Tamara Fyodorovna Makarova (Russian: Тама́ра Фёдоровна Мака́рова; 13 August 1907 – 19 January 1997) was a Soviet and Russian film actress and pedagogue. People's Artist of the USSR (1950) and Hero of Socialist Labour (1982).[1]
Tamara Makarova | |
---|---|
Born | Tamara Fyodorovna Makarova August 13, 1907 |
Died | January 19, 1997 | (aged 89)
Occupation(s) | Actress, pedagogue |
Years active | 1927–1985 |
Spouse | Sergei Gerasimov |
Biography
editMakarova was born in Saint Petersburg. She enrolled in the MASTFOR theater program in 1924, where she first met Sergei Gerasimov. The two began a romantic relationship and soon married. After World War II, they moved to Moscow, where Makarova began to teach at the Russian State University of Cinematography, which was later named after her husband.[2]
Filmography
edit- Somebody Else's Coat (1927) – typist Dudkina
- The New Babylon (1929) – can-can dancer
- The Deserter (1933) – Greta Zelle
- The Conveyor of Death (1933) – Anna
- Seven Brave Men (1936) – doctor Zhenya Okhrimenko
- Komsomolsk (1938) – Natasha Solovyova
- The Great Dawn (1938) – Svetlana
- The New Teacher (1939) – Agrafena Shumilina
- Masquerade (1941) – Nina
- The Ural Front (1944) – Anna Ivanovna Sviridova
- The Stone Flower (1946) – the Mistress of the Copper Mountain
- The Vow (1946) – Kseniya
- The Young Guard (1948) – Yelena Koshevaya, Oleg's mother
- First-Year Student (1948) – Anna Ivanovna, teacher
- Tale of a True Man (1948) – Klavdiya Mikhailovna
- Three Encounters (1948) – Olimpiada Samoseyeva
- The Village Doctor (1951) – doctor Tatyana Nikolayevna Kozakova
- Men and Beasts (1962) – Anna Andreyevna Soboleva
- The Journalist (1967) – Olga Panina
- The Love of Mankind (1972) – architect Aleksandra Vasilyevna Petrushkova
- Daughters-Mothers (1974) – Yelena Alekseyevna Vasilyeva
- The Youth of Peter the Great (1980) – Natalya Naryshkina
- At the Beginning of Glorious Days (1980) – Natalya Naryshkina
- Lev Tolstoy (1984) – Sophia Tolstaya
References
edit- ^ Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 425–427. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
- ^ "Tamara Makarova". Retrieved 15 May 2014.