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Lyubov Orlova

Lyubov Petrovna Orlova (Russian: Любовь Петровна Орлова [lʲʊˈbofʲ pʲɪˈtrovnə ɐrˈɫovə] ; 11 February [O.S. 29 January] 1902 – 26 January 1975) was a Soviet and Russian actress, singer, dancer and People's Artist of the USSR (1950).[2]

Lyubov Orlova
Любовь Орлова
Lyubov Orlova with her State Stalin Prize badge in 1945
Born
Lyubov Petrovna Orlova

(1902-02-11)11 February 1902
Died26 January 1975(1975-01-26) (aged 72)
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
55°43′29″N 37°33′15″E / 55.72472°N 37.55417°E / 55.72472; 37.55417
Alma materMoscow Conservatory[1]
Occupation(s)Actress, pianist, singer, dancer
Years active1926–1974
Spouses
Awards

Life and career edit

 
Lyubov Orlova's parents, Evgeniya Nikolaevna Sukhotina (1863—1945) and Pyotr Fedorovich Orlov (1867—1938), 19th century
 
Lyubov Orlova with her parents, early 1930s[3]

She was born to a family of Russian hereditary nobles, her maternal side, and gentry, her paternal side. in Zvenigorod, 60 km from Moscow, then lived with her parents and older sister in Yaroslavl. Her acting and singing talents were evident very early on, but her noble parents considered acting a disgraceful career and directed her towards classical music.[4] There she began to study music. In 1914, after her father left for the front, her mother Evgenia Nikolaevna and her daughters settled in Moscow, where the sisters entered the gymnasium. The Orlovs spent the difficult years of the Civil War in Voskresensk because their mother's sister lived here. The family subsisted on funds from the sale of milk which was given by the aunt's cow. Lyuba and Nonna drove nearly a hundred kilometers to Moscow, and then went home, with heavy cans. Hence comes the legend of the ugly hands which Orlova was so shy about.[5] Her first and last names are meaningful words in Russian: любовь means "love", and Орлова is the feminine form of орлов "eagle's".

When she was seven, Fyodor Shalyapin predicted her future as a famous actress. In 1919–1922, she studied as a piano student at the Moscow Conservatory (Professor K. Kipp [ru] class) but did not graduate because she had to work as a music teacher and a pianist-illustrator of silent films in movie theaters (French: tapeur[6]) to support her parents.[1] In 1925, she has graduated from the Moscow Theatre College, choreography department.[7] Her first husband, a Soviet economist, Andrei Berzin, was arrested in 1930. However, this did not affect her career. Dmitri Shcheglov, a biography author, wrote in Love and Mask ('Lyubov i maska', 1997): "As an eternal irony and foresight of fate, the best performer of the roles of house servants and enthusiasts of Communist labor was a descendant of ten Russian Orthodox saints. Two of them, Olga, the Grand Princess of Kiev, and Vladimir, the Grand Prince of Kiev, are among the Equal-to-apostles... Red Eagle in an azure-golden field, the House of Orlov's coat of arms, is also present on the Bezhetsk clan branch the actress belonged to..."[8] The Orlov family was partly saved from the worst form of repression, camps or deportation, and the Bolshevik "redistribution of property" only because even before the Revolution, her father Peter had lost all three of his estates at cards, and therefore there was practically nothing to take away. However, Orlova's father, an engineer and class enemy, was officially banned as an employee.[9]

In September 1926, she was hired as a choir singer by the Nemirovich-Danchenko Theatre Music Studio finally deciding to become an actress, not a pianist.[10] She received her first solo role in November, the same year. Her quick promotion was fueled by Olga Baclanova's sudden departure from Russia and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko's eye for this type of female beauty.[11] In 1932, she received her first leading roles in La Périchole and Les cloches de Corneville. Despite her success with the public, vocal and acting training in a theatre with Ksenia Kolubai [ru], Orlova wasn't noticed by the press and was criticized by her colleagues for not having a real singing voice (Faina Ranevskaya, her close friend, used to say "Orlova is a gorgeous actress for sure. But her voice! When she sings it sounds like somebody is urinating in an empty bucket."[12]) However, Orlova had her "trick". Remembering her student years (and she studied at the choreography department of the Moscow Theater College named after A.V. Lunacharsky, now - GITIS), she decided to bring herself back to her previous form and perform Serpoletta's entrance aria on pointe.[13] Alexander Hort, writer, wrote: "The audience was smitten: while dancing, Serpoletta stood up on pointe shoes, so graceful, airy, romantic! And Orlova made a tactically verified move, she took the bull by the horns: the very first vocal number, Serpoletta's verses 'What a pity that an unsettling case pushed me to a different path!' she performed, dancing on her fingers." In the future, no one was able to repeat this trick, it has stayed as a semi-legendary fact of history.[14]

 
Lyubov Orlova in her 30s

In 1933 she met the novice director Grigory Alexandrov, who was casting actors for his movie Jolly Fellows (1934), and married him. Orlova's performance in this comedy, very popular in the USSR, earned the young star the sympathy of Stalin and the title "Honorable actor of the RSFSR". It had caused the first wave of the so-called "Orlova syndrome", a Soviet psychiatric term describing women who wanted to be like Orlova. They diligently lightened their hair and self-styled themselves as relatives to the idol.[15] According to her relatives, Orlova secretly loathed Joseph Stalin reacted to death with the words: "Finally, this scum is dead".[16] Her critics, including Sergei Eisenstein, had blamed the musician-turned-actress for ruining the serious career of Alexandrov. Despite her efforts, Orlova didn't have a reputation of a serious drama actress, moreover, she was intentionally overplaying her film roles and didn't stop her constant touring as a singer. Her haters credited her success to the marriage of convenience and Stalin protection[17]

In the next few years she starred in four popular movies which also became instant Soviet classics: Circus (1936), Volga-Volga (1938), Tanya (1940), and Springtime (1947). She was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1941. In 1950, she became the first woman to receive the title of the People's Artist of the USSR exclusively for her cinematic works. After that, she switched to playing in theatre productions of Yuri Zavadsky's company. Her most famous roles included Nora - Nora, Dear Liar - Patrick Campbell, Strange Mrs. Savage - Mrs. Ethel Savage. But her most acclaimed performance was a title role in Lizzie MacKay (Russian title for The Respectful Prostitute). Jean-Paul Sartre was present on a jubilee 400th show in 1962, saying: "I was especially impressed by Lyubov Orlova's talented performance. After the show, I told her I've been delighted by her performance. It was not an empty compliment. Lyubov Orlova is really the best of all LizzieMacKay performers I know."[18]

Since the 1928 till her death, she was constantly touring as a singer with her pianist Leo Mironov (Russian: Лев Миронов, romanizedLev Mironov). Her early repertoire included classical songs by Glinka, Mussorgsky, Dargomyzhsky and Tchaikovsky.[10] During the war, she toured more than 50,000 kilometers along the front line, with her concerts based on Isaak Dunayevsky songs from her movies.[19] For all of her career, she was banned from making the records of her songs and performing on television, supposedly because of her "backstage war" with Klavdiya Shulzhenko, Leonid Utesov's choice of interest for Jolly Fellows.[20] Ivan Kozlovsky especially regretted the absence of recordings of his own duets with Orlova.[21]

Awards and honours edit

Personal relationships edit

 
Lyubov Orlova sings with Grigoi Aleksandrov in 1937

In 1926 or, according to her grandniece Nonna Golikova, in 1921, Lyubov Orlova married a Soviet economist Andrei Berzin (1893-1951), the deputy head of the administrative and financial department for the People's Commissariat of Agriculture.[23] Berzin supported not only Orlova, but her parents, and older sister, all of them also moved to his place. Orlova had married to save her relatives from death but she absolutely didn't love her husband and had an abortion or a miscarriage that, highly likely, had left her barren for the rest of her life. Berzin has understood and accepted that asking her to file for divorce and save herself from the inevitable labor camps or deportation, as both the wife of enemy of the people and the daughter of class enemy, just before his next arrest by NKVD. She had agreed. After that, Lyubov and all of her relatives had to move from Berzin's gorgeous apartment in the center of Moscow.

In 1931, Orlova became a partner of a 'German specialist', engineer or businessman, named Franz. Nothing more is known about him. Their romance developed for about a year. After her performances, a foreign admirer picked the actress in a black Mercedes. Franz bought Orlova expensive foreign outfits that arouse the envy of all women, especially in a theatre. Orlova moved to her beloved in the Metropol hotel, where he lived in a luxurious room. When Lyubov Orlova was invited to shoot Jolly Fellows, which took place in Gagra, Franz went with her. At that time, Lyuba was already familiar with Grigory Alexandrov, then separated for many years from his wife, actress Olga Ivanova. Olga and Grigory had a son named Douglas (1925-1978) but at that time she was in relationships with the famous actor Boris Tiomkin. In Gagra, Orlova's affection for Aleksandrov became obvious. She had explained the situation to Franz and he left, first for Moscow and then for his homeland. Faina Ranevskaya remembered in 1982: "Don't you know how handsome Aleksandrov, Lyubochka's director, friend, husband, used to be? He was handsome like Antinous even though I've never seen Antinous personally. Like Philemon and Baucis, they loved each other.".[24]

In January 1934, or, according to a different archive source, in 1937, Orlova married Aleksandrov.[25] However, because of the couple's suspicious lack of children and Aleksandrov's unclear relationships and painful breakup with Sergei Eisenstein, for the many decades, a lot of researchers have perceived Orlova as "a beard" to conceal Aleksandrov's bisexuality in exchange for the richer career opportunities. Later in life, Aleksandrov had answered about his wife's lack of children, according to his relative, the following: "In the beginning, she didn't want, and later she couldn't".[26]

