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Lyudmila Maksakova

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Occupation
  
Actress, director

Years active
  
1964–present


Name
  
Lyudmila Maksakova

Role
  
Theater Actress

Lyudmila Maksakova httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Lyudmila Vasilyevna Maksakova

Born
  
26 September 1940 (age 83) (
1940-09-26
)
Moscow, USSR

Alma mater
  
The Schukin Theater (college)

Parents
  
Aleksander Volkov, Maria Maksakova, Sr.

Children
  
Maria Maksakova, Jr., Maxim Maksakov

Spouse
  
Peter Igenbergs (m. 1975), Lev Zbarsky (m. 1962–1972)

Movies
  
Desyat Negrityat, There Was an Old Couple

Grandchildren
  
Ilya Maksakov, Lyudmila Maksakova

Similar People
  
Maria Maksakova - Jr, Maria Maksakova - Sr, Yuliya Menshova, Valentin Yudashkin, Yevgeny Vakhtangov

Lyudmila Vasilyevna Maksakova (Russian: Людмила Васильевна Максакова; born 26 September 1940) is a Soviet Russian stage and film actress who appeared in 24 films between 1965 and 1998. Honoured with the People's Artist of Russia title in 1980, she is also a laureate of the USSR State Prize (1995) and the Stanislavsky Prize (1996). Her mother was the renowned mezzo-soprano Maria Maksakova Sr.; her daughter Maria is an opera singer and Russian TV Kultura presenter.

Contents

Lyudmila Maksakova Lyudmila Maksakova Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

Biography

Lyudmila Maksakova 1

Lyudmila Maksakova was born in Moscow to the Soviet opera star Maria Petrovna Maksakova and Aleksander Volkov, a theatre entrepreneur. In 1942 the latter deflected to the West and later became the United States citizen. For decades Lyudmila remained unaware of her father's identity. By keeping it secret, Maria Petrovna was protecting her daughter from trouble at the times when any relation to a 'traitor' could lead to prosecution. According to another version, though, Lyudmila's father might have been the NKVD general Vasily Novikov, and there were even rumours pointing at Stalin himself, who was known to have favoured the famous Bolshoi singer.

Career

Lyudmila Maksakova

After the simultaneous graduation from a secondary school, and the Moscow Central music school where she studied cello, Lyudmila opted against pursuing the musical career and enrolled into the Shchukin Theatre Institute to join the actor Vladimir Etush's class. In 1961 she joined the Vakhtangov Theater where she debuted as Masha in The Cookie's Marriage (after Anatoly Sofronov's comedy). Her breakthrough came two years later when she played the Tatar Princess Adelma in the much acclaimed Vakhtangov production of Princess Turandot, revived by director Ruben Simonov. Among her other lauded performances were those of Lolya (Dion), Knipper-Chekhova (My Whimsical Happines), Nicol (Le Bourgeois gentilhomme), Maria (The Cavalry Army, after Babel) and Mamayeva (Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man).

In 1964 Maksakova debuted in film, as Nina in Grigory Chukhray's There Was an Old Couple. Over the next decade she appeared in more than fifteen films, including the revolutionary history drama Tatiana's Day (1967), psychological melodrama Not Guilty (1969), tragic melodrama The Bad Good Man (1973) and the psychological drama Autumn (1974). Among other critically acclaimed films she appeared in later, were Old Russian Vaudevilles' Evening (1979, where she played five different women), Igor Talankin's drama Father Sergius (after Leo Tolstoy's short story) and Die Fledermaus, Ian Frid's musical film after Johann Strauss Strauss' classic, alongside Yuri and Vitaly Solomins.

The early 1980s saw Maksakova enjoying her second wave of success in theatre. Much lauded were her Anna Karenina in Roman Viktyuk's 1983 production (based on Mikhail Roshchin's remake of Leo Tolstoy's novel), Paola in The Lady Without Camellias (after Terence Rattigan's play), Bizyukina in Soboryane (based on Leskov's novel) and Louise in I Don't Know You From Now On, Dear (after Aldo De Benedetti's play). Her performance in Pyotr Fomenko's production of Guilty Without Fault by Alexander Ostrovsky, earned Maksakova the USSR State Prize in 1995, and the Stanislavsky Prize a year later. In 2000s Maksakova started to teach at the Shchukin Theater Institute; her appearances on stage and on screen became rare and far between.

