Natalja Nikolajewna Kustinskaja

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Natalja Nikolajewna Kustinskaja ( Russian Наталья Николаевна Кустинская ; * April 5, 1938 in Moscow ; † December 13, 2012 there ) was a Russian actress .

Life

Natalja Kustinskaja graduated from the music school at the Gnesin College and then studied at the Gerasimov Institute for Cinematography , the Moscow State Film School, which she graduated in 1961. She made her cinema debut in 1959 in the Alexei Tolstoy film adaptation of Trüber Morgen . In total, she starred in 20 cinema and television films, the most famous of which are the comedies Ivan Vasilievich Changes Profession and Three Plus Two . From 1973 to 1983 she played in the television series Вечный зов (The Eternal Call). Natalja Kustina also worked as a voice actress, u. a. she was the voice of Brigitte Bardot in The Great Maneuver and Nadja Tiller in The Girl Rosemarie in Russian dubbing .

Natalja Kustinskaja played at the State Theater of Cinema Actors (Государственный театр киноактёра) in Moscow.

Private

Natalja Kustinskaja was married six times, u. a. from 1970 to 1989 with the doctor and cosmonaut Boris Jegorow . From her marriage to the diplomat Oleg Volkov, she had a son, whom Boris Yegorov adopted and who also became an actor. After her son died in 2002 at the age of 32 under circumstances that were not finally clarified, Natalja Kustinskaya became increasingly depressed. In December 2012 she fell ill with pneumonia, which resulted in a stroke. what she died of.

She is buried next to her son in the Kunzewoer Cemetery in Moscow.

Filmography

  • 1959: A cloudy morning
  • 1960: stronger than the hurricane
  • 1960: girls' years
  • 1962: After the wedding
  • 1962: Dismissed on the bank
  • 1963: three plus two
  • 1965: The sleeping lion
  • 1966: King's regatta
  • 1971: Spring fairy tale
  • 1971: The wandering front
  • 1973: Ivan Vasilievich changes his job
  • 1973–1983: The Eternal Call
  • 1975: accident
  • 1976: The intern
  • 1978: a resounding person
  • 1980: My father, the idealist
  • 1981: Driver for a ride
  • 1989: Swetik

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