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Zoya Fyodorova

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Occupation
  
Actress

Name
  
Zoya Fyodorova


Role
  
Film star

Children
  
Victoria Fyodorova

Zoya Fyodorova iv1lisimgcomimage1636195656fullzoyafyodorov

Full Name
  
Zoya Alekseyevna Fyodorova

Born
  
21 December [O.S. 8 December] 1909
Russia

Died
  
December 11, 1981, Moscow, Russia

Movies
  
Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears, Girl Friends, Operation Y and Shurik's Other Adventures, The Ugly Story

Spouse
  
Vladimir Rapoport (m. 1934–1939), Ivan Klishchov, Aleksandr Vsevolodovich Ryazanov, Leonid Veytsler

Siblings
  
Maria Fyodorova, Aleksandra Fyodorova

Similar People
  
Victoria Fyodorova, Vladimir Rapoport, Valentin Yezhov, Leonid Gaidai, Vladimir Naumov

Zoya Alekseyevna Fyodorova (Russian: Зоя Алексеевна Федорова; 21 December [O.S. 8 December] 1907 – 11 December 1981) was a Russian film star who had an affair with American Navy captain Jackson Tate in 1945 and bore a child, Victoria Fyodorova in January 1946. Having rejected the advances of NKVD police head Lavrentiy Beria, the affair was exposed resulting, initially, in a death sentence later reprieved to work camp imprisonment in Siberia; she was released after eight years. She was murdered in her Moscow apartment in 1981.

Contents

Career

Fyodorova was a well-known Russian film star starting in the 1930s, and some of the movies she appeared in were also seen in the United States, including Girl Friends in 1936. During her imprisonment she continued to perform in the Gulag theatres.

The year before Fyodorova was murdered, she appeared in Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears, which won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1980.

Reunion

University of Connecticut professor Irene Kirk learned of Victoria's story in 1959 and spent years trying to find Tate in the United States. Tate was unaware of having a daughter and of his former lover's arrest and imprisonment. When Kirk found Tate in 1973, she carried correspondence between the two back and forth to Moscow. In 1974, Tate began a campaign to convince the Soviet government to allow his daughter to travel to see him in the United States. Victoria was granted permission and arrived in the United States in March 1975 on a three-month travel visa, and spent several weeks in seclusion in Florida with Tate.

Zoya Fyodorova 4 the love of Zoya Fyodorova A life full of events Ledy News

Fyodorova traveled to the United States to be with her daughter, Victoria, when her grandson, Christopher, was born in 1976. Victoria had married an American and stayed in the United States when she was reunited with her father in 1975. On that trip, Zoya Fyodorova was also reunited with her wartime lover, Jackson Tate.

Zoya Fyodorova Zoya Fedorova bright Soviet actress Russian Personalities

In early 1981, Fyodorova was denied an exit visa by the Soviet government to leave the country and visit her daughter. The reason they gave was that her daughter had "behaved badly", referring to her book describing her parents' affair, The Admiral's Daughter, published in 1979.

Selected filmography


  • Counterplan (Встречный, 1932) as Chutochkin's wife (deleting scenes)
  • Girl Friends (Подруги, 1936) as Zoya
  • The Great Citizen (Великий гражданин, 1938) as Nadya
  • The Wedding (Свадьба, 1944) as Dasha, bride
  • The Girl Without an Address (Девушка без адреса, 1957) as Komarinskaya
  • A Groom from the Other World (Жених с того света, 1958) as chief medical officer
  • Scarlet Sails (Алые паруса, 1961) as Governess
  • Give me a complaints book (Дайте жалобную книгу, 1965) as Yekaterina Ivanovna
  • Wedding in Malinovka (Свадьба в Малиновке, 1967) as Gorpina Dormidontovna
  • Russian field (Русское поле, 1971) as Matrona
  • Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears (Москва слеза не верит, 1979) as Hostel's Security
  • Later life and death

    Fyodorova lived in the Kutuzovsky Prospekt in Moscow. She died from a gunshot through her eye. No one was seen entering or exiting the apartment and the case remained unsolved. Her death was first reported in the American press as being an apparent heart attack.

    References

    Zoya Fyodorova Wikipedia