Marina Dyuzheva

Marina Mikhailovna Dyuzheva
Native name Марина Михайловна Дюжева
Pronunciation IPA: [mɐˈrʲinə dʲʉʐevə]
Born Marina Kukushkina
(1955-10-09) October 9, 1955
Moscow, Russian SFSR, USSR
Nationality Russian
Occupation Actress
Years active 1978-present
Known for Theater and film
Website Marina Dyuzheva on IMDb

Marina Mikhailovna Dyuzheva (née Kukushkina, born October 9, 1955) is a Soviet and Russian film and stage actress.

Biography

Marina Dyuzheva graduated in 1976 from the Russian Academy of Theatre Arts. She was an actress in both theater and film from 1978 to 1997.

She has had roles in more than fifty films. Early in her career she acted under her maiden name, Kukushkina. She met her first husband, Nicholas Dyuzhev, the son of an influential official at the Ministry of Culture, while studying at the Academy; however, this marriage quickly disintegrated.

In 1994, Marina Dyuzheva was invited to dub the French series Helen and the Boys, and she continued this kind of work in other foreign films. In the 1996 and 1997 seasons of the game show The Keys to Fort Boryard, she voiced the female host, Sandrine Dominguez.

Personal life

  • Married her first husband, Nicholay Dyuzhev, in 1975 and divorced in 1978
  • Married her second husband, writer, journalist, radio host and driving instructor Yuri Geiko on February 4, 1983.
    • Son Mikhail, born October 9, 1981
    • Son Gregory, born August 28, 1986

Works

Filmography

YearFilmRole
1974At A Boyish Eighteen YearsValya
1974Think of Me As an AdultUnknown
1974Secret CityPioneer leader
1975Another WeddingAsya
1976TraineeKatya Savelieva
1976TownspeopleMasha
1977For Family ReasonsLida
1977MiminoSvetlana Georgievna, lawyer (mistakenly credited as Maria Dyuzheva)
1977RelativesUnknown
1978The Tavern on PyatnitskayaAlenka
1978Urgent CallXenia
1978The Front for the Front LineKatya
1978Risk: A Noble CauseNatasha
1979Time Has Chosen UsMasha, radio operator
1979At The End of SummerNurse Vera
1980National Border: We Are Ours, We Are New...Nina Alekseevna Danovich
1980Father and SonPraskovya Tikhonov Skobeeva, teacher
1980You Must LiveOksana
1980A Shot in the BackRita
1980KeyAnya, wife of Valery
1981Honest, Intelligent, SingleKatya
1981Theft of the CenturyBarbara Eryomina
1981Girl and GrandMarina Koşevaya
1982For HappinessKatya
1982The Pokrovsky GateAnna Adamovna, graduate student
1983Young PeopleGalya
1984Zudov, You're Fired!Elena Vasilevna
1985My ChoiceValentina
1985Malevolent SundayNina Grigorievna
1985Kalman's Riddle/Az élet muzsikája - KálmánImre
1985City Over MasterLiza
1986How to Become HappyZoe, wife of Gosha
1987Tumble Through the HeadAnna Ivanovna, head of the school
1988Where is the Nophelet?Marina
1988One Day in DecemberNatashka/Katka/Maya
1990The Arbat MotiveOlga
1991Тень, или Может быть, всё обойдётся (untranslatable)Princess
1995Moscow HolidaysGrisha's ex-wife (in the credits as Maria)
1995Without A CollarGudkov
1996ImpotentMasha
2000The Envy of the GodsUnknown
2002A Friendly Little FamilyMaria Potykaeva
2002Arrow of LoveIrina Mikhailovna
2007Pastries with PotatoAnna
2008The Story of Love, or A New Year's JokeMama Pauline
2008Daddy's DaughtersPianist Violetta
2009MineLyudmila Petrovna Sveshnikov
2009Blood Is Not WaterElena Kulikova, mother of Anna and Masha
2010White DressAunt Masha
2011CupidLyudmila Arkadevna Odintsov, Victoria's mother
2012My Favorite GeniusMarina Petrovna, Misha's mother
2012JungleLubov, mother of Marina
2013People's Doctor: The ReturnVera
2013Family CircumstancesIrina Lyubochkina
2014Son to FatherVadima, foster mother
2014Exclusion ZoneZinaida
2016My Favorite In-LawOlga

Television Series

  • 1988: Objective Circumstances — Irina Antipova

Cartoon Voices

  • 2005: The Story of One Frog's Love

Documentary Films

Theater Roles

Independent Theater Project

  • "Fierce Dance" (based on the novel They Shoot Horses, Don't They?) - Mary
  • "Boing Boing" - M. Kamoletti — Berta
  • "Calendar Girls" - T. Ferta — Ruth

Theatrical Production Center "Rusart"

  • "Five Nights" - Alexander Volodin - Zoe

Theatrical Marathon

  • "Dear Pamela" (based on the play by John Patrick) — Pamela Cronk

References

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