After Aleksandrov ex-wife Olga's death during childbirth in June 1941, when she was already married to Boris Tiomkin, Orlova has adopted his son Douglas (forcefully renamed to 'Vasili' during the next purges, arrested in 1952, had his first heart attack in prison, was liberated after Joseph Stalin's death the next year[27]). In 1975, Orlova died and in 1978, Vasili died. In 1979, Vasili's widow Galina Krylova married the mentally sick Grigori Aleksandrov to serve as his maid in exchange for a subsequent property and archive. She loathed Lyubov Orlova for arrogance towards her and her previous husband, and towards her son, Aleksandrov's grandson. Grigori Aleksandrov died in 1983, his documentary about his wife Lyubov Orlova was released in 1984. The wide has buried his corpse on the same line, the opposite side, of Novodevichy Cemetery as Lyubov Orlova's grave. For many decades, Orlova-Aleksandrov's archive had been plundered before being bought from Aleksandrov's descendants by the Russian-Jewish lawyer Aleksandr Dobrovinsky.[28][29]

Political views edit

Orlova was never a member of the Communist Party, even when her husband has joined it in 1954, following Joseph Stalin's death. In the 1960s, another Soviet actress Tatiana Bestayeva [ru] was unsuccessfully recruited by the KGB, in order for her to inform the authorities about the luminaries of Mossovet Theatre: Lyubov Orlova, Rostislav Plyatt, and Gennadi Bortnikov.[30]

 
Coat of arms of Sukhotin family [ru] includes à la Minor Pogon hand and golden lion[a]

Lyubov Orlova's mother, Evgenia Nikolaevna Sukhotina, was a niece to Tatyana Tolstoy's husband. Tatiana Sukhotina-Tolstaya was the eldest and most beloved daughter of count Leo Tolstoy, she had lived in her parents' house for 35 years and was very close to her father spiritually. As a child, Lyubov was encouraged to write a letter to a famous relative. She has received The Prisoner of the Caucasus with his autograph "To Lyubochka - L. N. Tolstoy" which was kept by her as a talisman.[32] In Russia, it's debatable whether the Tolstoy-inspired left-wing political views were sincere left-wing or was it a miscalculation and/or alleged hypocrisy of a count, taking into consideration the general negative attitude of the claimed Rurikids descendants (both Tolstoys and Orlovs, and also Aleksander Pushkin and Modest Mussorgsky) towards the House of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov policy. The claimed blood connection to an ex-communicated count is also known for giving the artists a special creative inspiration, and not only the obviously virtual hierarchical claims.[33][34][35][36] Orlova's education at Moscow Conservatory piano department, at least three years, has supposedly provided her with the system of spiritual values, The Well-Tempered Clavier as the Old Testament and Beethoven's 32 sonatas as the New Testament, and all of that didn't contradict the official ex-communication of Leo Tolstoy from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901.[b] From Alexis of Russia's 1648 law "About the correction of morals and the destruction of superstitions" (Об исправлении нравов и уничтожении суеверий) to Peter the Great's reforms, all the folk instruments were burned and banned in Russia, and Alexis was the first non-elected Romanov dynasty ruler, and those musicians who disagree were forcefully deported to Malorossia (modern Ukraine), there was a corporal punishment for them also. It was perceived by the Soviet propaganda as cultural genocide of Russians inspired by the local Orthodox Church that has never allowed the instrumental music on the liturgy, bell ringing being the one and only exception.[40][41] Alexis of Russia's rule also has established a tradition of self-immolation among the Russian Old Believers, a unique phenomenon in contemporary history.[42]

During the Soviet era, the obligatory conservatory pianist values have effectively utilized the fact of Vladimir Lenin's well-documented admiration for Beethoven's Sonata No. 23. According to Maxim Gorky, "one evening, in Moscow, at the apartment of E. P. Peshkova, Lenin, listening Beethoven's sonatas performed by Issay Dobrowen, noted: 'I know nothing better than 'Appassionata'. I am ready to listen to it every day. Amazing, preterhuman music. I'm always proud, naive maybe, childish, thinking these are the miracles people can do,' and, screwing up his eyes, grinning, he added gloomily: 'But I can't listen to it that often. It gets on my nerves, I want to say cute nonsense and caress the heads of people who, living in a filthy hell, can create such beauty. And today you can't caress anyone's head, they'll bite off your hand, and you need to beat over the heads, beat mercilessly. Although, perfectly, we are against all violence towards the people. Hmm, the job is hellishly difficult'."[43] After perestroika, along with the exclusive system of Soviet musical education, the Russian state has financially "abandoned the conservatory to face the merciless fate".[44][45] By 2019, the number of people of Russia who enjoy classical music has dropped to 22%, below the local pop (35%), Soviet pop (32%) and "criminals' songs" that are based on the themes of the urban underclass (30%).[46][47]

Orlova's movies include a decent amount of plot-defining in-jokes about the composers, (Beethoven in Jolly Fellows, Volga-Volga, Johann Sebastian Bach in Starling and Lyre), and a-la virtuoso grand piano performances (Circus, about virtuosity as a word with the previous meaning 'virtue', Springtime). Grigori Aleksandrov credited his second wife Orlova, she was fluent in both French and German, as a co-editor of his scripts. In the autobiography, he wrote: "It was enough for her to try by ear a piece of the script which had previously was lying on my desktop in a state of blissful well-being. All the imperfections of the material that was not completely written out were personally revealed to me. Lyubov Petrovna unusually sensed the slightest falsity".[48] On a contrary, the Russian upper-class has historically preferred Italian opera and French ballet, as brands, a lot more than anything else and these facts were concluded, by Aleksandrov and Orlova in The Composer Glinka and Mussorgsky, in a still popular statement about Russian political elites, House of Romanov especially, being historically Russophobic.[49][50][51] In 2018, The Economist has also pointed out the significant role of Russian Orthodox Church and "the ghost of the Romanovs" in Putin's Russia.[52] Feodor Nikitich Romanov (1553-1633, Patriarch Filaret of Moscow, de facto ruler of Russia during the reign of his son, Mikhail) descended from the Rurik dynasty through a female line, his mother, Evdokiya Gorbataya-Shuyskaya was a Rurikid princess from the Shuysky branch, daughter of Alexander Gorbatyi-Shuisky. The last tsar Nicholas II was described as "limited, stupid" and "degenerate" even by the usually polite first Russian Nobel Prize winner, physiologist Ivan Pavlov.[53]

In 1936, following her role of a young mother in Circus, Orlova was given an order to participate, among the best-known women in the country, in the discussion, and, practically, in the approval of the law banning the abortion. According to M. Kushnirov, the executive editor of the radio who prepared a text for her to read, in general, welcoming, of course, the wise project of the Stalin government "On mother and child, on family and abortion", the actress "has allowed herself to make some amendments and additions to it".[54]

On alimony, Orlova added: "It is irrational to punish a father-defaulter with prison, he must be forced to work." On abortion: "There should be no doom in the abortion clause. In Soviet society, there are many independent women, many professions in which a woman successfully competes with a man... Pregnancy will tear a woman out of her job, maybe at the very moment when she completes a grandiose project or prepares for a heroic flight, or finishes work over a big role for which she has spent several years of her life, and, perhaps, at this crucial moment of her life, her social and political biography, she is forced to give up everything and lose a year of time. In such cases, let the woman give birth a little later. Let abortion be allowed in these cases. Let the woman know the law is not fatal. It seems to me, lately, all women want to give birth, everyone wants to have a child. I myself want a child, and I will certainly have one. And it is natural. Life is getting more and more joyful and more fun. The future is even more wonderful. Why not give birth?"[54]

In 1939, Orlova also perceived the annexation of Polish territories of Ukraine and Belarus through the eyes of a musician. She wrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda the following: "Once these lands were the lands of the Belarusian and Ukrainian people. The same rains watered them, the same sun shone on them, and the same winds swept over their valleys and hills. But two decades ago, a border passed through these lands. For one part of the Belarusian and Ukrainian people, the land was shrouded in grave gloom, for another it blossomed with extraordinary colors which only the land of happy people can shine with."[55]

Orlova continued: "In one part of the land, in the West, people have even forgotten how to sing, they were forbidden to sing. The oppressors saw the sounds of a Ukrainian or Belarusian song as a danger for themselves. These songs could remind the disadvantaged of another world that began so disturbingly close, there behind this fishing line, there behind this village... Now the song broke free. Millions of lips have recently been looking for words of a curse to express their hatred towards the Polish landlords. Now, these millions of lips are looking for the words of happiness that are unusual for them in order to glorify a new life, the Red Army, the Soviet government, the wise Stalin." Orlova not only responded in writing to the annexation of the "old" new lands to the USSR. The Soviet press reported in October 1939: "In Western Ukraine and Western Belarus there are concert brigades of the USSR State Academic Bolshoi Theater and the All-Union Concert and Touring Association, including I. Kozlovsky, M. Reizen, R. Zelyonaya, S. Obraztsov, L. Orlova, V. Yakhontov [ru].[55]

In 1952, according to the witnesses, there was a failed attempt to assassinate Orlova for her political views. Her grandniece Nonna Golikova wrote: "In 1952, Lyubov Petrovna gave a concert in some border town in Western Ukraine, where, as we know, active anti-Russian sentiments and political movements have always existed. Orlova in the final of the concert went to bows. Someone from the audience gave her an extraordinary bouquet of roses. 'I immediately drew attention to it,' Lyubochka told us later. - 'Now I understand that it was for mourning. White roses, and in the middle are completely unusual - black ones. I've never seen such people.' She took the bouquet. The paper it was wrapped in was torn from the side facing it. Lyubochka pricked her finger, the thorns were soaked in poison. Rapid blood poisoning began, Orlova's life was in danger."[32]

Filmography edit

Year Title Original Title Role Notes

[57]

