Agnia Ditkovskyte

Agnia (Agne) Olegovna Ditkovskyte (Lithuanian: Agnija (Agnė) Ditkovskytė), after marriage — Chadova,[1] born 11 May 1988,[2] Vilnius, Lithuanian SSR) is a Lithuanian and Russian actress.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

Agnia Ditkovskite
At the premiere of Hooked in Moscow, 2009.
Born
Agne Olegovna Ditkovskite

(1988-05-11) May 11, 1988
OccupationActress
Years active2006–present

Biography

Ditkovskyte was born into the family of Lithuanian director Olegas Ditkovskis and Russian actress Tatyana Lyutaeva. She lived in Lithuania until the age of 15, then in 2004 she moved to Moscow with her mother and younger brother Dominique.[3]

Ditkovskyte decided to follow in her parents' footsteps and enrolled at VGIK. However, she only spent a single year at university. Despite this, Ditkovskyte was able to start a professional career and debuted in feature film Heat, in which she played a major role.[3]

In 2006, Ditkovskyte stopped acting for a while, but in 2008 she again started appearing on the screen and continues to pursue an acting career to this day.[3]

Personal life

From 2006 to 2009, Ditkovskyte dated Russian actor, Aleksey Chadov,[4] whom she met on the set of the film Heat, after which their relationship began.[3]

Ditkovskyte and Chadov both acted in the film Love in the Big City. Initially their relationship was happy, but later began to disintegrate and Ditkovskyte initiated their separation.[3]

Later it became known that they had decided to resume their relationship.[3] On August 24, 2012, they got married.[5][6] On June 5, 2014, Ditkovskyte gave birth to their son Fedor.[7] On May 2, 2015 the actors broke up again.[8]

Filmography

  • 2006 — Heat
  • 2006 — Ivan Podushkin. Gentleman Detective
  • 2006 — Death Bequest
  • 2008 — Mountaineer
  • 2009 — Hooked on the Game
  • 2010 — Hooked 2. Next Level
  • 2011 — Boris Godunov
  • 2012 — Happy New Year, Mommies!
  • 2013 — Lucky Island
  • 2013 — A Toy Seller
  • 2014 — Viy
  • 2014 — Major Sokolov's Hetaeras
  • 2017 — Dance to Death
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gollark: <https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/118141/high-frequency-blinking-leds-and-sensor-for-that> says that they probably can.
gollark: I'm not sure of the context of this, but there are probably microcontrollers or whatever which could do Bluetooth and not need some dedicated receiver on the other end.
gollark: You run the lowish-voltage DC from a solar panel through an inverter which converts it to AC.
gollark: A USB-C port on a laptop might support power delivery *in*, power delivery *out*, two different video output things, sometimes Thunderbolt which is completely different but runs over the same connector, and any regular USB speed from USB 2.0 to USB 3.2 Gen2x2.

References

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