Private life

Lyudmila Maksakova's first husband was the artist Lev Zbarsky (who in 1972 departed to Israel, then to the USA); they had a son, Maxim. In the mid-1970s Maksakova married Peter Igenbergs, a West German citizen. On 24 July 1977, she gave birth to a daughter, Maria, an opera singer and TV presenter.

Filmography

Actress
2022
Renessans (Short) as
Vseslavna
2022
Nomination (TV Mini Series) as
Agafya Alexandrovna Istomina
- Episode #1.4 (2022) - Agafya Alexandrovna Istomina
- Episode #1.3 (2022) - Agafya Alexandrovna Istomina
- Episode #1.2 (2022) - Agafya Alexandrovna Istomina
- Episode #1.1 (2022) - Agafya Alexandrovna Istomina
2017
Attraction as
Lyuba
2014
Doktor smert (TV Mini Series) as
Anna Pavlovna Tulpanova
2012
The Kitchen (TV Series) as
Vera Solovyova (2012)
2011
Slepoe schaste (TV Series)
2009
Krest v kruge (TV Series)
2004
O lyubvi v lyubuyu pogodu as
agent Zoya
2001
Smesitel
1998
Mu-Mu as
Barynya (The Lady)
1990
Dni cheloveka
1987
Ten Little Indians as
Miss Emily Caroline Brent
1987
Pretendent (TV Mini Series)
1986
Tam, gde nas net
1986
Poyezdki na starom avtomobile as
Zoya Pavlovna
1986
Po glavnoy ulitse s orkestrom as
Alla
1985
Pered samim soboy (TV Movie)
1985
Prokhindiada, ili Beg na meste
1982
Segodnya i vsegda
1979
Gospoda Glembai (TV Movie) as
Barunica Castelli (as L. Maksakova)
1979
Letuchaya mysh (TV Movie) as
Rosalinde
1979
Father Sergius as
Darya Makovkina
1978
Leto v Noane (TV Movie) as
George Sand (as L. Maksakova)
1978
Vecher starinnykh russkikh vodeviley (TV Movie) as
Praskovya Petrovna Kletkina (segment "Dayte mne starukhu")
1977
Teatr Klary Gazul (TV Movie) as
Klara Gazul / Woman-Devil / Perichchola
1977
Kafe «Izotop» as
Yuliya Aleksandrovna Skurlatova
1975
Den priyoma po lichnym voprosam as
Galina
1974
Autumn as
Margo (as L. Maksakova)
1973
Pieskariens as
Tamara Fabrizius
1973
Plokhoy khoroshiy chelovek as
Nadezhda Fyodorovna
1972
Boy posle pobedy as
Sofi Krause (as L. Maksakova)
1972
Propazha svidetelya as
Nastya
1972
Antratsit as
Natasha
1971
Na vsyakogo mudretsa dovolno prostoty (TV Movie)
1971
Printsessa Turandot (TV Movie) as
Adelma
1970
Poyezd v zavtrashniy den as
Lidiya Konoplyova
1969
Faust (TV Movie) as
Margarete
1969
Nepodsuden as
Nadya
1968
Konets Saturna as
Sofi (as L. Maksakova)
1968
Tatyanin den as
Tanya Ogneva
1968
Tvoy sovremennik as
Posetitelnitsa kafe
1967
Kuryer Kremlya (TV Movie)
1967
Put v 'Saturn' as
Sofi - radistka (uncredited)
1965
There Lived an Old Man and an Old Woman as
Nina Gusakova - doch
1964
Povest o molodykh suprugakh (TV Movie) as
Valya
Soundtrack
1977
Teatr Klary Gazul (TV Movie) (performer: "Dzhon Yachmennoye Zerno", "Na stsene i v zhizni")
Self
2018
VMayakovskiy (Documentary)
2015
Dancing with the Stars (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #9.9 (2015) - Self
2013
Evening Urgant (TV Series) as
Self - Guest
- Lyudmila Maksakova (2015) - Self - Guest
- Lyudmila Maksakova/Instrumenti (2013) - Self - Guest
1996
Chtoby pomnili (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Chapter 88. Galina Sokolova (2002) - Self
- Chapter 63. Nikolai Gritsenko (2000) - Self
- Chapter 26. Lyudmila Tselikovskaya (1996) - Self

References

Lyudmila Maksakova Wikipedia