1933 Alëna's Love Любовь Алёны Mrs Ellen Getwood, the wife of American engineer silent film, lost
1934 A Petersburg Night Петербургская ночь Grushen’ka music by Dmitry Kabalevsky
1934 Jolly Fellows Весёлые ребята Anyuta music by Isaac Dunayevsky
1936 Circus Цирк Marion Dixon music by Isaac Dunayevsky
1938 Volga-Volga Волга-Волга letter carrier Dunya Petrova ("Strelka") music by Isaac Dunayevsky
1939 Engineer Kochin's Error Ошибка инженера Кочина Ksenia Lebedeva, employee of the Aviation Institute
1940 Tanya Светлый путь Tanya Morozova "Cinderella" music by Isaac Dunayevsky
1941 Fighting Film Collection #4 Боевой киносборник № 4 letter carrier Dunya Petrova ("Strelka"), presenter of the collection
1941 The Artamonov Business Дело Артамоновых dancer Paula Menotti cameo
1943 A Family Одна семья Katya film wasn't released in theatres
1943 People of the Caspian Каспийцы documentary by Grigori Alexandrov
1947 Springtime Весна actress Vera Shatrova / scientist Irina Nikitina music by Isaac Dunayevsky
1949 Encounter at the Elbe Встреча на Эльбе Jeannette Sherwood, journalist music by Dmitry Shostakovich
1950 Mussorgsky Мусоргский Yuliya Platonova, opera singer of the Mariinsky Theater music by Dmitry Kabalevsky
1952 Man of Music Композитор Глинка Lyudmila Ivanovna, sister of the composer music by Vladimir Shcherbachov and Vissarion Shebalin
1960 Russian Souvenir Русский сувенир Varvara Komarova (Miss Barbara), engineer music by Kirill Molchanov
1974 Starling and Lyre Скворец и Лира Lyudmila Grekova ("Lyre"), secret service agent music by Oscar Feltsman

Theatre roles edit

Stanislavski and Nemirovich-Danchenko Theatre

Mossovet Theatre

Popular songs edit

According to the official credits, all the music is by Isaak Dunayevsky[60] Lyubov Orlova had been sistematically trained as a pianist from 1907 to 1922 (with 3 courses at the Moscow Conservatory), and, from 1920 to 1926, she worked professionally as a musician. In 1961, Orlova strongly implied her collaborative efforts in songwriting weren't credited,[19] highly likely, because of the strict rules about the non-members of the Union of Soviet Composers.[61][62] There is a story about a conversation between Dunaevsky (nicknamed Dunya) and Dmitry Shostakovich: Dunaevsky to Shostakovich: "You and me, Mitya, are the most popular composers". "Yes, Dunya," Shostakovich answers. "The only difference is that everyone knows my name but no one knows a single note of mine. Just like everyone knows your tunes but nobody knows who they belong to..."[63]

Legacy edit

A minor planet, 3108 Lyubov, discovered by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Zhuravlyova in 1972, is named after her.[65] A cruise ship named after her was built by the Soviet Union in Yugoslavia in 1976 for expeditions to Antarctica and the Arctic Circle.[66][67]

In a 1999 VCIOM poll, Orlova was voted as the greatest "Russian Idol of the 20th Century" by 10%, the highest-rated woman, and 10th place overall with Yuri Gagarin atop with 30%. Ten years later, in 2010, she finished 3rd with 7% of votes, behind figure-skater Irina Rodnina (9%) and ballerina Maya Plisetskaya (8%) only, on a 15th place overall with Yuri Gagarin atop with 35%.[64]

In 2016, a monument of Orlova in Zvenigorod was established near the Lyubov Orlova Cultural Centre (est. 2007).[68]

In 2019, she was featured as a Google Doodle on what would have been her 117th birthday.[69]

Contradictory facts edit

 
Lyubov Orlova's crippled hands in Volga-Volga with a classical 6th chord sheet

Lyubov Orlova didn't provide any information about her personal life during her rare interviews, and there were no yellow journalism in the USSR or tabloids that could have revealed a piece of dangerous information about her non-proletarian background and first marriage to Andrei Berzin, Gulag prisoner.[79] According to her unpublished autobiography, she was accepted, at the age of seven, at the Yaroslavl Music College and her education at the Moscow Conservatory had started before 1919. Orlova wrote: "Before 1919, I studied piano at the Moscow Conservatory, Profs. A. P. Ostrovskaya and K. A. Kipp. And, probably, my parents were slightly disappointed when it turned out the art form I've mastered didn't give me a great success, or recognition, or fame, but... just a modest opportunity to accompany the films that were shown in cinema with my piano playing".[10] The official Moscow Conservatory cites 1919 as a year of start for her studies with Kipp and explains Orlova's drop: "...due to the difficult financial situation, her conservatory studies weren't completed".[1] Other biographies, including her grandniece's book, also don't mention Orlova's rare Ménière's disease as a reason for the career focus change.[80]

In March 2016, the Channel One TV-series Orlova and Aleksandrov [ru] was released. In this biopic, Lyubov Orlova has graduated from Moscow Conservatory, Prof. Alexander Goldenweiser.[81] The series also implies, through an explicit display of that kind of torture on a female character, Orlova's music hands, her right hand especially, were seriously damaged during Cheka, or OGPU (the previous titles for NKVD) tortures for interrogation.[82] However, the official profile of Prof. Kipp lists Lybov Orlova (as a famous actress) among the best of his students, just like Prof. Ostrovskaya's (junior courses).[83][84] Another biography, the 1987 Lyubov Orlova in Art and Life book, listed her as a conservatory graduate with Prof. Felix Blumenfeld as her senior piano class teacher, in addition to Kipp.[85] Blumenfeld began his Moscow Conservatory career in 1922.[86]

A source of Orlova's pre-conservatory music education isn't clear. Yaroslavl Music College was founded in 1904 on a foundation of the existing Yaroslavl Russian Musical Society classes.[87] Education at the conservatory during the Civil War was provided as usual, even in unheated classrooms.[88] Since July 1918, the education at Moscow Conservatory has become state-sponsored, free of charge for domestic students. The full training period was 9 years, junior department from I to V course, and senior department from VI to IX course, and the minimum age of enrollment was 10 years.[89] From 1910 till his death in 1925, Prof. Kipp taught at the senior department.[90]

According to Orlova-Aleksandrov's archive holder, layer Aleksander Dobrovinsky, Orlova was voluntarily childless. Dobrovinsky said: "I've found her correspondence with a professor, gynecologist No. 1 in the USSR. There are mainly things of a physiological nature, but they indicate that Lyubov Orlova, one of the first women in the USSR, had inserted a spiral or something like that for contraception.[91]

Lyubov Orlova's year of birth was debatable. Her only friend Faina Ranevskaya stated: "Nobody will say how old she is. She is generally brilliant: when they issued passports in the early thirties, no documents were required. You could name any date of birth and any name too ... So Lyubochka did not lose her head and immediately knocked off a dozen years! It was me, the idiot, who hesitated: is it worth it? Then I calculated that I have spent two years at resorts, so the resorts, as they say, do not count, and a new date of birth has appeared in my passport: instead of 1895, 1897. So little that I still cannot forgive myself for such frivolity!"[92] According to Lyubov Orlova's grandniece Nonna Golikova, her grandmother Nonna Orlova (1897-1960[93]), was "two or three years older" than her famous sister.[94] Lyubov Orlova's mother, Evgenia Sukhotina, has changed her passport year of birth from 1863 to 1878, 'nullifying' fifteen years.[95]

Mutually exclusive facts before 1926
Data Autobiography[10] Posthumous biographies[96] RIA Novosti biography[97] F. Ranevskaya[92]
Year of birth 1902 1902 1892, "minus 10 years to the official", probably a joke referencing Orlova's years of music training)
Education: Music College (School) Yaroslavl Music College (est. 1904)
(enrolled through a competition at 7; after 2 years of domestic music education provided by her mother)[c]
1909 Music school since 7, as her parents' demand
Education: Gymnasium Music school [d] 1910–1917, Moscow[e] Moscow secondary school, graduated in 1919
Job: Sale of Milk 1917–1919, with her family, she moved to Svatovo, Voskresensky district[f]
Education: Moscow Conservatory Before 1919 1919—1922 1919—1922
Job: Musical Illustrator in Cinema Theatre Start in 1922, her first job 1920–1926, in Zvenigorod and Moscow As a part-time job during her studies at Moscow Theater College
Education: Choreography Start in 1922, choreographic department of the Moscow Theater College named after A.V. Lunacharsky. 1922–1925, Francesca Beata Studio (since 1924, merged into the choreographic department of the Moscow Theater College named after A.V. Lunacharsky she has graduated in 1925) 1922–1925, Moscow Theater College
Education: Acting Start in 1922, private lessons from Elizaveta Teleshova [ru]. 1922–1925, private lessons from Elizaveta Telesheva[g]
Job: Music Teacher 1924–1926, private lessons

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ House-of-Romanov-era Russian heraldists weren't precise to draw the description of "lion passant" as "lion statant".[31]
  2. ^ Leo Tolstoy's critical perception of Ludwig van Beethoven's later periods music has deeply shocked Pyotr Tchaikovsky, even though Tchaikovsky himself quietly confessed to Sergei Taneyev the following: "I am afraid of Beethoven, as you can be afraid of a big and scary dog". While sending Tchaikovsky a collection of folk songs, Tolstoy had asked him to arrange them "in the Mozarto-Haidn style, and not the Beethoven-Schumann-Berlioz-artificial, seeking the unexpected, style."[37][38][39]
  3. ^ 'училище', as school (college)
  4. ^ 'школа' as 'school' (school) she also calls 'училище' in the same paragraph, she also credits it for 'secret from parents, ballet studies'
  5. ^ Kiriena Konstantinovna Alelekova Gymnasium, loc. Moscow, Bolshaya Nikitskaya st., 46. Orlova wasn't good at science and didn't receive the excellence certificate
  6. ^ During the Civil War, Orlova has injured her hands carrying heavy milk cans to Moscow for sale, in any weather conditionts, for several years.[18] The fact makes her Moscow Conservatory (piano department) enrollment impossible.
  7. ^ Elizaveta Teleshova [ru] (1892-1943) was an actress and director of the Moscow Art Theater and a close friend of Sergei Eisenstein.

