Remove ads
Russian actress From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Natalya Utevlevna Arinbasarova (Russian: Наталья Утевлевна Аринбасарова, Kazakh: Наталья Өтеуліқызы Орынбасарова; born 24 September 1946 in Moscow)[1] is a Russian actress who appeared in more than thirty films since 1965. In 1979 Arinbasarova was named Honored Artist of the RSFSR and in the same year she received the USSR State Prize for her role in The Taste of Bread (1978).[2]
Natalya Utevlevna Arinbasarova was born on September 24, 1946. Her father was Utevle Turemuratovich, a military man, a Kazakh by nationality. At the time of the birth of his daughter, he studied in Moscow at the Frunze Military Academy. Her mother was Maria Konstantinovna, née Zhukovskaya, from a family of Polish refugees during the First World War. Natalya's siblings were older brothers Yuri and Arsen, younger brother Mikhail, younger sister Tatyana.
After the father graduated from the Military Academy, the family moved several times from place to place, until finally, in 1956, he settled in Alma-Ata.[3]
Natalya Arinbasarova was initially interested in dance. After watching a film in which an excerpt from the ballet "Swan Lake" was shown in her childhood, Natalya desired to become a professional ballerina.[3] She studied at the Bolshoi Ballet Academy until 1964 and joined the dance troupe of Almaty Opera Theater upon graduation. In 1965, director Andrei Konchalovsky cast her in his feature directorial debut The First Teacher. For her performance as Altynai, a peasant girl who supports the Communist teacher in her village, Arinbasarova won the prize for Best Female Lead at the Venice Film Festival in 1966.[2]
Arinbasarova, also enrolled in VGIK, where she studied in Sergei Gerasimov and Tamara Makarova’s workshop, graduating in 1971. Gerasimov gave her the role of a young Kyrgyz ballet dancer in his contemporary epic By the Lake (1970). Her other important lead roles include the title role in the Chingiz Aitmatov adaptation Jamilya (1969) and the World War II heroine Manshuk Mamedova in The Song of Manshuk (1970) by Kazakh director Magit Begalin. Arinbasarova was cast by Tolomush Okeev in the social drama The Ulan (1977), by Polish filmmaker Jerzy Hoffman in Beautiful Stranger (1992), and by Ermek Shinarbaev in the Kazakh-French co-production A Tender Heart (1994). She also had a supporting role in the Kazakh picture Leila’s Prayer (2002), about a young girl living near the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing site.[2]
In 1965 Natalya Arinbasarova married Konchalovsky, to whom she stayed married until 1969. They had one son, Egor who later also became a prominent film director.
She later remarried, to cinematographer Nikolai Dvigubskiy. They had a daughter, Katya Dvigubskaya, who later became an actress and film director. Arinbasarova married the third time to director Eldor Urazbayev, with whom she worked on several films. Arinbasarova retained good relationships with all her husbands, who supported her both children through their studies and film careers.[4]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | Returning to the 'A' (Возвращение в "А") |
grandma | |
2005 | Escape (Спасение) |
director of children's home | |
1989 | Entrance to the Labyrinth (Вход в лабиринт) |
Rashida Ramazanova | |
1987 | Visit to Minotaur (Визит к Минотавру) |
Marina Kolesnikova | |
1985 | One Second for a Feat | Nurse | |
1969 | Jamilya (Джамиля) |
Jamilya | |
1967 | By the Lake (У озера) |
ballerina Katya Olzoeva | |
1965 | The First Teacher (Первый учитель) |
Altynay |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.