Mayorova Vera Vladimirovna - actress of theater and cinema since the Soviet Union and the modern Russian Federation. The actress is known for participating in such films as “Visitor to the Museum”, “Seven Nannies” and “Investigators are Experts: Black Broker”.
Biography
She was born on July 19 in 1939, almost before the Second World War. Around 1957-1958, she entered the Shchukin Theater School. Young Vera decided to choose this path, since from childhood she was fond of art and playing in various scenes.
She didn’t show herself in any special way in school, but at the school she managed to show such good results that immediately after graduation, they wanted to see her in the theater, located on Malaya Bronnaya.
Becoming an actress in theatrical performances, Vera Mayorova immediately plunged into the work with all her inherent activity. For a short period of time she managed to play diverse roles in a large number of different performances. Among them was the role of Natasha in the production of Three Sisters, as well as the role of Vali in the production of Plato Krechet.
Movie work
For the first time in cinema, actress Vera Mayorova lit up in 1961. Then she played the role of Anna Vasilyevna in the drama film "Cosmonaut No. ..", directed by Tamara Lisitsian. In the future, Vera also actively participated in the filming of various films, mostly dramatic.
So, in the film "Wormwood grass", created by Alexei Saltykov, she played Lisa. Then in the film "Exam for Immortality" was a caring mother. Then she tried herself in the role of Anna in the psychological and dramatic picture of Konstantin Lopushinsky's “Letters of a Dead Man”.
Reviews about the actress
At the moment, Vera Mayorova has not been involved in cinema for ten years. On the one hand, given the current age of the woman, this is quite logical. However, on the other hand, it may well turn out that in the future film lovers will still be able to see her in some dramatic film, albeit not in the main, but in the episodic role.
In general, the acting play of Vera Mayorova was appreciated by many critics. Vera Vladimirovna really knows how to stay on stage well. She skillfully conveys her role to the audience so that you involuntarily believe in her game, which is why films with her participation look easy and pleasant. The same can be said about the performances with Mayorova. On the stage of the theater, she knows how to stay no worse than in front of the camera during the filming, and this has been proved more than once.