References edit

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External links edit

  • Lyubov Orlova at IMDb
  • (in Russian) lubov-orlova.ru
  • (in Russian) Lyubov Orlova on Russian Genealogy Foundation Website
  • (in Russian) Records of Lyubov Orlova on website The Encyclopedia of Russian recordings Russian-Records.com
  • (in Russian) "Ее советское сиятельство", ("Her Soviet Serenity") an article in Kommersant-Money
  • Lyubov Orlova at Find a Grave  

lyubov, orlova, ship, which, bears, name, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, petrovna, family, name, orlova, lyubov, petrovna, orlova, russian, Любовь, Петровна, Орлова, lʲʊˈbofʲ, pʲɪˈtrovnə, ɐrˈɫovə, february, january, 19. For the ship which bears her name see MV Lyubov Orlova In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Petrovna and the family name is Orlova Lyubov Petrovna Orlova Russian Lyubov Petrovna Orlova lʲʊˈbofʲ pʲɪˈtrovne ɐrˈɫove 11 February O S 29 January 1902 26 January 1975 was a Soviet and Russian actress singer dancer and People s Artist of the USSR 1950 2 Lyubov OrlovaLyubov OrlovaLyubov Orlova with her State Stalin Prize badge in 1945BornLyubov Petrovna Orlova 1902 02 11 11 February 1902Zvenigorod Moscow Governorate Russian EmpireDied26 January 1975 1975 01 26 aged 72 Moscow Russian SFSR USSRResting placeNovodevichy Cemetery Moscow55 43 29 N 37 33 15 E 55 72472 N 37 55417 E 55 72472 37 55417Alma materMoscow Conservatory 1 Occupation s Actress pianist singer dancerYears active1926 1974SpousesAndrei Berzin 1926 1930 divorced Grigori Aleksandrov 1933 1975 her death AwardsPeople s Artist of the USSR USSR State Prize 2 Order of Lenin Order of the Red Banner of Labour 2 Contents 1 Life and career 2 Awards and honours 3 Personal relationships 4 Political views 5 Filmography 6 Theatre roles 7 Popular songs 8 Legacy 8 1 Contradictory facts 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksLife and career edit nbsp Lyubov Orlova s parents Evgeniya Nikolaevna Sukhotina 1863 1945 and Pyotr Fedorovich Orlov 1867 1938 19th century nbsp Lyubov Orlova with her parents early 1930s 3 She was born to a family of Russian hereditary nobles her maternal side and gentry her paternal side in Zvenigorod 60 km from Moscow then lived with her parents and older sister in Yaroslavl Her acting and singing talents were evident very early on but her noble parents considered acting a disgraceful career and directed her towards classical music 4 There she began to study music In 1914 after her father left for the front her mother Evgenia Nikolaevna and her daughters settled in Moscow where the sisters entered the gymnasium The Orlovs spent the difficult years of the Civil War in Voskresensk because their mother s sister lived here The family subsisted on funds from the sale of milk which was given by the aunt s cow Lyuba and Nonna drove nearly a hundred kilometers to Moscow and then went home with heavy cans Hence comes the legend of the ugly hands which Orlova was so shy about 5 Her first and last names are meaningful words in Russian lyubov means love and Orlova is the feminine form of orlov eagle s When she was seven Fyodor Shalyapin predicted her future as a famous actress In 1919 1922 she studied as a piano student at the Moscow Conservatory Professor K Kipp ru class but did not graduate because she had to work as a music teacher and a pianist illustrator of silent films in movie theaters French tapeur 6 to support her parents 1 In 1925 she has graduated from the Moscow Theatre College choreography department 7 Her first husband a Soviet economist Andrei Berzin was arrested in 1930 However this did not affect her career Dmitri Shcheglov a biography author wrote in Love and Mask Lyubov i maska 1997 As an eternal irony and foresight of fate the best performer of the roles of house servants and enthusiasts of Communist labor was a descendant of ten Russian Orthodox saints Two of them Olga the Grand Princess of Kiev and Vladimir the Grand Prince of Kiev are among the Equal to apostles Red Eagle in an azure golden field the House of Orlov s coat of arms is also present on the Bezhetsk clan branch the actress belonged to 8 The Orlov family was partly saved from the worst form of repression camps or deportation and the Bolshevik redistribution of property only because even before the Revolution her father Peter had lost all three of his estates at cards and therefore there was practically nothing to take away However Orlova s father an engineer and class enemy was officially banned as an employee 9 In September 1926 she was hired as a choir singer by the Nemirovich Danchenko Theatre Music Studio finally deciding to become an actress not a pianist 10 She received her first solo role in November the same year Her quick promotion was fueled by Olga Baclanova s sudden departure from Russia and Vladimir Nemirovich Danchenko s eye for this type of female beauty 11 In 1932 she received her first leading roles in La Perichole and Les cloches de Corneville Despite her success with the public vocal and acting training in a theatre with Ksenia Kolubai ru Orlova wasn t noticed by the press and was criticized by her colleagues for not having a real singing voice Faina Ranevskaya her close friend used to say Orlova is a gorgeous actress for sure But her voice When she sings it sounds like somebody is urinating in an empty bucket 12 However Orlova had her trick Remembering her student years and she studied at the choreography department of the Moscow Theater College named after A V Lunacharsky now GITIS she decided to bring herself back to her previous form and perform Serpoletta s entrance aria on pointe 13 Alexander Hort writer wrote The audience was smitten while dancing Serpoletta stood up on pointe shoes so graceful airy romantic And Orlova made a tactically verified move she took the bull by the horns the very first vocal number Serpoletta s verses What a pity that an unsettling case pushed me to a different path she performed dancing on her fingers In the future no one was able to repeat this trick it has stayed as a semi legendary fact of history 14 nbsp Lyubov Orlova in her 30s In 1933 she met the novice director Grigory Alexandrov who was casting actors for his movie Jolly Fellows 1934 and married him Orlova s performance in this comedy very popular in the USSR earned the young star the sympathy of Stalin and the title Honorable actor of the RSFSR It had caused the first wave of the so called Orlova syndrome a Soviet psychiatric term describing women who wanted to be like Orlova They diligently lightened their hair and self styled themselves as relatives to the idol 15 According to her relatives Orlova secretly loathed Joseph Stalin reacted to death with the words Finally this scum is dead 16 Her critics including Sergei Eisenstein had blamed the musician turned actress for ruining the serious career of Alexandrov Despite her efforts Orlova didn t have a reputation of a serious drama actress moreover she was intentionally overplaying her film roles and didn t stop her constant touring as a singer Her haters credited her success to the marriage of convenience and Stalin protection 17 In the next few years she starred in four popular movies which also became instant Soviet classics Circus 1936 Volga Volga 1938 Tanya 1940 and Springtime 1947 She was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1941 In 1950 she became the first woman to receive the title of the People s Artist of the USSR exclusively for her cinematic works After that she switched to playing in theatre productions of Yuri Zavadsky s company Her most famous roles included Nora Nora Dear Liar Patrick Campbell Strange Mrs Savage Mrs Ethel Savage But her most acclaimed performance was a title role in Lizzie MacKay Russian title for The Respectful Prostitute Jean Paul Sartre was present on a jubilee 400th show in 1962 saying I was especially impressed by Lyubov Orlova s talented performance After the show I told her I ve been delighted by her performance It was not an empty compliment Lyubov Orlova is really the best of all LizzieMacKay performers I know 18 Since the 1928 till her death she was constantly touring as a singer with her pianist Leo Mironov Russian Lev Mironov romanized Lev Mironov Her early repertoire included classical songs by Glinka Mussorgsky Dargomyzhsky and Tchaikovsky 10 During the war she toured more than 50 000 kilometers along the front line with her concerts based on Isaak Dunayevsky songs from her movies 19 For all of her career she was banned from making the records of her songs and performing on television supposedly because of her backstage war with Klavdiya Shulzhenko Leonid Utesov s choice of interest for Jolly Fellows 20 Ivan Kozlovsky especially regretted the absence of recordings of his own duets with Orlova 21 Awards and honours edit nbsp Honored Artist of the RSFSR 1935 nbsp People s Artist of the RSFSR 5 11 1947 nbsp People s Artist of the USSR 6 03 1950 nbsp Stalin Prize first class 1941 for the role Marion Dixon in the film Circus 1936 and the role Arrow in the film Volga Volga 1938 1950 for the role an American journalist Jeannette Sherwood in the film Encounter at the Elbe 1949 nbsp Order of Lenin 1 02 1939 nbsp Orders of the Red Banner of Labour 1 04 1938 4 11 1967 nbsp Medal For the Defence of the Caucasus 1944 nbsp Medal For Valiant Labour in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 1945 nbsp Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow 1947 nbsp Medal For the Development of Virgin Lands nbsp For Valiant Labour Jubilee Medal In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin 1970 Anniversary badge XX Years of Soviet Cinematography 1940 VIII Venice Film Festival 1947 Special Prize for the best female role in Springtime shared with Ingrid Bergman IV International Film Festival in Marianske Lazne 1949 Peace Prize for the film Encounter at the Elbe Certificate of honor from the Soviet Peace Committee 1960 22 Personal relationships edit nbsp Lyubov Orlova sings with Grigoi Aleksandrov in 1937 In 1926 or according to her grandniece Nonna Golikova in 1921 Lyubov Orlova married a Soviet economist Andrei Berzin 1893 1951 the deputy head of the administrative and financial department for the People s Commissariat of Agriculture 23 Berzin supported not only Orlova but her parents and older sister all of them also moved to his place Orlova had married to save her relatives from death but she absolutely didn t love her husband and had an abortion or a miscarriage that highly likely had left