The popular theater and film actress - Varvara Vladimirova - is a native of Leningrad and a bearer of the cultural heritage of St. Petersburg. Today, she equally shares her desire to go to the stage with going to the set.
The successor of the famous creative dynasty in Russia - Varvara Vladimirova - showed the world not only her bright talent inherited from her parents: Igor Vladimirov and Alisa Freindlich, but also a rather unusual fate. The participant of the sensational television project "Cop Wars" still goes on the stage with her mother.
Biography and career of Varvara Vladimirova
A native of Leningrad was born on March 13, 1968 in a family that is directly related to the world of theater and cinema. For obvious reasons, the girl from early childhood dreamed of becoming an artist, which she realized by entering the State Institute of Theater in her city.
In her native university, Varvara first got on a course with Efim Padva, and after the announcement of the recruitment of students by Igor Vladimirov - to her father. Since the parent of Vladimirova was already at a respectful age (at the time of the girl's birth, he was already fifty years old), he practically very rarely studied with his daughter at the institute due to his health condition. It is significant that Varvara Vladimirova graduated from the university without a graduation performance, as is usually customary in thematic educational institutions, but on the basis of the works that she passed in her second year.
The aspiring actress made her film debut back in 1983, when she was only fifteen years old, in Igor Vladimirov's musical tale "An Extra Ticket". Here Varvara had a good chance - under the supervision of her father, to try on one of the roles. But then this project could not cause a stir among the public, and Varvara's film work remained almost unnoticed by a wide audience.
The first success came to the girl after her filming in Georgy Danelia's tragicomedy "Kin-dza-dza!" together with such venerable actors as Yuri Yakovlev and Yevgeny Leonov. After graduation, director Leonid Nechaev invited Varvara to play the role of Albina in the musical film "Don't Leave". In the "nineties" the artist shared the fate of many colleagues in the creative department and took up raising children, devoting her life entirely to her family.
However, at the beginning of the "tenths" Vladimirova again appears on the screens together with her mother, Stanislav Govorukhin and Irina Skobtseva in the detective television film "Women's Logic". The last films of the actress include the projects "Cop Wars" (2012-2013) and "Our Happy Tomorrow".
Personal life of the actress
In the early nineties, Varvara Vladimirova married the vice-governor of St. Petersburg, Sergei Tarasov. After obtaining the status of a spouse, she decides to leave theater and cinema in order to fully devote herself to family responsibilities. Almost immediately, the couple has a daughter, Anna, and a son, Nikita.
In 2009, a terrible tragedy took the life of Sergei Tarasov. The terrorist attack on the Nevsky Express train caused the death of her husband. Having recovered from such a misfortune, Varvara Vladimirova decided to return to the set and the theatrical stage.