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Larisa Valentinovna Kadochnikova
Лариса Кадочникова
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Larisa Kadochnikova is an actress whose calling card was the film Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors" It has spread throughout the country and gained popularity abroad. With its creator, Sergey Parajanov, she until the end of his days connected touching friendship, say that the master considered her his favorite actress. Larisa Valentinovna was born on August 30, 1937 in a family of creative people – mother-actress, father, Valentin Kadochnikov – artist, director-animator. Her father died in 1942,
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Larisa Kadochnikova is an actress whose calling card was the film
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors" It has spread throughout the country and gained popularity abroad. With its creator, Sergey Parajanov, she until the end of his days connected touching friendship, say that the master considered her his favorite actress.
Larisa Valentinovna was born on August 30, 1937 in a family of creative people – mother-actress, father, Valentin Kadochnikov – artist, director-animator. Her father died in 1942, in an evacuation, and she does not remember him at all.
After school, Larisa, whom her parents named in honor of the main character of “Bespridannitsa”, entered VGIK, graduating in 1961. There, while still a student, plunged headlong into a three-year romance with a major Soviet artist Ilya Glazunov, a married man, after a breakup with whom she married the cameraman Yuri Ilyenko. Her husband shot her in the role of Ukrainian Juliet in Prajanov’s film Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, and also worked with her in several more films. When this marriage broke up, Larisa Valentinovna some time later married the former head of the Lesia Ukrainka Theater in Kiev Mikhail Saranchuk and moved to Ukraine, which became her second homeland.
The actress began to play in the theater of Lesya Ukrainka and continued to act in films, where she can be seen in such films as
Black Chicken or Underground Residents" , bigrfic drama "Rise", television film "Let him perform..." based on the play by Jack London, the film "Blue Rose" based on the work of Lesya Ukrainka.