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Maria Mironova
Life Time
7 January 1911 - 12 November 1997
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Maria Vladimirovna Mironova - Honored Artist of the RSFSR, laureate of the First All-Union Pop Artists Competition, legend of our stage. January 7, 1911 in Moscow, in the family of a school teacher and employee was born a girl Masha. Her father loved music, theater and painting, and sought to cultivate a taste for art in his daughter. As a result, a persistent and diligent person, passionate about the theater, grew up. Then she attended the Fridtjof Nansen Experimental School. And in 1925 she entered
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Maria Vladimirovna Mironova - Honored Artist of the RSFSR, laureate of the First All-Union Pop Artists Competition, legend of our stage.
January 7, 1911 in Moscow, in the family of a school teacher and employee was born a girl Masha. Her father loved music, theater and painting, and sought to cultivate a taste for art in his daughter. As a result, a persistent and diligent person, passionate about the theater, grew up. Then she attended the Fridtjof Nansen Experimental School. And in 1925 she entered the Lunacharsky Theatre College.
Maria Mironova has always been considered a bright artist, with a sharp character and extraordinary hard work. She worked in the Moscow State Music Hall of Nikolai Volkonsky, the Gogol Theatre. She played successful roles in Vasily Shkvarkin’s comedy “The Harmful Element”, in the plays “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and “The Case of Honor of I. Mikitenko”.
Later, the actress declared herself as an author, director and performer. She became the founder of a new genre of telephone conversations, and together with her husband.
Andrey Mironov Maria Vladimirovna found the strength to work and continued to play in the theater, together with the young team. Her last work was a role in the play “The old man left the old woman”, where she played with Semyon Zolotnikov. On November 13, 1997, the actress passed away.
Contemporaries and friends remembered Maria Vladimirovna with warm words, she was admired and feared, loved and respected. The actress herself said: I wish that children would not die in Russia. So mothers don't bury their sons. It is unnatural, it is the scariest thing in life.” /