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Nadezhda Rumyantseva

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Years active
  
1952–2008

Name
  
Nadezhda Rumyantseva


Role
  
Actress

Children
  
Karina Khshtoyan

Nadezhda Rumyantseva Nadezhda Rumyantseva

Full Name
  
Nadezhda Vasilyevna Rumiantseva

Born
  
September 9, 1930 (
1930-09-09
)

Died
  
April 8, 2008, Moscow, Russia

Spouse
  
Willy Khshtoyan (m. ?–2008)

Movies
  
The Girls, 38 Parrots, An Easy Life

Parents
  
Vasiliy Rumyantsev, Nadezhda Vsevolodovna Rumyantseva

Similar People
  
Nikolai Rybnikov, Lyusyena Ovchinnikova, Svetlana Druzhinina, Leonid Gaidai, Ivan Ufimtsev

1 2 rumba


Nadezhda Vasilyevna Rumyantseva (Russian: Наде́жда Васи́льевна Румя́нцева, September 9, 1930, Potapovo, Smolensk Oblast — April 8, 2008, Moscow) was a popular Soviet and Russian comedy actress. People’s Artist of the RSFSR (1991).

Contents

Nadezhda Rumyantseva Picture of Nadezhda Rumyantseva

Надежда Румянцева (Nadezhda Rumyantseva)


Early years

Nadezhda Rumyantseva russianwomenclubimagesNadezhdaRumyantsevagif

Nadezhda Rumyantseva was born in the Potapovo village (now Gagarinsky District) into a simple Russian family. Her father Vasily Ivanovich Rumyantsev was a war veteran. He worked as a train conductor and later — as a forest guard. Her mother Olga Vsevolodovna Rumyantseva was a housewife.

Nadezhda Rumyantseva beautifulruscomwpcontentuploads201210Nadezh

After graduating from school Nadezhda entered theatrical courses at the Moscow Central Children's Theater. Very soon she became one of the leading actresses at this theater, although the courses were dismissed in just a year under a government initiative. With the help of her teacher Olga Pyzhova she enrolled to the Russian Academy of Theatre Arts and later — to VGIK which she finished in 1955. In-between she acted in plays and movies.

Film career

Nadezhda Rumyantseva Nadezhda Rumyantseva actress of USSR waswere Pinterest Actresses

Rumyantseva's first breakthrough happened in 1959 with the comedy The Unamenables directed by Yuri Chulyukin where she was given the leading role, along with her fellow-student Yuri Belov, Alexei Kozhevnikov and Yuri Nikulin. The film turned so successful (10th place at the Soviet box office with 31.83 million viewers) that Chulyukin invited her to act in his second movie — Devchata that was finished in 1961. Her partner was Nikolai Rybnikov. The movie hit the 5th spot with 34.8 million viewers and brought international fame to Nadezhda who was named the best actress at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival in 1962.

Same year she reunited with Belov and Kozhevnikov in the comedy Queen of the Gas Station shot at the Dovzhenko Film Studios. Once again, it turned into one of the box office leaders (5th place with 34.3 million viewers) and remains among the most beloved Soviet comedy films up till these days. Rumyantseva was named Merited Artist of the Russian SFSR later on. She appeared in her last leading role in the 1967 war comedy Tough Nut along with Vitaly Solomin. It was well received by the public, but criticised by the official press for turning the Great Patriotic War into a primitive parody.

Nadezhda Rumyantseva Nadezhda Rumyantseva Theatre and film actress people Russia

Around the same time Rumyantseva married a Soviet diplomat Villi Khshtoyan who worked at the Ministry of International Trade of the USSR. They spent nearly 15 years abroad, which she fully dedicated to her husband and his daughter from the first marriage (she couldn't give birth to her own children). After their return Nadezhda rarely appeared on the big screen. By that time she was more interested in dubbing. She did voice overs for many foreign pictures and TV series, as well as some of the Soviet movies and animated films. She also became the main presenter of the popular children's TV show Alarm Clock. A member of the Film Actors' Theater-Studio since 1955.

Late years

In 1996 two burglars tried to rob Rumyantseva's Moscow apartment. Her husband — a former boxer — managed to stop them, but she was hit on the head by one of the bandits which led to serious damages and regular pains. She was later diagnosed with brain tumor. She died in 2008 and was buried at the Moscow Armenian Cemetery in the Khshtoyan family tomb. She was survived by her husband Villi Khshtoyan and his daughter Christine.

