Verka Serduchka

Andriy Danylko
Background information
Birth name Andriy Mykhailovych Danylko
Also known as Verka Serduchka
Born (1973-10-02) 2 October 1973
Poltava, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Genres Comedy, parody, pop
Occupation(s) Comedian, singer
Instruments Singing
Years active 1998–present
Labels CD Land, mamamusic
Website www.serduchka.com

Andriy Mykhailovych Danylko (Ukrainian: Андрі́й Миха́йлович Дани́лко; Russian: Андрей Миха́йлович Дани́лко, translit. Andrey Mikhaylovich Danilko; born 2 October 1973), better known for his drag stage persona Verka Serduchka (Ukrainian: Вєрка Сердючка; Russian: Верка Сердючка), is a Ukrainian comedian and pop and dance singer. Danylko represented Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 as Verka Serduchka and finished in second place. Serduchka has sold over 600,000 records during its career in Ukraine.

As a character actor, Danylko has also appeared in over a dozen television films and is also known for appearing as Serduchka in the comedy film Spy starring Melissa McCarthy, Rose Byrne, and Miranda Hart.

External image
Andriy Danylko's studio photo of his Verka Serduchka character
1+1 channel

Early life and education

Andriy Danylko was born to a working-class family in Poltava. In 1980, at seven, he lost his father to lung cancer. An avid amateur performer since childhood, he graduated from the Kiev State College of Circus and Variety Arts.

Career

Danylko Theater

In 1990, Andriy Danylko began to create the character of Verka Serduchka, a flamboyant middle-aged woman from a rural family, working as a railroad sleeping car attendant. Danylko presented Serduchka publicly for the first time in a Poltava comedy competition on January 4, 1991. He invented the character's name by combining the randomly picked first name Verka and the last name of a former school classmate, Anya Serduk.[1][2]

Danylko later gave his Serduchka character a "mother," played by actress Inna Bilokon, who had been Danylko's close friend since school.

After Verka Serduchka, Danylko created other characters, such as a police officer, a soldier and a female ballet dancer. He established the troupe "Danylko Theater" to tour the cities of Russia and Ukraine. In 2002, Danylko, along with his group, toured in the CIS and Baltic countries with the program "I am a Revolution" for the whole year. The following year he was awarded the title of Honored Artist of Ukraine soon after the Danylko Theater concert tour "I Was Born for Love".

Television and TV-movie appearances

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Danylko hosted a talk show called "SV-show" ("SV" is an abbreviation for Ukrainian: Спальний Вагон, "Spalnyy Vagon", which means sleeping car) on various Ukrainian television channels.[3]

In 2001, Danylko made his first appearance in one of several musicals produced for television, mostly in female comic portrayals based on the Serduchka character (see Filmography). Several of these productions were shown in the New Year's Eve broadcasts of Russia-1 television.

Pianist and composer

Apart from pop and dance performances as Serduchka, Danylko has also performed ambient musical compositions under his real name, including the 2005 album После тебя (Posle tebya: After you).

Eurovision Song Contest 2007

Verka Serduchka with her ensemble in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007.

Verka Serduchka was chosen to represent Ukraine at the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 in Helsinki, Finland, with the song "Dancing Lasha Tumbai".[4] One of Ukraine's nationwide FM radio stations organized a protest action in February 2007 to express their disapproval of the selection.[5] Some Ukrainians and even members of the Ukrainian Parliament also expressed their disapproval, viewing the character of Serduchka as "grotesque and vulgar".[6][7]

Serduchka's song "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" was sung in four languages: German, English, Ukrainian, and Russian. The invented words "lasha tumbai" caused some controversy after the performance, as many people noted the phrase's similarity to "Russian goodbye". In early publicity appearances, Serduchka explained that "lasha tumbai" was a Mongolian expression for "whipped cream." His statement was denied by several Mongols who gave the correct phrase on a talk show broadcast by Channel One (Russia) just before the Eurovision Song Contest 2007.[8] The Mongolian embassy in Moscow also said that "lasha tumbai" was total gibberish.[9]

The "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" single reached #6 in the French charts and went on to be #28 on The Official UK Singles Chart on 20 May 2007. This was the first time a non-UK non-winning Eurovision entry had made UK charts since 1974.

Danylko later made a brief phone-in appearance on the BBC's The Graham Norton Show, in which his comments made no sense whatsoever. Another call was made, but with a translator in the audience. In this instance, Danylko appeared to tell guest Andrew Lloyd Webber he was "rubbish". However, in an interview with Andrew Williams in the 60 Seconds column of metro.co.uk (30 July 2007), Danylko clarified his meaning:

AW: Why did you call Andrew Lloyd Webber ‘rubbish’ on The Graham Norton Show?

AD: Someone interpreted Serduchka wrongly. I meant I watched "Cats: the Musical" on TV. It was boring. You should watch a musical on the stage. Don't watch "Cats" on TV.[10]

In the same interview, he stated that "lasha tumbai" was a somewhat made-up phrase that sounds like the Mongolian phrase for "milkshake" and that many Russians nevertheless managed to interpret it as saying "Russia goodbye!".