her barren for the rest of her life Berzin has understood and accepted that asking her to file for divorce and save herself from the inevitable labor camps or deportation as both the wife of enemy of the people and the daughter of class enemy just before his next arrest by NKVD She had agreed After that Lyubov and all of her relatives had to move from Berzin s gorgeous apartment in the center of Moscow In 1931 Orlova became a partner of a German specialist engineer or businessman named Franz Nothing more is known about him Their romance developed for about a year After her performances a foreign admirer picked the actress in a black Mercedes Franz bought Orlova expensive foreign outfits that arouse the envy of all women especially in a theatre Orlova moved to her beloved in the Metropol hotel where he lived in a luxurious room When Lyubov Orlova was invited to shoot Jolly Fellows which took place in Gagra Franz went with her At that time Lyuba was already familiar with Grigory Alexandrov then separated for many years from his wife actress Olga Ivanova Olga and Grigory had a son named Douglas 1925 1978 but at that time she was in relationships with the famous actor Boris Tiomkin In Gagra Orlova s affection for Aleksandrov became obvious She had explained the situation to Franz and he left first for Moscow and then for his homeland Faina Ranevskaya remembered in 1982 Don t you know how handsome Aleksandrov Lyubochka s director friend husband used to be He was handsome like Antinous even though I ve never seen Antinous personally Like Philemon and Baucis they loved each other 24 In January 1934 or according to a different archive source in 1937 Orlova married Aleksandrov 25 However because of the couple s suspicious lack of children and Aleksandrov s unclear relationships and painful breakup with Sergei Eisenstein for the many decades a lot of researchers have perceived Orlova as a beard to conceal Aleksandrov s bisexuality in exchange for the richer career opportunities Later in life Aleksandrov had answered about his wife s lack of children according to his relative the following In the beginning she didn t want and later she couldn t 26 After Aleksandrov ex wife Olga s death during childbirth in June 1941 when she was already married to Boris Tiomkin Orlova has adopted his son Douglas forcefully renamed to Vasili during the next purges arrested in 1952 had his first heart attack in prison was liberated after Joseph Stalin s death the next year 27 In 1975 Orlova died and in 1978 Vasili died In 1979 Vasili s widow Galina Krylova married the mentally sick Grigori Aleksandrov to serve as his maid in exchange for a subsequent property and archive She loathed Lyubov Orlova for arrogance towards her and her previous husband and towards her son Aleksandrov s grandson Grigori Aleksandrov died in 1983 his documentary about his wife Lyubov Orlova was released in 1984 The wide has buried his corpse on the same line the opposite side of Novodevichy Cemetery as Lyubov Orlova s grave For many decades Orlova Aleksandrov s archive had been plundered before being bought from Aleksandrov s descendants by the Russian Jewish lawyer Aleksandr Dobrovinsky 28 29 Political views editOrlova was never a member of the Communist Party even when her husband has joined it in 1954 following Joseph Stalin s death In the 1960s another Soviet actress Tatiana Bestayeva ru was unsuccessfully recruited by the KGB in order for her to inform the authorities about the luminaries of Mossovet Theatre Lyubov Orlova Rostislav Plyatt and Gennadi Bortnikov 30 nbsp Coat of arms of Sukhotin family ru includes a la Minor Pogon hand and golden lion a Lyubov Orlova s mother Evgenia Nikolaevna Sukhotina was a niece to Tatyana Tolstoy s husband Tatiana Sukhotina Tolstaya was the eldest and most beloved daughter of count Leo Tolstoy she had lived in her parents house for 35 years and was very close to her father spiritually As a child Lyubov was encouraged to write a letter to a famous relative She has received The Prisoner of the Caucasus with his autograph To Lyubochka L N Tolstoy which was kept by her as a talisman 32 In Russia it s debatable whether the Tolstoy inspired left wing political views were sincere left wing or was it a miscalculation and or alleged hypocrisy of a count taking into consideration the general negative attitude of the claimed Rurikids descendants both Tolstoys and Orlovs and also Aleksander Pushkin and Modest Mussorgsky towards the House of Holstein Gottorp Romanov policy The claimed blood connection to an ex communicated count is also known for giving the artists a special creative inspiration and not only the obviously virtual hierarchical claims 33 34 35 36 Orlova s education at Moscow Conservatory piano department at least three years has supposedly provided her with the system of spiritual values The Well Tempered Clavier as the Old Testament and Beethoven s 32 sonatas as the New Testament and all of that didn t contradict the official ex communication of Leo Tolstoy from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901 b From Alexis of Russia s 1648 law About the correction of morals and the destruction of superstitions Ob ispravlenii nravov i unichtozhenii sueverij to Peter the Great s reforms all the folk instruments were burned and banned in Russia and Alexis was the first non elected Romanov dynasty ruler and those musicians who disagree were forcefully deported to Malorossia modern Ukraine there was a corporal punishment for them also It was perceived by the Soviet propaganda as cultural genocide of Russians inspired by the local Orthodox Church that has never allowed the instrumental music on the liturgy bell ringing being the one and only exception 40 41 Alexis of Russia s rule also has established a tradition of self immolation among the Russian Old Believers a unique phenomenon in contemporary history 42 During the Soviet era the obligatory conservatory pianist values have effectively utilized the fact of Vladimir Lenin s well documented admiration for Beethoven s Sonata No 23 According to Maxim Gorky one evening in Moscow at the apartment of E P Peshkova Lenin listening Beethoven s sonatas performed by Issay Dobrowen noted I know nothing better than Appassionata I am ready to listen to it every day Amazing preterhuman music I m always proud naive maybe childish thinking these are the miracles people can do and screwing up his eyes grinning he added gloomily But I can t listen to it that often It gets on my nerves I want to say cute nonsense and caress the heads of people who living in a filthy hell can create such beauty And today you can t caress anyone s head they ll bite off your hand and you need to beat over the heads beat mercilessly Although perfectly we are against all violence towards the people Hmm the job is hellishly difficult 43 After perestroika along with the exclusive system of Soviet musical education the Russian state has financially abandoned the conservatory to face the merciless fate 44 45 By 2019 the number of people of Russia who enjoy classical music has dropped to 22 below the local pop 35 Soviet pop 32 and criminals songs that are based on the themes of the urban underclass 30 46 47 Orlova s movies include a decent amount of plot defining in jokes about the composers Beethoven in Jolly Fellows Volga Volga Johann Sebastian Bach in Starling and Lyre and a la virtuoso grand piano performances Circus about virtuosity as a word with the previous meaning virtue Springtime Grigori Aleksandrov credited his second wife Orlova she was fluent in both French and German as a co editor of his scripts In the autobiography he wrote It was enough for her to try by ear a piece of the script which had previously was lying on my desktop in a state of blissful well being All the imperfections of the material that was not completely written out were personally revealed to me Lyubov Petrovna unusually sensed the slightest falsity 48 On a contrary the Russian upper class has historically preferred Italian opera and French ballet as brands a lot more than anything else and these facts were concluded by Aleksandrov and Orlova in The Composer Glinka and Mussorgsky in a still popular statement about Russian political elites House of Romanov especially being historically Russophobic 49 50 51 In 2018 The Economist has also pointed out the significant role of Russian Orthodox Church and the ghost of the Romanovs in Putin s Russia 52 Feodor Nikitich Romanov 1553 1633 Patriarch Filaret of Moscow de facto ruler of Russia during the reign of his son Mikhail descended from the Rurik dynasty through a female line his mother Evdokiya Gorbataya Shuyskaya was a Rurikid princess from the Shuysky branch daughter of Alexander Gorbatyi Shuisky The last tsar Nicholas II was described as limited stupid and degenerate even by the usually polite first Russian Nobel Prize winner physiologist Ivan Pavlov 53 In 1936 following her role of a young mother in Circus Orlova was given an order to participate among the best known women in the country in the discussion and practically in the approval of the law banning the abortion According to M Kushnirov the executive editor of the radio who prepared a text for her to read in general welcoming of course the wise project of the Stalin government On mother and child on family and abortion the actress has allowed herself to make some amendments and additions to it 54 On alimony Orlova added It is irrational to punish a father defaulter with prison he must be forced to work On abortion There should be no doom in the abortion clause In Soviet society there are many independent women many professions in which a woman successfully competes with a man Pregnancy will tear a woman out of her job maybe at the very moment when she completes a grandiose project or prepares for a heroic flight or finishes work over a big role for which she has spent several years of her life and perhaps at this crucial moment of her life her social and political biography she is forced to give up everything and lose a year of time In such cases let the woman give birth a little later Let abortion be allowed in these cases Let the woman know the law is not fatal It seems to me lately all women want to give birth everyone wants to have a child I myself want a child and I will certainly have one And it is natural Life is getting more and more joyful and more fun The future is even more wonderful Why not give birth 54 In 1939 Orlova also perceived the annexation of Polish territories of Ukraine and