello (1926). He is the author of two
plays, Lytsemiry (Hypocrites, 1908) and Shantrapa (Rabble, 1914),
and two books of memoirs, Po shliakhu zhyttia (On the Path of Life,
1935) and Iz proshlogo ukrainskogo teatra (From the Past of the
Ukrainian Theater, 1938). Biographies of him have been written by Vsevolod
Chahovets (1951), B. Tobilevych (1957), L. Melnychuk-Luchko (1958),
and L. Stetsenko (1959), and collections of memoirs about him were published in
1939 and 1984.
Valeriian Revutsky