Grandchildren of Shukshina Lydia. Why were the daughters of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina offended by their famous mother? 

- Russian and Soviet theater and film actress.

Photo: http://www.tvc.ru/news/show/id/44455

Biography of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina

Graduated from the All-Union state institute cinematography (1964, acting workshop of S. Gerasimov and T. Makarova).

She began acting in films in 1957.

The actress’s great success was her creative union with V. M. Shukshin, in whose films she created vivid images of ordinary Russian women.

From 1974 to 1993, she was an actress at the Film Actor's Studio Theater in Moscow.

In 1996-1997, together with Bari Alibasov, she headed the Secret & Secret magazine.

Since 2005, Lidiya Fedoseeva-Shukshina has been the president of the film festival “Vivat Cinema of Russia!”

Personal life

Lydia Fedoseeva's first husband was Kiev actor V. Voronin. They met at the Dovzhenko film studio (he starred in the films “First Echelon”, “Ivanna”, “Kochubey”, “Dream”, etc.).

In 1960, he gave birth to a girl who was named Nastya. However, the birth of a child had a negative impact on her studies at VGIK - soon Fedoseeva was expelled from the institute for systematic absences from classes.

Her young husband had to bow to the dean of the acting department of VGIK. This campaign ended in success - Fedoseeva was reinstated at the institute and enrolled in the workshop of S. Gerasimov and T. Makarova.

Meanwhile, Fedoseeva’s return to the capital played a cruel joke on the young family. Since Voronin continued to live in Kyiv, and Fedoseeva in Moscow (while their daughter lived with her grandmother in Leningrad), they saw each other extremely rarely and eventually became unaccustomed to each other. Therefore, by 1964, when Fedoseeva graduated from VGIK and left to star in the film “What is it like, the sea?”, her marriage to Voronin managed to turn into a pure formality.

After the divorce, the girl was left in the care of Voronin’s mother, hidden from her own mother until they separated her completely. Over time, Fedoseeva’s mental wound healed, and now she herself does not want to maintain any relationship with her daughter, even after learning that she was arrested for transporting drugs. She also asks journalists not to interfere and not stir up this family tragedy.

Second husband - Vasily Shukshin, writer, film director, actor, screenwriter (married from 1964 to 1974).

In her marriage to Shukshin, Lydia Nikolaevna gave birth to two more girls of the same age. The eldest, Masha, graduated from the Institute of Foreign Languages; for several years she worked as a translator at the stock exchange, then switched to television. But over time, she decided to continue the family tradition and became an actress. She has already starred in several films, including “American Daughter” and “The Circus Burned Down and the Clowns Ran Away.” Lately, Masha has often acted in TV series.

The youngest Shukshina, Olga, first graduated from VGIK, starred in several films, it seemed that her future had already been determined. But then she decided to follow in her father’s footsteps, began writing autobiographical stories and entered the Literary Institute to study. Olga is not at all like her older sister, bright and energetic. She lives secluded in country house and raises his son Vasily. As it turns out, Olga received her literary gift not only from her father, but also from her mother, who also decided to express herself in the literary field and has already published a collection of riddles. Some of them were collected by Shukshin.

Daughters are actress Maria Shukshina and Olga Shukshina.

Photo: http://antikontrafakt.ru/estrada/store/mariya-shukshina-i-olga-shukshina.html

Third husband - Mikhail Agranovich, cinematographer (married from 1975 to 1984).

Fourth husband - Marek Mierzeevski, Polish artist (married from 1984 to 1988).

Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina has four grandchildren and one great-grandson.

Lidiya Fedoseeva-Shukshina and

Bari and Lydia met in the late 90s at the Nika film awards, where their seats happened to be next door. “Lida and I were together for four years,” he shared with Collection magazine. Caravan of stories" Bari Karimovich. - An unimaginably long time for me. My main misfortune is that no matter how much I love a woman, I lose interest in her after a few months. And I still have the warmest and most tender feelings for Lida. You ask why we didn’t get married? This topic has been discussed several times. And even the “Na-Nai”, who adored Lida, hinted: what else do you need, Bari?! But it didn’t work out. The reason for this was my obsession with work. Reproaches began that we rarely see each other, that I pay little attention. However, there was no gap as such...”

Photo: http://news.rambler.ru/20257244/

Awards for Lidia Fedoseeva-Shukshina

  • Order of Merit for the Fatherland, IV degree (09/15/1998).
  • Medal "For Services to Society" (2009).
  • Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1976).
  • People's Artist of the RSFSR (1984).
  • Order of Arts (Poland) - for his role in the film “The Ballad of Januszik” (1988).
  • In 1989 in Warsaw she was awarded the Golden Screen Award for creative work on television, received this award for her performance of the main female role in the serial television film “The Ballad of Januszka”.

