Ninel Konstantinovna Myshkova

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Ninel Konstantinowna Myschkowa ( Russian: Нинель Константиновна Мышкова ; born May 8, 1926 in Leningrad , RSFSR , USSR ; † September 13, 2003 in Moscow , Russia ) was a Soviet actress .

Life and accomplishments

Ninel Konstantinowna Myschkowa was born as the only daughter of the artillery general Konstantin Romanowitsch Myschkow and his wife Natalia Wassiljewna, who came from an impoverished aristocratic family. Her first name is a turn of " Lenin ", but she mostly called herself "Eva".

In 1947 Myshkova completed her acting training and in the same year made her film debut in the war film За тех, кто в море Sa tech, kto w more . Ten years later she gained great popularity in the Soviet Union with her first leading role in Дом, в котором я живу Dom, w kotorom ja schiwu . The roles in the fairy tale films Sadko's Adventure , The Battle for the Golden Gate and The Enchanted Marie, which she did not like, were also decisive for her reputation as a film beauty and her popularity with younger audiences .

On December 31, 1976, she was awarded the title of Honored Artist of the RSFSR , a year after she played her last leading role in Лесные качели Lesnye kacheli .

At the end of the 1970s, Myshkova, now suffering from multiple sclerosis , decided to end her acting career. She played her 31st and last film role in 1982 in Гонки по вертикали Gonki po Wertikali Until 1983, Myshkova appeared at the Moscow State Theater of Film Actors , where she had been active since 1968.

Myshkova died at the age of 79 and was buried next to her parents in the Novodevichy Cemetery.

Private

At the beginning of her film career, Ninel Myshkova married the actor Vladimir Etush , but soon afterwards began an affair with the composer Antonio Spadavecchia. In 1953 she married the cameraman Konstantin Petritschenko. Their son, Constantine, later became a diplomat and took care of the seriously ill during the last years of Myshkova's life. In 1966 Myshkova married the director Viktor Ivchenko , whom she met while filming Gaduka Gadjuka and who divorced her. His death in 1972 plunged her into depression.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Biography of Ninel Myschkowkas on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on November 26, 2019
  2. a b c d filmography of Ninel Myschkowkas on kino-teatr.ru (Russian), accessed on November 26, 2019
  3. a b Biography of Ninel Myschkowkas on soviet-art.ru , accessed on November 26, 2019
  4. English version of Ninel Myshkova's biography on kino-teatr.ru with a photo of the grave , accessed on November 26, 2019