Beata Tyszkiewicz is a Polish actress from a Warsaw aristocratic family. Tyshkevich made his debut at the age of sixteen in the film Revenge. In the early sixties, she took part in the filming of several films, but the debut serious success was the film “The First Day of Freedom” directed by Alexander Ford. Beata became the wife of Polish director Andrzej Wajda, starring in three of his films: All for sale "Ashes" and "Samson." After five years of marriage, the couple broke up. Tyszkiewicz took
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Beata Tyszkiewicz is a Polish actress from a Warsaw aristocratic family.
Tyshkevich made his debut at the age of sixteen in the film Revenge. In the early sixties, she took part in the filming of several films, but the debut serious success was the film “The First Day of Freedom” directed by Alexander Ford. Beata became the wife of Polish director Andrzej Wajda, starring in three of his films:
All for sale "Ashes" and "Samson." After five years of marriage, the couple broke up.
Tyszkiewicz took part in the filming of many Polish filmmakers, including Wojciech Has, Tadeusz Konwitski, Agnieszka Holland, Andrzej Zulawski, Krzysztof Zanussi, Janusz Morgenstern and Jerzy Hofmann. In the early seventies, Beata filmed a lot in Bulgaria, Hungary, the USSR and the GDR.
In the USSR, Tyshkevich became famous after participating in the film “Noble Nest” by Andrei Konchalovsky. For viewers from the Soviet Union, she began to personify Maria Valevskaya from the film “Marysya and Napoleon”.
In 1976, Beate married the French architect Jacek Pallevski, moving to live in France. A year later, daughter Victoria was born. At her new place of residence, the actress took part in the filming of films and TV series, for example, with director Claude Lelusch in the project “Edith and Marcel”.
In the eighties, the actress returned to Poland, began to play in films, but mainly in secondary roles. Tyszkiewicz wrote a column in the publication that is part of the jury of the Polish competition “Dancing with the Stars”, wrote a cookbook and memoirs, participated in film festivals, was fond of photography and published albums.
In 2001, I saw a movie.
"August 44th." Belarusian director Mikhail Ptashuk, in which the actress played the role of an angry hostess of a Polish farm. In 2006, within the framework of the XV International Film Forum "Golden Knight", Beate was awarded a gold medal named after Bondarchuk "For contribution to world cinema".