Films with Lidia Fedoseeva-Shukshina

1955 - Two captains - assistant to V. Zhukov

1955 - Maxim Perepelitsa - laboratory assistant

1957 - To the Black Sea - Nastya, combine operator

1959 - Katya-Katyusha

1959 - Peers - Tanya

1961 - Save Our Souls

1961 - People of my valley

1964 - What is it like, the sea? - Nastya

1969 - Strange people - Lidia Nikolaevna

1971 - Dauria - matchmaker

1972 - Stove-benches - Nyura

1973 - Red viburnum - Lyuba Baikalova

1974 - Birds over the city

1974 - If you want to be happy

1975 - They fought for their homeland - Glasha

1976 - Our Debts - Katerina

1976 - Tryn-grass - Lydia

1976 - 12 chairs - Madame Gritsatsueva

1976 - Gypsy happiness - Anyuta

1976 - Non-transferable key - Emma Pavlovna, chemistry teacher

1977 - Walking through torment - Matryona

1977 - Our Debts - Katerina

1977 - Call me into the bright distance - Pear

1978 - Trouble - Zinaida, Kuligin’s wife

1979 - The wife left - Tatyana

1979 - Little tragedies - an elderly lady

1980 - You never dreamed of... - Vera, Roman’s mother

1980 - Peter's youth - matchmaker

1980 - From the life of vacationers - Oksana

1980 - Useless - Marina

1981 - Driver for one flight - Sofya Makarovna Tishanova

1981 - Until the last drop of blood

1981 - Other games and fun - Khudyakova

1981 - Which would you choose? - Marina's mother

1982 - Idealist - Nadezhda

1982 - You can’t forbid living beautifully

1982 - The Limit of Desires - Zoya Sergeevna

1983 - Burn, burn clearly... - Ustinovna

1983 - Demidovs - Anna Ioannovna

1983 - Quarantine - circus cashier

1983 - Bribe - Olovyannikova

1983 - Talisman - Nina Georgievna

1984 - Bouquet of mimosa and other flowers - Ekaterina Terentyevna Bubnova

1984 - Dead Souls - a lady, just nice

1986 - Along the main street with an orchestra - Lida Muravina

1987 - And live tomorrow - Martynova

1987 - Kreutzer Sonata - Lisa's mother

1987 - The queen sat on the golden porch

1988 - Branch - Vera Platonovna Saburova

1988 - Ballad of Januszik Ballada o Januszku (Poland) - mother

1988 - Treasure - Ksenia Nikolaevna

1988 - Let me die, Lord - Lydia Nikolaevea

1988 - The investigation is conducted by the Experts. Without a knife and brass knuckles - Sofya Rashidovna Narzoeva

1989 - Don't Leave - Queen Flora

1989 - Love with privileges (another title - “City Details”)

1990 - Beast - dubbing

1990 - Eternal Husband - Zakhlebinina

1990 - Hat - Zinaida Ivanovna Kukushkina

1991 - Faithful Ruslan - Styura

1991 - Vivat, midshipmen! - Countess Chernysheva

1992 - One in a Million - Maria Fedorovna

1992 - Manuscript

1993 - Personal life of the Queen - Lucy, wife of the Russian Ambassador

1993 - Ferry "Anna Karenina"

1994 - Countess Sheremeteva - Catherine II

1994 - St. Petersburg secrets - General Amalia von Spilts

1996 - Scientific section of pilots - Anna Vilhelmovna

1997 - Schizophrenia

1998 - Prince Yuri Dolgoruky - Euphrosyne, Kuchka’s sister

1998 - The denouement of the St. Petersburg mysteries - Amalia von Spilts

2001 - Ideal couple - Maria Pankratovna

2002 - Marriage of convenience - Aunt Marina

2002 - Russians in the City of Angels

2002 - Evenings on a farm near Dikanka - Catherine II

2004 - Thieves and prostitutes. Prize - flight into space - Tina Modotti in old age

2004 - Dasha Vasilyeva 2 - Violetta Pavlovskaya

2004 - Parallel to love - grandmother

2005 - Women's intuition - Eleanor

2005 - Matchmaking (film)

2006 - Dad of all trades - mother-in-law

2006 - Park of the Soviet period - Elizaveta Petrovna Ivanova

2008 - Start over. Marta - Marya Ivanovna

2008 - Candle from the Holy Sepulcher

2009 - Terrorist Ivanova - Alevtina Petrovna Blinova, judge

2009 - Mother’s Heart - Ekaterina Petrovna

2010 - Marry a millionaire - Nina Petrovna

2010 - - Olga's mother

2013 - Sex, coffee, cigarettes

2014 - Martha's Line - Marta Galanchik

The brilliant Russian actress Lidiya Fedoseeva-Shukshina received the Medal and Order for services to society and the Fatherland. Her talent was appreciated not only at home, but also abroad.

Lidia Fedoseeva-Shukshina had many offers from different directors. Even in retirement, she continues to act in films.

Leningrad became the hometown of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina. She was born on September 25, 1938 and together with her parents survived the difficult siege of Leningrad.

Nothing more is known about Lida's father and mother. When the war ended, the girl went to school. She was able to receive knowledge from 1946-1956 in the famous Petrishula.

