Sony hires ex-Disney exec as Russia chief

Schastlivy Vmeste

Schastlivy Vmeste

Sony Pictures Television has hired a former Disney Russia producer to run its production business in Russia following the exit of Maria Smirnova to CTC, DTVE’s sister title TBI has learned.

Vadim Sokolovsky will oversee SPT Productions Russia and Sony’s locally owned prodco Lean-M Productions as managing director, reporting to SPT’s senior VP, scripted programming and international production Jeff Lerner.

He takes up the post in early September and will be based at SPT’s Moscow office.

This comes after Smironova exited her post as SPT Russia’s CEO to become Russian broadcaster CTC’s head of content production, acquisitions and sales in April. Lerner has been running the unit since her departure.

SPT Russia is behind remakes of US sitcoms Everybody Loves Raymond (Voroniny) and Married with Children (Schastlivy Vmeste, pictured), scripted dramedy Betty La Fea (Ne Rodis Krassivoy) and CTC’s original drama The Eighties, which was recently taken to a fourth season. Lean-M produces scripted reality series Strong Medicine, which has gone to five seasons and topped 300 episodes.

Sokolovsky, meanwhile, was The Walt Disney Company Russia’s director of film, production and acquisition between 2007 and 2010, during which time he produced long-running comedy As the Bell Rings for Disney Channel Russia.

He was also head of production for Russian media group Amedia, where he worked on Poor Anastasia (Bednaya Nastya), a local-language series that was coproduced by SPT. He also worked at NBC News and between 2011 and present has been working as an independent writer and director on telemovies such as Russia 1’s Mama’s Getting Married and Wife of Stirlitz. He also made sketch comedy pilot Darwin’s Hamsters for CTC.

“Vadim is the perfect choice to continue that legacy and build our business going forward,” said Lerner. “He has excellent creative and production credentials, strong relationships with buyers, and a passion for producing high quality programming that speaks to Russian language audiences at home and abroad.”

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