Olga Naumenko

Olga Nikolayevna Naumenko (Russian: О́льга Никола́евна Нау́менко; born December 6, 1949, Moscow, USSR) is a Soviet and Russian actress of theater and cinema, TV presenter, People's Artist of Russia (2005)).[1] Actress of Gogol Center.[2][3]

Olga Naumenko
О́льга Нау́менко
Born (1949-12-06) 6 December 1949
CitizenshipRussian SFSR, USSR (1949–1991), Russian Federation (1991–present)
Alma materBoris Shchukin Theatre Institute
OccupationActress
Years active1968–present
Notable work
The Irony of Fate (1975)
Spouse(s)Aleksandr Skvortsov (died)
Children1

Olga Naumenko, a native of Moscow, was born and grew up in a large family of a lieutenant-colonel (tank forces) and housewives. The first years of her life were spent in Germany.

Spouse of actress Aleksandr Skvortsov (1950-2009), actor of the Hermitage Theater. In marriage lived 32 years. Daughter Svetlana is a journalist.[4]

Career

Selected filmography

  • Crossing the Threshold (1970) as Albina Savitskaya
  • Shadows Disappear at Noon (1971) as Varka Morozova
  • Eternal Call (1973) as Manya's girlfriend[5]
  • The Irony of Fate (1975) as Galya
  • Medicine Against Fear (1978) as Olga Ilinichna Panafidina
  • Vladivostok, 1918 (1982) as Loginova

Theater

  • Ugly Elsa (1983, directed by Boris Golubovsky)
  • Tired with Нappiness (2005, Vyacheslav Sorokin)
  • The Idiots (2013, Kirill Serebrennikov)
  • Ordinary Story (2015, Kirill Serebrennikov)
  • Person (2016, Lera Surkova)
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gollark: If only you had a replicator to let you replicate your replicator.
gollark: GTech™ retroactively altered the progression to hinder our competitors.
gollark: I should probably automate laser drill interfacing whatsoever.
gollark: I doubt it. EIO's rather late. I'm just oddly obsessive about harvesting them from deserts.

References

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