Belarus through the eyes of a musician She wrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda the following Once these lands were the lands of the Belarusian and Ukrainian people The same rains watered them the same sun shone on them and the same winds swept over their valleys and hills But two decades ago a border passed through these lands For one part of the Belarusian and Ukrainian people the land was shrouded in grave gloom for another it blossomed with extraordinary colors which only the land of happy people can shine with 55 Orlova continued In one part of the land in the West people have even forgotten how to sing they were forbidden to sing The oppressors saw the sounds of a Ukrainian or Belarusian song as a danger for themselves These songs could remind the disadvantaged of another world that began so disturbingly close there behind this fishing line there behind this village Now the song broke free Millions of lips have recently been looking for words of a curse to express their hatred towards the Polish landlords Now these millions of lips are looking for the words of happiness that are unusual for them in order to glorify a new life the Red Army the Soviet government the wise Stalin Orlova not only responded in writing to the annexation of the old new lands to the USSR The Soviet press reported in October 1939 In Western Ukraine and Western Belarus there are concert brigades of the USSR State Academic Bolshoi Theater and the All Union Concert and Touring Association including I Kozlovsky M Reizen R Zelyonaya S Obraztsov L Orlova V Yakhontov ru 55 In 1952 according to the witnesses there was a failed attempt to assassinate Orlova for her political views Her grandniece Nonna Golikova wrote In 1952 Lyubov Petrovna gave a concert in some border town in Western Ukraine where as we know active anti Russian sentiments and political movements have always existed Orlova in the final of the concert went to bows Someone from the audience gave her an extraordinary bouquet of roses I immediately drew attention to it Lyubochka told us later Now I understand that it was for mourning White roses and in the middle are completely unusual black ones I ve never seen such people She took the bouquet The paper it was wrapped in was torn from the side facing it Lyubochka pricked her finger the thorns were soaked in poison Rapid blood poisoning began Orlova s life was in danger 32 Videos source source source source source source Volga Volga Joseph Stalin s favourite film with Orlova s solo lezginka and death drop 24 51 56 source source source source source Lyubov Orlova character teaching an Azerbaijani soldier about music s ability to communicate without words in A Family 1943 Baku Cinema Studio film banned by Stalin from theatrical releaseFilmography editYear Title Original Title Role Notes 57 1933 Alena s Love Lyubov Alyony Mrs Ellen Getwood the wife of American engineer silent film lost 1934 A Petersburg Night Peterburgskaya noch Grushen ka music by Dmitry Kabalevsky 1934 Jolly Fellows Vesyolye rebyata Anyuta music by Isaac Dunayevsky 1936 Circus Cirk Marion Dixon music by Isaac Dunayevsky 1938 Volga Volga Volga Volga letter carrier Dunya Petrova Strelka music by Isaac Dunayevsky 1939 Engineer Kochin s Error Oshibka inzhenera Kochina Ksenia Lebedeva employee of the Aviation Institute 1940 Tanya Svetlyj put Tanya Morozova Cinderella music by Isaac Dunayevsky 1941 Fighting Film Collection 4 Boevoj kinosbornik 4 letter carrier Dunya Petrova Strelka presenter of the collection 1941 The Artamonov Business Delo Artamonovyh dancer Paula Menotti cameo 1943 A Family Odna semya Katya film wasn t released in theatres 1943 People of the Caspian Kaspijcy documentary by Grigori Alexandrov 1947 Springtime Vesna actress Vera Shatrova scientist Irina Nikitina music by Isaac Dunayevsky 1949 Encounter at the Elbe Vstrecha na Elbe Jeannette Sherwood journalist music by Dmitry Shostakovich 1950 Mussorgsky Musorgskij Yuliya Platonova opera singer of the Mariinsky Theater music by Dmitry Kabalevsky 1952 Man of Music Kompozitor Glinka Lyudmila Ivanovna sister of the composer music by Vladimir Shcherbachov and Vissarion Shebalin 1960 Russian Souvenir Russkij suvenir Varvara Komarova Miss Barbara engineer music by Kirill Molchanov 1974 Starling and Lyre Skvorec i Lira Lyudmila Grekova Lyre secret service agent music by Oscar FeltsmanTheatre roles editStanislavski and Nemirovich Danchenko Theatre 1926 Hersillie Babet La fille de Madame Angot 1927 Georgette Russian adaptation name Virginie The Italian Straw Hat 1932 Serpolette Les cloches de Corneville 1932 La Perichole La Perichole Mossovet Theatre 1947 Jessie The Russian Question by Konstantin Simonov 1953 Lydia Somov and Others by Maxim Gorky 1955 Lizzie Lizzie McKay Russian adaptation of The Respectful Prostitute by Jean Paul Sartre 1958 Nora Nora Russian adaptation of A Doll s House by Henrik Ibsen 1963 Patrick Campbell Dear Liar by Jerome Kilty 1972 Ethel Savage Strange Mrs Savage Russian adaptation of The Curious Savage by John Patrick 58 Popular songs editFrom Jolly Fellows 1934 Anyuta s song Such a lot of nice girls featuring on Leonid Utesov performance Tyuh tyuh Our iron is on fire Razgorelsya nash utyug trio with Leonid Utesov and Fyodor Kurikhin From Circus 1936 Song on a Cannon Mary believes in miracles Moonlight Waltz Lullaby Song of the Motherland From Volga Volga 1938 Song about the Volga Youth Molodyozhnaya noted for its similarity to a 1950s song If You re Happy and You Know It From Tanya 1940 Song Bird featuring on Elizaveta Antonova ru performance Chastushkas with vocal trio Abramyan Dmitrieva Anikeeva Enthusiasts March From Fighting Film Collection No 4 1941 March of the Jolly Fellows Military From Springtime 1947 Spring is coming 59 According to the official credits all the music is by Isaak Dunayevsky 60 Lyubov Orlova had been sistematically trained as a pianist from 1907 to 1922 with 3 courses at the Moscow Conservatory and from 1920 to 1926 she worked professionally as a musician In 1961 Orlova strongly implied her collaborative efforts in songwriting weren t credited 19 highly likely because of the strict rules about the non members of the Union of Soviet Composers 61 62 There is a story about a conversation between Dunaevsky nicknamed Dunya and Dmitry Shostakovich Dunaevsky to Shostakovich You and me Mitya are the most popular composers Yes Dunya Shostakovich answers The only difference is that everyone knows my name but no one knows a single note of mine Just like everyone knows your tunes but nobody knows who they belong to 63 Legacy edit Russian Idol of the 20th Century VCIOM Polls 64 Name 1999 2010 Yuri Gagarin 1934 1968 30 35 Vladimir Vysotsky 1938 1980 31 31 Georgy Zhukov 1896 1974 26 20 Leo Tolstoy 1828 1910 16 17 Joseph Stalin 1878 1953 14 16 Alexander Solzhenitsyn 1918 2008 16 14 Vladimir Lenin 1870 1924 16 13 Andrey Sakharov 1921 1989 26 12 Andrey Mironov 1941 1987 20 12 Mikhail Bulgakov 1891 1940 7 10 Mikhail Sholokhov 1905 1984 7 9 Irina Rodnina b 1949 7 9 Anton Chekhov 1860 1904 6 8 Maya Plisetskaya 1925 2015 7 8 Lyubov Orlova 10 7 Lev Yashin 1929 1990 8 6 Fyodor Shalyapin 1873 1938 7 5 Vasily Chapaev 1887 1919 6 4 Dmitry Shostakovich 1906 1975 3 4 Ilya Repin 1844 1930 3 3 Mikhail Gorbachev b 1931 7 3 Joseph Brodsky 1940 1996 2 2 others 1 2 find it difficult to answer 4 9 A minor planet 3108 Lyubov discovered by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Zhuravlyova in 1972 is named after her 65 A cruise ship named after her was built by the Soviet Union in Yugoslavia in 1976 for expeditions to Antarctica and the Arctic Circle 66 67 In a 1999 VCIOM poll Orlova was voted as the greatest Russian Idol of the 20th Century by 10 the highest rated woman and 10th place overall with Yuri Gagarin atop with 30 Ten years later in 2010 she finished 3rd with 7 of votes behind figure skater Irina Rodnina 9 and ballerina Maya Plisetskaya 8 only on a 15th place overall with Yuri Gagarin atop with 35 64 In 2016 a monument of Orlova in Zvenigorod was established near the Lyubov Orlova Cultural Centre est 2007 68 In 2019 she was featured as a Google Doodle on what would have been her 117th birthday 69 Influential roles nbsp According to the official art history version the unfading controversial 70 film Circus 71 had inspired Vera Mukhina to create the sculpture Worker and Kolkhoz Woman 1937 especially the male part played by Orlova s partner Sergei Stolyarov 10 years younger than Orlova 72 nbsp Lyubov Orlova character screams Follow Me Za mnoj in Volga Volga 1938 Despite rumors it has no direct connection to The Motherland Calls monument apart from the propaganda poster Fascism is the most vicious enemy of women All rise to fight fascism 73 as according to the official Soviet art history version 74 Just like Orlova as a symbol of totalitarism the 1967 statue was also criticised as an empty and inhuman display of Stalinist kitsch 75 76 nbsp Orlova s two title roles a famous female scientist and an actress in Springtime 1947 In 1990s it was revisited by the German critic Uve Schpilman as a forerunner of postmodernism Other critics argue the movie is an undoubted harbinger of F Fellini s 8 1 2 films by Antonioni and Wenders 77 The first film to use Mukhina s most famous statue as an official Mosfilm logo 78 Contradictory facts edit nbsp Lyubov Orlova s crippled hands in Volga Volga with a classical 6th chord sheet Lyubov Orlova didn t provide any information about her personal life during her rare interviews and there were no yellow journalism in the USSR or tabloids that could have revealed a piece of dangerous information about her non proletarian background and first marriage to Andrei Berzin Gulag prisoner 79 According to her unpublished autobiography she was accepted at the age of seven at the Yaroslavl Music College and her education at the Moscow Conservatory had started before 1919 Orlova wrote Before 1919 I studied piano at the Moscow Conservatory Profs A P Ostrovskaya and K A Kipp And probably my parents were slightly disappointed when it turned out the art form I ve mastered didn t give me a great success or recognition or fame but just a modest opportunity to accompany the films that were shown in cinema with my piano playing 10 The official Moscow Conservatory cites 1919 as a year of start for her studies with Kipp and explains Orlova s drop due to the difficult financial situation her conservatory studies weren t completed 1 Other biographies including her grandniece s book also don t mention Orlova s rare Meniere s disease