

Faina Ranevskaya
ActorFaina Georgiyevna Ranevskaya (born Faina Girschevna Feldman, on August 27th, 1896 in Taganrog), was a Soviet theatre and film actress. She is also very well known for her cheeky aphorisms. In childhood, she attended the Mariinskaya Gymnasium for Girls, receiving additional education usual for someone from an affluent family (music, singing, foreign languages). Heavily influenced by her mother's love for the arts, Ranevskaya had a budding interest in theatre and by the age of 14 was attending classes at the private theatre studio of A. Jagiello (A.N. Govberg), graduating in 1914. In 1915 she decided to move to Moscow, becoming estranged from her family due to her choice of career. During these years she met M. Tsvetaeva, O. Mandelstam, V. Mayakovsky, and V. Kachalov. In the post-revolutionary years, her family left Russia and settled in Prague, but she stayed to continue pursuing theatre. She worked in the theatres of Kerch, Rostov-on-Don, at the mobile theatre "The First Soviet Theater" in Crimea, also in Baku, Arkhangelsk, Smolensk, etc. In fall of 1915, Ranevskaya signed a contract to work in the Kerch troupe of Madame Lavrovskaya. Sadly, the public did not express great interest in the new troupe. Ranevskaya chose her stage name in honor of the main character in Anton Chekhov's play The Cherry Orchard. Once, on a walk with a fellow troupe member, Ranevskaya decided to check into the bank. The actress recalls the birth of this pseudonym: "When we came out of the massive bank doors, a gust of wind tore the banknotes out of my hands – the entire amount. I stopped, and, looking at the flying banknotes, said: 'Shame about the money, but how beautifully it flies away!' 'But indeed, you are Ranevskaya!' exclaimed her companion. 'Only she could say that!' When I later had to choose a pseudonym, I decided to take the surname of Chekhov's heroine. We have something in common–but far from everything, far from everything..." Ranevskaya also used to joke about herself, saying that she was Ranevskaya because she had butterfingers. Ranevskaya's mother and her had both greatly admired the writer himself. In 1934, she made her debut in film as Madame Loiseau in Pyshka (dir. Mikhail Romm), based on Boule de Suif by Guy de Maupassant. Romain Rolland, a French writer, loved the film (his favorite actor in the movie was Ranevskaya). At his request it was shown in French cinemas and became a box-office hit. She remained both prominent film and theatre actress, although most of her work remained in theatre. In her later years, Ranevskaya professed that meeting Pavla Woolf drastically changed her fate; it was thanks to Woolf that she became an actress. They met in 1918, when Ranevskaya worked as an extra for a circus production. She happened to see Pavla Woolf in "A Nest of the Gentlefolk", which left upon her a big impression. She asked the actress to help her (who willingly accepted), and from that day on they remained very close friends.
More details at TMDB
KNOWN FOR
FILMOGRAPHY
ACTOR28

Old Masters
1983
Self

The Rest Is Silence
1978
Lucy Cooper

Karlson Returns
1970
Freken Bok (voice)

New Attraction Today
1966
Ada Konstantinovna

An Easy Life
1964
Margarita Ivanovna, AKA Queen Margot

Be Careful, Grandma!
1961
Elena Timofeevna

Drama
1960
Murashkina

A Girl with Guitar
1958
Sviristinskaya

Meeting on the Elbe
1949
Mrs. MacDermott

They Have a Motherland
1949

Cinderella
1947
Stepmother

Spring
1947
Margarita Lvovna, housekeeper

Private Aleksandr Matrosov
1947

The Sky Slow-Mover
1946
military doctor, professor of medicine

An Elephant and a Rope
1945
Grandmother

Wedding
1944
Настасья Тимофеевна Жигалова (мать невесты)

Dream
1943
Madame Rosa Skorokhodova

The New Adventures of Schweik
1943

Native Shores
1943

The Tale of Tsar Saltan
1943
Babarikha (voice)

Aleksandr Parkhomenko
1942
female pianist (uncredited)

How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich
1941
Горпина

The Beloved
1940
Marya Ivanovna

Engineer Kochin's Error
1939

The Foundling
1939
Lyalya (as F.G. Ranevskaya)

Man in a Shell
1939
жена инспектора

The Ballad of Cossack Golota
1937

Boule de Suif
1934
Mme. Loiseau





