Tatyana Pavlovna Ivanova ( German: Tatjana Iwanow ; May 14, 1925 , Berlin , Germany - October 6, 1979 , Hamburg ) is a German actress and singer of Russian origin. She performs Russian and Gypsy songs, Russian romances . Her work reflects the old Russian culture , preserved vocal and stage techniques of the pre-revolutionary "old stage".
Tatyana Pavlovna Ivanova | |
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Date of Birth | |
Place of Birth | |
Date of death | |
Place of death | |
A country | Germany |
Professions | singer , actress |
Singing voice | |
Instruments | |
Genres | operetta , pop , folk music , |
Biography
Tatyana Ivanova was born in the western part of Berlin - Charlottenburg , where her parents moved soon after the revolution of 1917 in Russia . Prior to that, the whole family lived in St. Petersburg on Vasilyevsky Island . The daughter of the Russian White Guard officer Pavel Dmitrievich Ivanov and opera singer Elena Ion [4] (1890-1967), Tatiana was brought up in the best traditions of Russian culture. The house spoke only in Russian, and her love for Russian and Gypsy songs and romances was transferred from her father to her from childhood.
In the late 50s - early 60s , Tatyana Ivanova shone on the stages of many European theaters. She starred in several films. She rightfully earned the title “First Lady of the Musical ” [5] . Among the most famous roles is the title role in the musical “ Hello, Dolly! ”, Performed by her more than 400 times and gained success far beyond the borders of Germany. She spent several years in Australia , where she also played roles in musicals with great success. Returning to Germany, she continued her career in cinema and on the stages of various theaters. Together with Ivan Rebrov, she recorded several gramophone records of Russian songs and romances, many of which received great fame in the Soviet Union .
Tatyana Ivanova was married three times. From her first marriage with actor Wilfried Seifert , her son Andreas was born, who also became an actor. The second time she married in 1959, the actor Gert Fröbe (1913-1988), known for his one of the main roles - the villain in the film “ Goldfinger ” about James Bond . Gert Fröbe adopted her son Andreas Seifert [6] . In 1975, she married for the third time film producer Walter Koppel (1906-1982).
Tatyana Ivanova died of breast cancer at the University Hospital Eppendorf in Hamburg . The urn with its ashes was buried in the family grave [7] next to the mother, father, and grandfather Frederick Ion (1861–1932) [8] and grandmother Anna Ivanovna Ion (Golm) (1867–1938) [9] in Russian Orthodox cemetery of the Holy Prince Vladimir Brotherhood in the western part of Berlin - Tegel .
Education and Theater
After high school, Tatyana Ivanova received an acting education at the drama school of the German Theater in Berlin . One of her teachers was a German actress and broadcaster Agnes Windeck. Training completed in 1943 , at the height of the Second World War . Tatyana received her first theater engagement in 1944 in the same German Theater in Berlin in the role of “young heroine” and an ingenue . Her stage debut took place in the role of Perdita in William Shakespeare's play “ Winter's Tale ” and occurred shortly before the closure of all German theaters on September 1, 1944 due to the tightening of the position of German troops on the fronts and the transfer of hostilities to Germany [10] .
After the end of World War II, Tatiana continued her acting career at the Munich Chamber Theater ( Münchner Kammerspiele ) (1946/1947 season), the Frankfurt am Main Dramatic Theater ( Schauspielhaus Frankfurt ) (1947/1948 season) and the Koblenz City Theater Koblenz (1948-1950), where, among other things, she played the role of Rosalind in Shakespeare's comedy “ How You Like It, ” directed by director Heinz Hilpert [11] . With this performance, Ivanova toured in 1949 at the Theater on the Bezenbinderhof (Theater am Besenbinderhof) in Hamburg , where she later moved.
Since 1951, Tatyana Ivanova was a member of the Deutsches Theater Göttingen . Her roles from this period include: Katharine in “ The Taming of the Shrew ”, Beatrice in “ Much Ado About Nothing ”, Sally in the comedy “The Song of the Pigeon” ( Das Lied der Taube ) by John Van Druten , Belis in the play “Don Perlimplin's Love” [12] Federica Garcia Lorca , and Rosalind in How You Like It . In 1955 she played the Virgin Mary in the play “ Wojcieck ” by German playwright Georg Büchner .
Tatyana Ivanova played as a guest actress at the Comedy Theater ( Fritz Rémond Theater ) in Frankfurt am Main . She was invited to Australia on tour in Princess Theater and Pilgrim Theater in Melbourne .
The owner of a bright mezzo-soprano , Tatiana Ivanova has long been the leading actor in the musical “ Hello, Dolly! , Staged in 1966 at the Düsseldorf Dramatic Theater . If, in the original American version, the main heroine is Dolly Levy, then in the German one - Dolly Vasilyeva, textually adapted to perception as Russian. In 1967, due to the great success of the production, a vinyl record was released with songs from this performance.
