Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
Lyudmila Tselikovskaya was a Russian film and stage actress, and unofficial sex symbol in the 1940s Soviet Union. She was loved by general public, but was censored under the dictatorship of Joseph Stalin.
She was born Lyudmila Vasilyevna Tselikovskaya on September 8, 1919, in Astrakhan, Russia. Her father, Vasili Tselikovsky, was an orchestra conductor, her mother was an opera singer. Young Tselikovskaya studied piano at the Gnesin School of Music in Moscow, then, from 1937 to 1941 she studied acting at the Shchukin Theatrical School of the Vakhtangov Theatre, graduating in 1941 as an actress.
From 1941 to 1992 Lyudmila Tselikovskaya was a member of the troupe at Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow. There her stage partners were such actors as Mikhail Ulyanov, Ruben Simonov, Boris Zakhava, Mikhail Astangov, Varvara Popova, Vasiliy Lanovoy, Irina Kupchenko, Yuliya Borisova, Lyudmila Maksakova, Marianna Vertinskaya, Nina Ruslanova, Nikolai Plotnikov, Yuriy Yakovlev, Vladimir Etush, Vyacheslav Shalevich, Andrei Abrikosov, Grigori Abrikosov, Boris Babochkin, Nikolai Gritsenko, Nikolai Timofeyev, Evgeni Fedorov, Aleksandr Grave, Vladimir Koval, Viktor Zozulin, Evgeniy Karelskikh, Sergey Makovetskiy, and Ruben Simonov, among others. Tselikovskaya gave memorable performances in the classic Shakespeare's plays, such as Juliet in 'Romeo and Juliet', and Beatrice in 'Mnogo shuma is nichego' (aka.. Much Ado about Nothing).
At the beginning of her film career, Tselikovskaya gave a stellar performance in Ivan the Terrible, Part I (1945) by director Sergei M. Eisenstein. However, Joseph Stalin canceled her nomination for Stalin's Prize, and as a consequence, Tselikovskaya did not have any official support for the rest of her career. During the Second World War Lyudmila Tselikovskaya entertained the Red Army troops at the front-lines together with her husband, actor Mikhail Zharov. However, after the war, she and Zharov were censored by the Soviet officials, and both became virtually unemployed.
In 1948 Tselikovskaya married Karo Alabyan, a prominent architect, but soon he was falsely accused of anti-Soviet activity, was fired from all government projects, became depressed, and later died of cancer. For the next 15 years, Tselikovskaya lived in a civil union with director Yuri Lyubimov, and their home in Moscow was a meeting place for such cultural figures as Boris Pasternak, Petr Kapitsa, Vladimir Vysotskiy, Fedor Abramov, Evgeniy Evtushenko, and other Russian intellectuals. At the same time, Tselikovskaya did not have new roles to play, she was ignored by official Soviet critics, and was rarely mentioned in the Soviet press. However, she was still loved by general public, and was eventually designated People's Actress of Russia. She died of cancer on July 2, 1992, in Moscow, Russia.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Steve Shelokhonov
Acting
Movie
Ivan the Terrible, Part I
as Czarina Anastasia Romanovna
1944
Movie
Did We Meet Somewhere Before
1954
Movie
Story of a Real Man
as Zinochka
1948
Movie
Four Hearts
as Шура Мурашова
1944
Movie
A Noisy Household
as Antonina Pavlovna Kalmykova
1946
Movie
The Grasshopper
as Olga Dymova
1955
Movie
Twins
as Lyuba Karaseva
1945
Movie
Air Taxi
as Natasha
1943
TV
To Remember
as archivefootage
1993
Movie
Incredible Bet, or True Event That Ended Happily Hundred Years Ago
as Madam Brykovich
1984
Movie
The Forest
1980
Movie
Classmates
1978
Movie
Anton Ivanovich Gets Angry
as Sima, his daughter
1941
Movie
Tutor
as Зинаида Сергеевна
1987
Movie
Karandash on Ice
1948
Movie
Family is Like Family
as Tatyana Ivanovna Korobova
1970
Movie
The Man with the Gun
as Варвара Ивановна Сибирцева
1977
Movie
Ladies and Hussars
1976
Movie
Much Ado About Nothing
as Беатриче
1956
Movie
He Came
as миссис Берлинг, его супруга
1973
Movie
50 Years of Sergei Obraztsov's Puppet Theater
1981
Movie
All Day Long
1978
TV
Legends of Cinema
as Self (archive footage)
2016