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Lidiya Dranovskaya
Лидия Драновская
Life Time
18 October 1922 - 11 July 2008
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She was born on 18 October 1922. Actress of the Motion Picture Actress. Honored Artist of the Russian Federation (1999). She graduated from VGIK (1946, the workshop of B. Bibikov and O. Pyzhova; the head of the diploma is Sergey Gerasimov). She came to the movies at the age of fifteen. Yakov Protazanov - a classic of Russian cinema, the creator of the famous "Bespritnitsa", three years before the war shot "Seven-graders" - a tape, especially loved by the young viewer. In one of the main roles -
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She was born on 18 October 1922.
Actress of the Motion Picture Actress. Honored Artist of the Russian Federation (1999).
She graduated from VGIK (1946, the workshop of B. Bibikov and O. Pyzhova; the head of the diploma is Sergey Gerasimov).
She came to the movies at the age of fifteen. Yakov Protazanov - a classic of Russian cinema, the creator of the famous "Bespritnitsa", three years before the war shot "Seven-graders" - a tape, especially loved by the young viewer. In one of the main roles - Lydia Dranovskaya. It was a noisy start. Then after the war she starred in Pudovkin’s “Zhukovsky”, Roshal’s “Rimsky-Korsakov”, but the name brought her an elegant comedy by Julia Raizman “Train goes to the East”. The film was released in 1948, at the most seemingly inappropriate time for love stories. But the story of an affair that arose between a naval officer and a charming graduate of the biofaculty on the train on the way to Vladivostok attracted viewers. Crowds besieged cinemas. Lydia Dranovskaya was a huge success, she captivated with sincerity, purity and rare charm.
However, the tape aroused the wrath of Stalin and was subsequently rudely scolded by official criticism. Stalin, while watching the picture, angrily remarked: “I will get off at the next station” and left the viewing hall. The movie was destroyed. Young Lydia Dranovskaya was subjected to deafening criticism. 50 years later, the film was broadcast on Channel Six. The game of Lydia Dranovskaya and Leonid Gallis is quite modern and accurate. The ideological signs of the time looked naive, but this did not prevent the audience from watching the film with apparent pleasure. In 1997, the director Igor Apasyan decided to make a film based on the novel by Ray Bradbury "Wine from Dandelions" with Lydia Dranovsky in the title role of old Mrs. Bentley. The director conceived a eulogy in defense of childhood, an anthem of humanity, kindness, love and kindness. To solve this problem was called the image of the grandmother, the young characters of the film.
When she took to the stage of the CDRI at a party arranged in her honor for the first time in her difficult and completely unhappy cinematic life, the hall applauded her for a long time. In some mysterious way, she retained her charm and vitality. Born cinematic actress, in fact, lived a life without cinema, but unlike others - talented and successful colleagues who acted without stopping, Lydia Dranovskaya will remain in the history of world cinema as an actress, whose screen appearance as if heralded in our country that inner freedom of feelings and the game of vital forces cannot be extinguished.