In 1977, the actress participated in the theater festival Gandersheimer Domfestspielen in Bad Gandersheim and won the audience award - “ Roswitha-Ring ”.
Film and television
In the 1950s , Tatyana Ivanova began acting in films, mostly in cameo roles. In 1959, in the war drama “ Night over Gotenhafen ”, which tells about the tragedy of the airliner “ Wilhelm Gustloff ” ( directed by Frank Wisbar ), she played the role of Meta's maid . Then she played in the crime comedy “The Adventures of Nick Knuterton - The Robbery of Gloria Nylon” and in the film about the defeat of General Paulus's 6th Army near Stalingrad “ Dogs, do you want to live forever? ".
In 1967, she starred in DEFA in a joint German-German comedy " Pagans from Kummerov and their funny leprosy " as Mrs. Duker.
In 1968, Tatiana Ivanova participates in the TV show "Win only one" in Wiesbaden as an artist. In 1970 she leads the television show ZDF - the second channel of German television, "Review of music in the summer", in which famous composers presented their latest works. Based on the materials of this program, a long-playing record was recorded, where the singer performed the song “Brave Romanov” ( Der tolle Romanoff ).
In 1971, for ZDF, Tatiana Ivanova appeared in two operetta films: in duets with Heinz Erhart in the role of the not very young and highly moral Madame Palmyra Bobusson in The Ball in the Opera by Richard Heuberger and Horst Nindorf in the role of the cheerful Russian Countess Olga in Princess dollars "Austrian composer Leo Fall . The adaptation of the operetta "The Ball in the Opera" is still regularly repeated on the ZDF . Later, Ivanova plays the role of salon women, including the role of Countess Beata von Troyenfelz in the film adaptation of the novel by German writer Hedvigi Kirts-Mahler “Griseldis” (1974) and in a duet with Erica Plouar the role of Prudence Duverny, girlfriend of the main character in the film adaptation of the novel “ Dam s Camellias (1978) directed by Tom Tölle . She collaborated on several television shows - “Music Divided into Three” ( ARD , 1969) and “Scala Today” (ZDF, 1971). In 1973 she was invited by the famous TV presenter Heinz Schenk to an interview in the program “ At the Blue Goat ”.
The first officially published recordings of Tatiana Ivanova appeared in Russia in 1991 , when two vinyl giant disks were published. They were later reprinted on CD.
Filmography
- 1959 : “ Night over Gotenhafen ” - Meta
- 1959 : "The Adventures of Nick Knauterton - The Robbery of Gloria Nylon"
- 1959 : “ Dogs, do you want to live forever? "
- 1967 : " Pagans from Kummerov and their funny leprosy " - Frau Duker
- 1970 : "Die Wesenacks" - Asta Grashofn
- 1971 : " The Ball at the Opera " - Palmyra
- 1971 : " Princess of Dollars " - Olga
- 1974 : "Griseldis" - Countess Beata von Treufels
- 1978 : The Lady of the Camellias - Prudence
Records
1967
- Anatol heisst er (“His name is Anatole”)
1968
- Ivan Rebroff. Slawische Seele (Compilation album shared with Tatjana Ivanow & Dunja Rajter)
1973
- Ivan Rebroff. 25 Greatest Russian Melodies (Compilation with Tatiana Ivanov (2 duets))
CD
Collections
Notes
- ↑ Internet Movie Database - 1990.
- ↑ 1 2 Discogs - 2000.
- ↑ German National Library , Berlin State Library , Bavarian State Library , etc. Record # 134580419 // General Regulatory Control (GND) - 2012—2016.
- ↑ Elena Yulia Maria Ivanova, nee Ion
- "She danced even through torment." Magazine "Gong", N. 43 - 1979, Germany. Per. from German G. Kahl
- ↑ (English) Andreas Seyferth, actor. Wilfried Seyferth and actress Tatyana Ivanov was adopted in 1969 by Gert Froebe
- Татья Tatiana Pavlovna Ivanova (1925–1979). Grave celebrities
- ↑ Friedrich Fedorovich Ion
- ↑ Anna Ivanovna Ion, nee Holm
- Нем (German) 1.9.1944 Das Deutsche Theater schließt seine Pforten - wie alle Bühnen
- ↑ (him.) Theater ohne Stars | DIE ZEIT Archiv | Ausgabe 45/1949
- ↑ Federic Garcia Lorca. Don Perlimplin's Love
Links
- (eng.) Tatjana Iwanow (1925-1979). Actress
- ( ger .) Filmportal.de: Tatjana Iwanow. Darstellerin. Filmografie
- (him.) Tatjana Iwanow Discography at Discogs
- The first Russian lady of the musical. LJ publication of Gennady Kalya
- Biography of Tatiana Ivanova on Russian chanson
- Tatyana Ivanova. Childhood memories
- Tatyana Ivanova. Old Moscow. Russian and gypsy songs and romances
- Tatyana Ivanova. Tatjana Iwanow