Lyudmila Maksakova

Lyudmila Maksakova
Born Lyudmila Vasilyevna Maksakova
26 September 1940
Moscow, USSR
Alma mater The Schukin Theater (college)
Occupation Actress, director
Years active 1964–present
Spouse(s) Lev Zbarsky
Peter Igenbergs
Children Maxim Maksakov
Maria Maksakova, Jr.

Lyudmila Maksakova (Russian: Людмила Васильевна Максакова; born 26 September 1940) is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actress. Maksakova, who appeared in 24 films between 1965 and 1998, was assignated People's Artist of Russia (1980); she is a laureate of the USSR State Prize (1995) and the prestigious Stanislavsky Prize (1996).[1] She is the daughter of mezzo-soprano Maria Maksakova, Sr. and the mother of Maria Maksakova, Jr., an opera singer and Russian TV Kultura presenter.[2]

Biography

Lyudmila Maksakova was born in Moscow to opera diva Maria Maksakova and theater entrepreneur Aleksander Volkov, whom her mother never married and who, in 1942, defected to the West, later to re-surface in the United States as the founder of a drama school. For many years Lyudmila was unaware of her father's identity. By keeping it secret, her mother was protecting her from serious trouble at the time when any link to 'a traitor' could be regarded crime against the state; according to the family legend, her father might have been NKVD general Vasily Novikov (hence the middle name, Vasilienva).[3] This controversy was also the reason for the atmosphere of secrecy that the girl has been grown in. With rumours spreading around concerning her origins (one had it that she'd been the daughter of none other than Stalin, who'd treated the famous Bolshoi singer as a favourite), Lyudmila was being kept mostly at home, so as "not to get too much unwanted impressions", as her mother put it. It was only in the Moscow Central music school where she studied cello that the girl would be able to socialize with peers.[2]

After the graduation from both schools (the secondary and the musical) simultaneously, Lyudmila has opted against pursuing musical career and enrolled at the prestigious Schukin theater college, to study in the actor Vladimir Etush class. In 1961 she graduated from the College and joined the Vakhtangov Theater, the troupe she knew well, since she'd been performing with it already, while a student.[1][4] The first two roles Maksakova was given there were as Masha Tchubukova in Kookie in Marriage (by Anatoly Sofronov) and as Masha in The Living Corpse (by Leo Tolstoy). Her breakthrough came two years later when she took upon herself the part of the Tatar princess Adelma in the famous Vakhtangov production of Princess Turandot, revived by director Ruben Simonov. This performance, full of swagger and charm, highlighted the young actress' best qualities and made her an overnight sensation in the Moscow theater circles. In the years to come she was lauded by theater critics in heroic parts (Lolya, Dion; Knipper-Chekhova, My Whimsical Happines), as well as comic (Nicol, Le Bourgeois gentilhomme), lyrical (Maria, The Cavalry Army after Babel) and dramatic (Mamayeva, Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man) ones.[1]

In 1964 Maksakova debuted on screen as Nina in Grigory Chukhray's There Was an Old Couple. Over the next ten years she had leading parts in revolutionary history drama Tatiana's Day (as Tatiana Ogneva, the young workers' leader), psychological melodrama Not Guilty (Natasha) and tragic melodrama The Bad Good Man (Nadezhda). The 1977 marriage to a German citizen Peter Igenbergs all but finished Maksakova's career: her photos have been removed from the press and life in theater became difficult, then collaborations with guesting theater directors from abroad (Miroslav Belovich, A. Kovalchik) saw its successful re-launch.[1]

Praised were her leading parts in Roman Viktyuk's Anna Karenina 1983 production (based on Mikhail Roshchin's remake of Leo Tolstoy's classic) which was followed by The Lady Without Camellias (after Terence Rattigan's play, Paola), Soboryane (based on Leskov's novel, Bizyukina) and I Don't Know You From Now On, Dear (after Aldo De Benedetti's play, Louise). In 1990 Maksakova debuted as a co-director in Viktyuk's take on David Pawnell's The Master's Lessons staged at Vakhtangov's.[5] Maksakova's notable film works of the were The Old Russian Vaudevilles' Evening (1979) where she played five women, Igor Talankin's drama Father Sergius (after Leo Tolstoy's short story, Makovkina) and Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus, the Ian Frid's musical film after Johann Strauss Strauss' classic where she starred opposite brothers Yuri and Vitaly Solomin.[1]

Critics lauded her works in Stanislav Govorukhin's Ten Little Negroes (1987, as Miss Brent), Pyotr Todorovsky's By the Main Street with an Orchestra (1986, as Alla Maksimovna) and Pyotr Fomenko's melodrama Old Car Ridings (Zoya Pavlovna). The latter marked the beginning of successful collaboration the climax of which was the Alexander Ostrovsky's Guilty Without Fault production which earned Maksakova the "USSR State Prize" in 1995, and the Stanislavsky Prize a year later. Two other Fomenko productions, Queen of Spades (1998) and The Resurrection (1999, after Maurice Maeterlinck's Le Miracle de saint Antoine) starred Maksakova. In 2000s she started to teach at the Schukin's Theater College and her appearances on stage and on screen have become increasingly less frequent.[1]

Filmography

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 "Максакова Людмила Васильевна". www.rusactors.ru. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Vergasov, F. "Людмила Васильевна Максакова: Ходили слухи, что я - дочь Сталина". www.pseudology.org. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  3. "Мария Максакова хочет знать имя своего дедушки". Комсомольская правда. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  4. "Людмила Васильевна Максакова". krugosvet.ru. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  5. "Уроки мастера". vahtangov.ru. Retrieved 10 October 2011.

External links