Christina Kalogerikou

Christina Kalogerikou (Greek: Χριστίνα Καλογερίκου; 24 February 1885 – 3 November 1968) was an actress which she was awarded for her work in the theatre. She is descended from an acting family and acted at the National Theatre.

Christina Kalogerikou
Born1885
Died3 November 1968
Greece
OccupationActress

Biography

Christina Kalogerikou was born in 1885 and was the daughter of Pantelis Roussos and his wife Elpiniki. The two sisters, Evangelia and Anthi did a great career in the characterists of the Greek theatre. Anthi was the first wife of Nikos Miliadis, father of celebrated actor Takis Miliadis.

She married Nikolaos Koukoulas and afterwards married her second husband Panos Kalogerikos. It is believed that she married Marios Paleologos.

She was decorated as actor with Taxiarchis Evpiias. Kalogerikou died in 1968.

Artwork presentation

She played mostly in roles at the National Theatre. After World War II, she left and starred herself in movies with her most popular role was the mother of Giorgos Foudas and the noted father in-law of Melina Mercouri in Stella by Mihalis Kakogiannis, she starred in To Amaxaki in 1955 by Dinos Dimopoulos, she played a part in the bankrupt leader, on the side of Orestis Makris and Vasilis Avlonitis.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1917O aniforos tou GolgothaMaria Magdalena
1951Nekri politeiaMrs. Petrokosta
1954O dromos me tis akakiesMrs. Petri
1955StellaMiltos' Mother
1955O agapitikos tis voskopoulas
1957To amaxaki
1958Makrya ap' ton kosmoAbbess(final film role)

Sources

  • Antonis Prekas, Like the Old Cinema (Σαν Παλιό Σινεμά = San Palio Sinema), Syghronoi Orizontes', 2003 pg 197-98
gollark: You may be better off just using a regular SSD, price/performance-wise.
gollark: I think most do?
gollark: My CPU's cooler shipped with thermal paste on it anyway.
gollark: Even Marmite would work. Then probably stop working soon. But it would work for a bit.
gollark: Plus if you want more RAM you'll be stuck buying outdated DDR3.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.