In 2011, a writer from British newspaper The Guardian described "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" as the "best song never to win Eurovision" before going on to describe Serduchka as "an oven-ready Christopher Biggins".[11]

Political life

Danylko announced in 2007 that he would front a new political party, "For Ours!", to run in that year's Ukrainian parliamentary election, but he later abandoned the idea. A public opinion poll in July 2007 placed 'For Ours! Verka Serduchka' at 2% overall support.[12][13]

Eurovision 2011

Serduchka had planned to participate in the Ukrainian national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest 2011. He automatically qualified for the final,[14] but withdrew his nomination in October 2010.[15]

Appearance in Spy

Danylko appeared as the character Verka Serduchka in a cameo role in the 2015 American action comedy movie Spy, which premiered May 22, 2015 in New York City and June 4, 2015 in Ukraine. In the scene, set in Paris, Serduchka's open-air performance of "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" is interrupted by CIA agents Susan Cooper (Melissa McCarthy) and Rick Ford (Jason Statham).[16]

Eurovision 2016

In the 2016 telecast of the Eurovision Song Contest, Serduchka announced the results from the Ukrainian jury. Bilokon, portraying Serduchka's mother, accompanied Danylko.[17]

Eurovision 2017

For the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest hosted in Ukraine, a series of short video clips, titled "Verkavision", were produced that chronicled the fictional back story of the character of Verka Serduchka and her journey as a Eurovision "star".[18] Verka also appeared on stage during the final, and opened the televote.

Awards

In 2003, Danylko was honored with the title People's Artist of Ukraine.[19]

Personal life

In 2013, Danylko bought a Rolls-Royce that once belonged to Freddie Mercury, with plans to donate it to a museum devoted to the group Queen.[20]

Danylko has said in interviews that he does not engage in transvestitism outside of his public performances, with a distinction between his stage persona and his personal life.[21] He is reluctant to discuss his private affairs beyond this, though he has stated in interviews that he had a difficult relationship with a woman with whom he lived with for 8 years.[22] In January 2015, photos of Danylko intimately kissing Inna Bilokon were posted online by a friend.[23]

Discography

Albums

Singles

Chart position

Year Single Chart positions Album
SWE FI UK IE FR GER AUT CH PL DK EU
2007 "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" 6 2 28 31 6 74 49 53 48 52 45 Dancing Europe

Other songs

Filmography

As performer

As composer

DVD

References

  1. "Danylko become Serduchka because of school girlfriend" (in Russian). kp.ru. 2003-12-04.
  2. Ryzancheva, Elena. "Interview with Verka Serduchka-Danylko" (in Russian).
  3. "Danylko's biography" (in Russian).
  4. "Verka Serduchka went to the Eurovision-2007 song contest". Podrobnosti.ua (in Russian). Retrieved March 17, 2007.
  5. ""No to Euroserduchka!" - protest action of an FM radio station" (in Ukrainian). NTN (Channel). Retrieved May 10, 2007.
  6. Fawkes, Helen (April 2, 2007). "Eurovision act angers Ukrainians". BBC News. Retrieved May 11, 2007.
  7. "Eurovision: Verka Serduchka will disgrace Ukraine" (in Ukrainian). Korrespondent. Archived from the original on March 20, 2007. Retrieved May 11, 2007.
  8. "Russian Channel One Takes Offence at Verka Serduchka". Ukrainian Newspaper (in Ukrainian). Retrieved May 21, 2007.
  9. "Ukrainian drag queen a front-runner at Eurovision". Agence France Presse. May 12, 2007. Archived from the original on December 14, 2009. Retrieved December 14, 2009.
  10. "60 SECONDS: Verka Serduchka". metro.co.uk.
  11. Raeside, Julia (May 10, 2011). "Six to watch: memorable Eurovision moments". London: The Guardian.
  12. "Socialists Lose Their Rating". Ukrayinska Pravda. 2007-07-31.
  13. "Ukraine’s election campaign: mired in scandal". Russia Today. 2007-08-25.
  14. (in Ukrainian) "Gogol Bordello" не буде на "Євробаченні", а Сердючка вже у фіналі, Табло ID (August 20, 2010)
  15. (in Ukrainian) Сердючка передумала їхати на "Євробачення", Табло ID (October 13, 2010)
  16. Lewis, Pete (April 27, 2014). "Ukraine: Verka hits Hollywood in spy movie". esctoday.com.
  17. "Eurovision scoring 2016 from Ukraine
  18. "Video: Verkavision Part II at the second Semi-Final of the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest - Eurovision Song Contest Kyiv 2017"
  19. Sabrine Jaszi. "Verka Serduchka". AllMusic. Retrieved August 3, 2016.
  20. "Ukrainian pop-idol star buys Freddie Mercury's Rolls-Royce". music-news.com. January 28, 2013. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
  21. Данилко обижается, когда его считают извращенцем (in Russian). 1+1 channel. Retrieved July 15, 2013.
  22. "Andriy Danylko: "I had a difficult experience living together with a woman..."" (in Russian). Gay.ru. Retrieved May 13, 2007.
  23. Данилка заскочили за пристрасним поцілунком з "мамою" Сердючки. ФОТО (in Ukrainian)
  24. Also transliterated as Gop gop
  25. "Andrey Danylko". IMDb.com. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Tina Karol
with "Show Me Your Love"
Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest
2007
Succeeded by
Ani Lorak
with "Shady Lady"
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