as a reason for the career focus change 80 In March 2016 the Channel One TV series Orlova and Aleksandrov ru was released In this biopic Lyubov Orlova has graduated from Moscow Conservatory Prof Alexander Goldenweiser 81 The series also implies through an explicit display of that kind of torture on a female character Orlova s music hands her right hand especially were seriously damaged during Cheka or OGPU the previous titles for NKVD tortures for interrogation 82 However the official profile of Prof Kipp lists Lybov Orlova as a famous actress among the best of his students just like Prof Ostrovskaya s junior courses 83 84 Another biography the 1987 Lyubov Orlova in Art and Life book listed her as a conservatory graduate with Prof Felix Blumenfeld as her senior piano class teacher in addition to Kipp 85 Blumenfeld began his Moscow Conservatory career in 1922 86 A source of Orlova s pre conservatory music education isn t clear Yaroslavl Music College was founded in 1904 on a foundation of the existing Yaroslavl Russian Musical Society classes 87 Education at the conservatory during the Civil War was provided as usual even in unheated classrooms 88 Since July 1918 the education at Moscow Conservatory has become state sponsored free of charge for domestic students The full training period was 9 years junior department from I to V course and senior department from VI to IX course and the minimum age of enrollment was 10 years 89 From 1910 till his death in 1925 Prof Kipp taught at the senior department 90 According to Orlova Aleksandrov s archive holder layer Aleksander Dobrovinsky Orlova was voluntarily childless Dobrovinsky said I ve found her correspondence with a professor gynecologist No 1 in the USSR There are mainly things of a physiological nature but they indicate that Lyubov Orlova one of the first women in the USSR had inserted a spiral or something like that for contraception 91 Lyubov Orlova s year of birth was debatable Her only friend Faina Ranevskaya stated Nobody will say how old she is She is generally brilliant when they issued passports in the early thirties no documents were required You could name any date of birth and any name too So Lyubochka did not lose her head and immediately knocked off a dozen years It was me the idiot who hesitated is it worth it Then I calculated that I have spent two years at resorts so the resorts as they say do not count and a new date of birth has appeared in my passport instead of 1895 1897 So little that I still cannot forgive myself for such frivolity 92 According to Lyubov Orlova s grandniece Nonna Golikova her grandmother Nonna Orlova 1897 1960 93 was two or three years older than her famous sister 94 Lyubov Orlova s mother Evgenia Sukhotina has changed her passport year of birth from 1863 to 1878 nullifying fifteen years 95 Mutually exclusive facts before 1926 Data Autobiography 10 Posthumous biographies 96 RIA Novosti biography 97 F Ranevskaya 92 Year of birth 1902 1902 1892 minus 10 years to the official probably a joke referencing Orlova s years of music training Education Music College School Yaroslavl Music College est 1904 enrolled through a competition at 7 after 2 years of domestic music education provided by her mother c 1909 Music school since 7 as her parents demand Education Gymnasium Music school d 1910 1917 Moscow e Moscow secondary school graduated in 1919 Job Sale of Milk 1917 1919 with her family she moved to Svatovo Voskresensky district f Education Moscow Conservatory Before 1919 1919 1922 1919 1922 Job Musical Illustrator in Cinema Theatre Start in 1922 her first job 1920 1926 in Zvenigorod and Moscow As a part time job during her studies at Moscow Theater College Education Choreography Start in 1922 choreographic department of the Moscow Theater College named after A V Lunacharsky 1922 1925 Francesca Beata Studio since 1924 merged into the choreographic department of the Moscow Theater College named after A V Lunacharsky she has graduated in 1925 1922 1925 Moscow Theater College Education Acting Start in 1922 private lessons from Elizaveta Teleshova ru 1922 1925 private lessons from Elizaveta Telesheva g Job Music Teacher 1924 1926 private lessons Gallery editPhotos nbsp Lyubov Orlova in 1904 nbsp Lyubov Orlova in 1916 nbsp During the filming of Fighting Film Collection 4 in August 1941 Orlova is standing next to Viktor Talalikhin nbsp Singing for the Soviet soldiers during WWII nbsp Lyubov Orlova sees off Soviet troops departing to the front Commemorative items nbsp Postage Stamp Russia 2001 nbsp 2002 Bank of Russia Series Outstanding Personalities of Russia 100th AnniversarySee also editMV Lyubov Orlova Cinema of the Soviet UnionNotes edit House of Romanov era Russian heraldists weren t precise to draw the description of lion passant as lion statant 31 Leo Tolstoy s critical perception of Ludwig van Beethoven s later periods music has deeply shocked Pyotr Tchaikovsky even though Tchaikovsky himself quietly confessed to Sergei Taneyev the following I am afraid of Beethoven as you can be afraid of a big and scary dog While sending Tchaikovsky a collection of folk songs Tolstoy had asked him to arrange them in the Mozarto Haidn style and not the Beethoven Schumann Berlioz artificial seeking the unexpected style 37 38 39 uchilishe as school college shkola as school school she also calls uchilishe in the same paragraph she also credits it for secret from parents ballet studies Kiriena Konstantinovna Alelekova Gymnasium loc Moscow Bolshaya Nikitskaya st 46 Orlova wasn t good at science and didn t receive the excellence certificate During the Civil War Orlova has injured her hands carrying heavy milk cans to Moscow for sale in any weather conditionts for several years 18 The fact makes her Moscow Conservatory piano department enrollment impossible Elizaveta Teleshova ru 1892 1943 was an actress and director of the Moscow Art Theater and a close friend of Sergei Eisenstein References edit a b c Lyubov Orlova studentka Moskovskoj konservatorii Lyubov Orlova as Moscow Conservatory student mosconsv ru in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 10 August 2020 Peter Rollberg 2009 Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema US Rowman amp Littlefield pp 502 503 ISBN 978 0 8108 6072 8 From Vnukovo Archive chapaev media in Russian Seans Retrieved 5 September 2020 Artistka Lyubov Orlova imela znamenityh vladimirskih predkov An artist Lyubov Orlova had had famous Vladimir ancestors prizyv ru in Russian 7 December 2018 Retrieved 10 August 2020 Golikova N 2014 Lyubov Orlova in Russian Molodaya Gvardiya ISBN 978 5 235 03745 8 Vnukovo Archive reveals the secrets of Lyubov Orlova Unknown photos of the sex symbol of the Soviet era kp ru in Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda in Ukraine 15 January 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2020 Tapeur belcanto ru in Russian Belcanto Retrieved 18 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova mossoveta ru in Russian Mossovet Theatre Retrieved 18 August 2020 Scsheglov Dmitri 1997 Lyubov i maska in Russian Moscow Olymp ISBN 9785885908115 Gaievskaia Marina 8 February 2007 Lyubov Orlova the legend of Cinderella belcanto ru in Russian Retrieved 16 August 2020 a b c d Orlova Lyubov 2017 Fragments from actress memories chapaev media in Russian Retrieved 16 August 2020 Kushnirov Mark Before Cinematograph chapaev media in Russian Retrieved 15 August 2020 Olga Baklanova by her emigration to Hollywood she made Lyubov Orlova a star in the USSR retrospectra ru in Russian Retrospectra 10 June 2019 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Her Soviet Shiningness in Russian Kommersant Dengi January 24 2005 no 3 page 63 Lyubov Orlova Chronology lybov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 19 August 2020 The theater is crumbling long live the theater Operetta at the Musical Theater The 1930s stanmus ru in Russian Stanislavski and Nemirovich Danchenko Theatre Retrieved 7 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova did not like to be photographed ng ru in Russian Nezavisimaya Gazeta Retrieved 15 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova was jealous in Russian 7 Days 17 November 2016 Retrieved 18 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova Star 1 v wulf ru Vitaly Wulf Official Site in Russian L Officiel Russian edition 33 December January 2001 2002 Retrieved 18 August 2020 a b Life after Fame Ups and Downs of Lyubov Orlova rg ru in Russian Rossiyskaya Gazeta 26 January 2014 Retrieved 19 August 2020 a b Orlova Lyubov 1961 Dunayevsky in My Life chapaev media in Russian Soviet Composer Retrieved 16 August 2020 Backstage wars on stage 2016 television film transcript lubov orlova ru TV Center Retrieved 19 August 2020 Backstage wars on stage 2016 watch after 8 min 12 sec YouTube in Russian TV Center 11 February 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Fact 86 Ju S Sakov 100 Truths and Untruths about Orlova lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 3 September 2020 Orlova Lyubov Petrovna Timeline rudata ru in Russian Film Encyclopedia Retrieved 16 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova Bio kino teatr ru in Russian Retrieved 2 November 2020 They tried to poison Lyubov Orlova with thorns of roses kp ru in Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda 6 October 2005 Retrieved 2 September 2020 Ranevskaya Faina 1982 Drop everything go to the cinema chapaev media in Russian Seans Retrieved 23 August 2020 Vnukovo Archive reveals the secrets of Lyubov Orlova Unknown photos of the sex symbol of the Soviet era kp ru in Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda 29 December 2016 Archived from the original on 5 January 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Love story of Lyubov Orlova and Grigori Aleksandrov stolitsa ee in Russian Estonia Stolitsa 14 December 2019 Retrieved 22 August 2020 Grigory Alexandrov I don t know if there was a passionate love between my grandfather and Orlova lubov orlova ru in Russian Caravan of Stories 2002 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Return laughter to the land of sorrow novayagazeta ru in Russian Novaya Gazeta Retrieved 21 August 2020 Orlova Lyubov Petrovna culture ru in Russian Ministry of Culture Russia Retrieved 22 August 2020 How were Orlova Ranevskaya and Maretskaya dividing the Mossovet Theater 7days ru in Russian 7 Days 17 December 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Sukhotin COA gerbovnik ru in Russian Gerbovnik Retrieved 13 September 2020 