Filmography

Actress
2005
Nechayannaya radost (TV Movie) as
Maria Ivanovna
2004
Chudnaya dolina (Video) as
Aisha
1976
38 Parrots (TV Series) as
Monkey
- Nenaglyadnoe posobie (1991) - Monkey (voice)
- Zaryadka dlya khvosta (1979) - Monkey (voice)
- Zavtra budet zavtra (1979) - Monkey (voice)
- Privet martyshke (1978) - Monkey (voice)
- A vdrug poluchitsya! (1978) - Monkey (voice)
- Kuda idyot slonyonok (1977) - Monkey (voice)
- Kak lechit udava? (1977) - Monkey (voice)
- Babushka udava (1977) - Monkey (voice, as N. Rumyantseva)
- 38 popugaev (1976) - Monkey (voice, as N. Rumyantseva)
1990
Stervyatniki na dorogakh
1990
Three Little Froggies #3 (Short) as
Little Frog in a Red Hat (voice)
1989
What Sound Does the Mosquito Make? (Short)
1988
Three Little Froggies #2 (Short) as
Little Frog in a Red Hat (voice)
1987
Konets sveta s posleduyushchim simpoziumom
1982
Zhenatyy kholostyak as
Valentina Zaytseva
1981
A Hedgehog Plus a Turtle (Short) as
Turtle (voice)
1981
Prodannyy smekh (TV Movie) as
Emma Rickert
1978
The Last Bride of Zmey Gorynych (Short) as
Tsarevna Irina (voice, as K.M. Rumyantseva)
1977
Tom Thumb (TV Short) as
The boy (voice)
1977
Nesovershennoletnie as
maty Alki (as N. Rumyantseva)
1976
Au-u! as
Writer's Wife (segment "I podyekhali k izbe svaty... Ili pokhozhdeniya pisatelya Seni v poiskakh 'slova zatayonnovo'")
1974
Yeralash (TV Series)
- Vypusk 2: Slava Ivana Kozlovskogo, Gostepreimstvo, Ne nado volnovatsya (1974)
1972
Fakir na chas (TV Movie) as
Tatyana Mironova
1970
Novogodnee pokhishcheniye (TV Mini Series) as
Cameo
- Episode #1.2 (1970) - Cameo
- Episode #1.1 (1970) - Cameo
1968
A Hard Little Nut as
Rayisa Oreshkina
1967
Kidnapping, Caucasian Style as
Nina (singing voice, uncredited)
1966
About a Vicious Stepmother (Short) as
Fira (voice)
1966
Chyort s portfelem as
Masha Fyodorova
1965
The Portrait (Short) as
Narrator (voice)
1964
Zhenitba Balzaminova as
Raisa
1964
Lyogkaya zhizn as
Galya
1963
Three Fat Men (Short) as
Suok (voice)
1963
Polustanok as
Sima - Kolkhoz accountant (as N. Rumyantseva)
1963
Koroleva benzokolonki as
Lyudmila
1962
Pavlukha as
Lyolya (as N. Rumyantseva)
1962
The Girls as
Tosya Kislitsina
1961
Volnyy veter as
Peppita Diabolo (as N. Rumyantseva)
1960
Trizhdy voskresshiy as
Lyubasha Solovyova
1959
Unamenables as
Nadya Berestova
1958
Gori, moya zvezda! (as N. Rumyantseva)
1958
An Ordinary Trip as
Anya Krylenko
1958
Zvyozdnyy malchik as
Forest boy
1956
Spring Voices as
Nina
1956
More zovyot as
Nastenka Fedorenko (as N. Rumyantseva)
1956
Meksikanets as
May
1955
Syn as
Tamara
1954
Morskoy okhotnik as
Katya (as N. Rumyantseva)
1953
Alyosha Ptitsyn vyrabatyvaet kharakter as
Galya
1952
Navstrechu zhizni as
Marusya Rodnikova
Self
1993
Chtoby pomnili (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Chapter 105. Vladimir Belokurov (2003) - Self
- Chapter 55. Lyusyena Ovchinnikova (1999) - Self
- Chapter 39. Valentina Vladimirova (1997) - Self
- Chapter 21. Nikolai Rybnikov (1996) - Self
- Chapter 9. Ekaterina Savinova (1995) - Self
- Chapter 7. And yet- (1994) - Self
- Chapter 6. Yuri Belov (1994) - Self
- Chapter 4. Izolda Izvitskaya (1994) - Self
- Chapter 1. Inna Gulaya (1993) - Self
1973
Behind the Wheel, Korobkin (Documentary short)
Archive Footage
2021
Zvyozdnye vdovtsy (Documentary short) as
Self
2014
Vremya pokazhet (TV Series) as
Tosya Kislitsina (segment "Devchata")
- Episode #1.26 (2014) - Tosya Kislitsina (segment "Devchata")
2004
Legends of World Cinema (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Nadezhda Rumyantseva - Self

References

Nadezhda Rumyantseva Wikipedia