Antonina Shuranova

Antonina Nikolayevna Shuranova (Russian: Антони́на Никола́евна Шура́нова, 1936–2003) was a Russian stage, television and film actress.[1]

Antonina Shuranova
Антонина Шуранова
Born(1936-04-30)30 April 1936
Died5 February 2003(2003-02-05) (aged 66)
St. Petersburg, Russia
OccupationActress
Years active1962—2003

Partial filmography

  • War and Peace (1966–1967, part 1-5) - Princess Maria Bolkonskaya
  • Na puti v Berlin (1969) - Tatyana Mikhaylovna
  • Kazhdyy vecher v odinnadtsat (1969)
  • Tchaikovsky (1970)[2] - Nadezhda von Meck
  • Shag s kryshi (1970)
  • Matters of the Heart (1974) - Lida
  • Strange Adults (1974, TV Movie) - Nina Ivanovna
  • Trust (1976) - Rosa Luxemburg
  • An Unfinished Piece for Mechanical Piano (1977) - Anna Petrovna Voynitseva
  • Strogaya muzhskaya zhizn (1977) - Tamara Stepanovna Klyonova
  • Inzhener Graftio (1979) - Antonina Graftio
  • Tovarishch Innokentiy (1981)
  • Krepysh (1982)
  • S tekh por, kak my vmeste (1983) - Antonina Petrovna
  • Vse kogo-to lyubyat... (1988) - Klavdiya Ivanovna
  • Pomnish zapakh sireni... (1992) - Vera Lvovna
  • 22 iyunya, rovno v 4 chasa (1992) - Tanya's mother

Awards

gollark: I want maximum customizability on both, since a phone is in essence just a highly integrated portable computer.
gollark: I've heard it said that there's one group which basically just wants something which works for some set of tasks and can't understand why you would want to go to all the work of configuring a device the way you want it, and another one which wants something maximally customizable to set it up as desired and can't understand why you would buy something which doesn't allow that.
gollark: Yes, lots of people don't care.
gollark: Personally, I *don't*, it's very uncustomizable.
gollark: Well, lucky, I guess, except it's an iPhone so I don't really like it, but it has... good specs and such.

References

  1. Rollberg p.642-43
  2. Антонина Шуранова // Караван историй. — 2000. — № 3.

Bibliography

  • Rollberg, Peter. Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2008.


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