a b Golikova Nonna Home Excerpts from the book Lyubov Olrova also contains Leo Tolstoy s autographed book scan lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 12 September 2020 Lyubov Orlova PDF adview ru in Russian DeAgostini Rurik s descendants live in St Petersburg ntv ru NTV Russia 16 August 2003 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Kuharkiny deti Kak zakon v sfere obrazovaniya privyol k krusheniyu imperii Cook s children How did the education law cause the crash of Russian Empire in Russian Argumenty i fakty 1 July 2017 Retrieved 5 September 2019 Leo Tolstoy s ancestors tolstoy lit ru in Russian Retrieved 10 September 2020 Tchaikovsly Between Heaven and Hell YouTube TV Center 4 January 2020 Retrieved 17 September 2020 Leonid Sabaneev Harmless Memories belcanto ru in Russian Belcanto Retrieved 17 September 2020 Tchaikovsky P I From the Diary tolstoy lit ru in Russian Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy Retrieved 17 September 2020 Interfakty Chast 6 Balalajka Interfacts Part 6 Balalaika in Russian Tomsk Regional State Philarmony Archived from the original on 9 May 2018 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Pochemu Aleksej Mihajlovich prikazal szhech vse balalajki Why did Alexei Mikhailovich order to burn all the balalaikas in Russian Cyrillitsa ru 7 December 2018 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Everyone knows about the witch hunt of Inquisition times but only few people aware that in 17th century Russia there were burning balalaikas for the same purpose ow Russia s Old Believers used to burn themselves alive Russia Beyond the Headlines 15 May 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Gorky Maxim V I Lenin First Edition maximgorkiy narod ru Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Is Ovchinnikov Sheepskin nikov worth it itogi ru in Russian Itogi 31 October 2000 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Brophy Timothy S 2019 The Oxford Handbook of Assessment Policy and Practice in Music Education Volume 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190248116 Musical Preferences levada ru in Russian Levada Center Retrieved 12 September 2020 Bomba dlya muzykalnyh shkol Bomb for the Musical Schools ClassicalMusicNews ru 17 June 2019 Retrieved 5 September 2019 Orchestra Rehearsal rg ru in Russian Rossiyskaya Gazeta 10 April 2019 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Arthur Domansky accompanist of the highest category For an hour of work at the conservatory he receives 86 rubles Shvydkoy Musically educated people are more prepared than the others for the challenges of the day rg ru Rossiyskaya Gazeta 19 March 2019 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Klassika ne v trende chinovniki predlozhili muzykalnym shkolam smenit format Classics as not trendy The officials suggest musical schools change of the format ClassicalMusicNews ru 22 December 2018 Retrieved 5 September 2019 Serebryany Igor 29 May 2019 Why building churches in Russia is of higher priority than building schools fairplanet org FairPlanet Retrieved 21 June 2020 But when the Russians see that their local authorities contribute public funds to church construction instead of investing money into ailing housing and utilities that annoys people Russians Return to Religion But Not to Church pewforum org Pew Research Center 10 February 2014 Retrieved 21 June 2020 Aleksandrov Grigori Epoch and Cinema biography wikireading ru Retrieved 10 September 2020 Kartsev D 15 October 2019 Alexei Navalny argued with the author of The End of History Francis Fukuyama about populism liberalism and Greta Thunberg This is how it was Meduza in Russian Retrieved 28 March 2020 Putin Doesn t Believe In You McCain Tells Russian People npr org 19 September 2013 Retrieved 23 June 2020 Why is Tchaikovsky so loved in America kultspargalka ru in Russian 29 November 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Sergei Rachmaninoff And what is most surprising of all the Yankees perhaps feel and understand Tchaikovsky better than us Russians Really every note of Tchaikovsky says something to them And what is most surprising of all the Yankees perhaps better than us Russians feel and understand Tchaikovsky Positively every note of Tchaikovsky says something to them Putin s Russia and the ghost of the Romanovs The Economist official YouTube channel 17 July 2018 Retrieved 24 November 2018 Todes D P 2014 Ivan Pavlov A Russian Life in Science Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199394449 a b Fact 23 Ju S Sakov 100 Truths and Untruths about Orlova lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 3 September 2020 a b Fact 36 Ju S Sakov 100 Truths and Untruths about Orlova lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 3 September 2020 Volga Volga 1998 in Russian Mosfilm Retrieved 11 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova centrteatraikino ru in Russian Theater and Cinema Center on Povarskaya Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2020 All Theatre and Film Roles lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 18 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova music yandex ru in Russian Yandex Music Retrieved 20 August 2020 OSTs dunaevski ru in Russian Official Site of Isaak Dunayevsky Retrieved 20 August 2020 Yuri Antonov Fate Under the Roof you Your House russia tv in Russian Retrieved 20 August 2020 Kara Zehra Ezgi Musical Censorship and Repression in the Union of Soviet Composers PDF porteakademik itu edu tr Turkey Istanbul Technical University Turkish Music State Conservatory Retrieved 20 August 2020 Master os Sounds mk ru in Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda 4 February 2000 Retrieved 26 August 2020 a b Russian Idols of the XX Century wciom ru in Russian VCIOM 20 January 2010 Retrieved 9 September 2020 3108 Lyubov 1972 Google Search Retrieved 4 May 2018 via Google Books Hubbard Amy Ghost ship Lyubov Orlova and starving rats headed for land Los Angeles Times 23 January 2014 Retrieved 8 February 2014 Layne Ken Abandoned Cruise Ship Full of Starving Rats Headed For Land Archived 8 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Gawker 1 23 14 Retrieved via facebook 8 February 2014 Pamyatnik Lyubovi Orlovoj otkryli v subbotu v gorodskom okruge Zvenigorod Lyubov Orlova Monument in the urban district of Zvenigorod was opened on Saturday in Russian RIA Novosti Moscow Oblast Retrieved 13 August 2023 Kulturnyj centr Lyubovi Orlovoj v Zvenigorode Lyubov Orlova Zvenigorod Cultural Centere mosoblkino ru in Russian Retrieved 13 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova s 117th Birthday Doodles Archive Google 11 February 2019 Orlova i Aleksandrov tajnaya zhizn sovetskih nebozhitelej Ot 25 05 16 YouTube in Russian Pryamoy Efir Holmgren Beth 2007 The Blue Angel and Blackface Redeeming Entertainment in Aleksandrov s Circus The Russian Review 66 1 5 22 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9434 2006 00427 x JSTOR 20620475 Neskazochnaya sudba samogo izvestnogo bogatyrya sovetskogo kino Chto stalo prichinoj rannego uhoda Sergeya Stolyarova Non fairytale fate of the most famous hero of Soviet cinema What had caused an early death of Sergei Stolyarov kulturologia ru in Russian Retrieved 15 August 2020 Belarusian Protesters Reimagine Soviet Era Art rfefl org Retrieved 12 September 2020 The Motherland Calls 10 facts about the monument culture ru Retrieved 14 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova Years of Happiness mybook ru in Russian Retrieved 12 September 2020 Jones Jonathan 21 July 2020 Statues are lies selfies in bronze and you can t bring history to life with a dead art The Guardian Retrieved 12 September 2020 Alexandrov Grigory Vasil evich Biography k1ni ru in Russian Retrieved 15 August 2020 What do we know about Mosfilm studio celebrating its 95th anniversary today posta magazine ru in Russian 30 January 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova The Legend of Cinderella belcanto ru in Russian 2007 Retrieved 11 September 2020 Golikova Nonna 2020 Lyubov Orlova Years of Happiness in Russian Russia Litres ISBN 9785042591495 Orlova and Aleksandrov 1 series after 34 minute YouTube in Russian Domashny Mother What if they discover you ve graduated from the Conservatory Goldenweiser Orlova and Aleksandrov TV Series 2015 IMDb Retrieved 22 August 2020 Kipp Karl Avgustovich mosconsv ru in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 22 August 2020 Ostrovskaya Ignatieva Anna Pavlovna mosconsv ru in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 18 September 2020 Orlova i Aleksandrov 11 episode start 38 13 YouTube Domashny Retrieved 7 September 2020 Romanov Aleksei 1987 Lyubov Orlova in Art and Life in Russian Iskusstvo Blumenfeld Felix Mikhailovich in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 4 September 2020 About muzsob ru in Russian Yaroslavl Music College Retrieved 22 August 2020 Moscow Conservatory Enrollment classicalmusicnews ru in Russian Classical Music News Retrieved 22 August 2020 Conservatory before 1917 Chapter I Part 1 in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 4 September 2020 Herzen st 13 mosconsv ru in Russian Moscow Conservatory Retrieved 4 September 2020 Refusal to Stalin a strange marriage and millions in savings Lyubov Orlova s Secrets aif ru in Russian Argumenti i fakti Retrieved 22 August 2020 a b Lyubov Orlova s Secrets what the actress was silent about stolitsa ee in Russian Estonia Stolitsa Retrieved 22 August 2020 Anna Nonna Petrovna Orlova Veselova ru rodovid org in Russian Rodovid Retrieved 5 September 2020 Portret in a Rubish lubov orlova ru in Russian Moskovsky Komsomolets Retrieved 5 September 2020 Evgenia Nikokayevna Sukhotina rgfond ru in Russian Russian Genealogy Foundation Retrieved 22 August 2020 Timeline lubov orlova ru in Russian Retrieved 24 August 2020 Lyubov Orlova Biography in Russian RIA Novosti Retrieved 24 August 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lyubov Orlova Lyubov Orlova at IMDb in Russian lubov orlova ru in Russian Lyubov Orlova on Russian Genealogy Foundation Website in Russian Records of Lyubov Orlova on website The Encyclopedia of Russian recordings Russian Records com in Russian Ee sovetskoe siyatelstvo Her Soviet Serenity an article in Kommersant Money Lyubov Orlova at Find a Grave nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lyubov Orlova amp oldid 1216630603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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