Gulsum Abdrakhmanov ( December 12, 1917 , modern Nurinsky district of Karaganda region - October 7, 1970 , Semipalatinsk , Semipalatinsk region , Kazakh SSR ) - Kazakh and Soviet actress, people's artist of the Kazakh SSR (1964; Honored Artist of the Kazakh SSR since 1944).
| Gulsum Abdrakhmanova | |
|---|---|
| Gulsim Әbdіrahmanova | |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | Karaganda region , Kazakh SSR |
| Date of death | |
| Place of death | Semipalatinsk |
| Citizenship | |
| Profession | actress |
| Awards |
|
Content
Biography
Gulsum Abdrakhmanova graduated from the Alma-Ata Theater School in 1936, and until the end of her life she worked in the Semipalatinsk Regional Music and Drama Theater, where she created a number of bright, emotionally saturated female images, including: Enlik, Karlyga, Ayman, Tenge, Altynshash , Marzhan (“ Enlik - Kebek ”, “ Ayman Sholpan ”, “White Birch”, “Karagoz” by M. O. Auezov ), Saule (in the play by T. Akhtanov ), Mother Earth (“Mother Field” by C.T. Aitmatov ), a woman police officer (“Oh, these horsemen” K. T. Shangitbaeva and K. Baiseitova ) and others. Possessing both musical culture and dramatic talent, she with equal skill played roles in both musical and dramatic performances. The originality of interpretation was marked by the image of Akzhunus in the opera “Yer Targyn” by E. G. Brusilovsky . [one]
In 1943 she joined the VKP (b) . In the post-war years, Gulsum Abdrakhmanova also played major roles in the performances of Soviet multinational dramaturgy: Sophia (“Wedding in Malinovka” by B. A. Alexandrova ), Clementine and Elena (“Free Wind” by I. O. Dunaevsky ). [one]
Awards and honors
- Honored Artist of the Kazakh SSR (1944)
- People's Artist of the Kazakh SSR (1964)
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Kazakh SSR: a brief encyclopedia / Ch. ed. R.N. Nurgaliyev. - Alma-Ata: Ch. ed. Kazakh Soviet Encyclopedia, 1991. - Vol. 4: Language. Literature. Folklore. Art. Architecture. - p. 89-90. - 31 300 copies - ISBN 5-89800-023-2 .
Literature
- Abdrakhmanova, Gulsum // Kazakhstan. National Encyclopedia . - Almaty: “Kazakh Encyclopedias”, 2004. - ISBN 9965-9389-9-7 .