Tatyana Vasilyeva | |
---|---|
Born | Tatyana Grigoryevna Itsykovich 28 February 1947 |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1969-present |
Awards |
Tatyana Grigoryevna Vasilyeva (Russian: Татья́на Григо́рьевна Васи́льевa; born 28 February 1947) is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actress, and TV presenter. She has appeared in more than seventy films since 1969.[1] She was named a People's Artist of the Russian Federation in 1992.[2]
Biography
She graduated from the Moscow Art Theatre School (course of Vasiliy Markov[3]) in 1969. In 1969–1983, she acted at the Moscow Satire Theater. Her first theatre role was as the Commissioner in The Time in Captivity, based on a play by Alexander Stein.
From 1983 to 1992, she performed at the Moscow Academic Mayakovsky Theatre.
Since 1996, she has been acting at The School of Modern Play.
From June 4 to August 31, 2012, she led the program Between Us, Girls on Channel One, and, from April 1 to May 30, 2014, moderated Your case... on Channel One.
Selected filmography
- 1975 — Hello, I'm Your Aunt! as Annie
- 1979 — Kind Men as Iraida Yaroslavna
- 1980 — The Evening Labyrinth as Eleonora
- 1985 — The Most Charming and Attractive as Susanna
- 1992 — White King, Red Queen as Yekaterina
- 1998 — The Circus Burned Down, and the Clowns Have Gone as Margarita
- 2005 — Popsa as Larisa Ivanovna
- 2007 — Waiting for a Miracle as Renata Genrikhovna
- 2012 — Svaty as Viktoria Viktorovna
Personal life
Her first husband (1973-1983) was actor Anatoly Vasilyev (born 1946), People's Artist of the Russian Federation (1994). Their son, Philip (born July 30, 1978), is an actor. The second husband (1983-1995) was actor Georgy Martirosyan (born 1948), Honored Artist of the Russian Federation (2004). Their daughter is Elizaveta Martirosyan (born November 5, 1986).[4]
References
- ↑ Tatyana Vasilyeva at IMDb
- ↑ Почётное звание присвоено указом президента России № 699 от 25 июня 1992 года
- ↑ Школа-студия МХАТ. Актёрский факультет. Выпускники. 1960-е годы. // mhatschool.ru
- ↑ Радиостанция «Эхо Москвы». Александр Акопов и Татьяна Васильева