Love for acting

When Lida was in elementary school, she tried to play in the Leningrad drama club “House of Cinema” as often as possible. Here she had the joy of performing on stage, playing children's roles. During one such performance, young Lydia was appreciated by director Anatoly Granik. He liked the girl’s skill and decided to show her in his movie. Then work was underway on the film “Maxim Perepelitsa”, where Lida was supposed to play a laboratory assistant. Later she had another cameo role in the film “Two Captains”. These two small roles clearly showed Fedoseeva where she needs to direct her life path- to the world of cinema.

Therefore, in 1957, Lydia entered VGIK, where the talented one became her mentor. Literally 2 years later, the fruits of their training could be seen in Fedoseeva’s performance when she starred in the film “Peers.” After the release of this picture, many appreciated the new actress.

Changes

Lydia was invited to participate in the filming of the film “What is it like, the sea?” Working for film set, Fedoseeva met a handsome guy. The young people liked each other, and after a short time they got married. Now they were waiting not only living together, but also collaboration. The couple can be seen together in the films “Stoves and Benches”, “Strange People” and others.

Further films in Shukshina’s creative biography were “Kalina Krasnaya”, “Birds over the City”, “They Fought for the Motherland”, “Dauria” and others. In almost all the films, Lydia appeared in the role of an ordinary peasant woman. Her appearance was very suitable, since the actress had a short stature and a figure corresponding to a Russian woman. In addition, Fedoseeva had a chic, long brown braid, which suited the image of a village woman.

Since 1974, the actress began introducing herself as Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina. The reason for this action was the sudden death of her husband. Despite the heavy loss, the woman continued to act in films. The cinema archive contains vivid films with the participation of Shukshina. These are “Vivat, Midshipmen!”, “Our Sins”, “12 Chairs”, Walking Through Torment” and others.

Since 1984, Lydia has been a People's Actress of the RSFSR. If at the beginning of her career she played only village women, then later Shukshina appeared as an empress, a teacher, a lady from high society and other leading figures. At the same time, Lydia very accurately reflected the qualities and character traits of such women.

Since the 2000s, Shukshina began to appear less and less in films. The reason for this is her work in the foundation in memory of her husband Vasily. Later, she transferred leadership of the foundation to her granddaughter Anna. Another public work was the presidential participation in the festival “Vivat, Cinema of Russia!”

Despite her active life, the actress also managed to star in several films. In 2014, Lydia played Martha in the film “The Martha Line.” According to the plot, mother and daughter decided to find Martha, to whom one soldier left a farewell letter on the wall. Shukshina played one of the Marthas who were found by the women. Even in 2018, Lydia appeared on the screens. She played in the film “McMafia” and was the mother of Vadim Kalyagin.

Personal life

Vasily Shukshin was not the first man of the young actress. She met her first husband, Vyacheslav Voronin, at the institute. Their romantic relationship quickly led to the registry office. A short time later, the couple had a daughter, Nastya. Their personal life can hardly be called happy. Lydia was either in Moscow or Leningrad, and Slavik generally worked in Kyiv. Meanwhile, their daughter together was with her parents. Therefore, Fedoseeva’s marriage soon broke up.


Photo: Lidiya Fedoseeva-Shukshina with her daughters

When Lydia was left alone, she met Vasily Shukshin. The couple lived together for 10 happy years and would have been able to live longer if not for Vasily’s death. During this time, the couple had Olga and Maria. At first, both daughters aspired to the same things as their parents. But this way of life became unpleasant for Ole, and she devoted herself to religion. The woman spent 15 years in a monastery, and then went to Africa and regularly attends church there. The daughter from her first marriage, Anastasia, connected her life with a foreigner and for a long time lived with him in Angola, where he worked as head of counterintelligence. When her father V. Voronin died, she and her children returned to Kyiv.

For Lydia, her second husband remained forever in her heart. Later, she tried to fall in love again and was married three times, but neither Mikhail Agranovich nor even Marek Mezheevsky could make Shukshina happy. Therefore, now the woman lives alone and does not want to have anyone nearby.


Photo: Lidiya Fedoseeva-Shukshina with her husband and daughters

The woman enjoys communicating with her children and grandchildren. And in 2014 she already became a great-grandmother and has a great-grandson, Vyacheslav. Lydia has a difficult relationship only with Olga, since the women have not resolved the real estate situation. Due to her nerves, Fedoseeva-Shukshina experiences significant heart problems and suffers from diabetes mellitus.

For Lydia, Vasily’s death still remains a mystery. She is sure that he was killed. On this day, Shukshin was relaxing with friends on the ship, where the tragedy happened. After his death, it was determined that the man had heart failure, which once again indicated that his death was unnatural. At the same time, there were rumors that the actor died from drunkenness, but the widowed wife rejects this idea. Others claimed that he died from a “heart attack” gas that was allegedly released into the actor’s cabin. Then Shukshin’s friend was on the ship, who should have known the cause of death. But the man refused to talk about this terrible day until his death and took his secret with him to the grave.

Selected filmography

  • 1955 - Two captains
  • 1976 - 12 chairs
  • 1977 - Walking through torment
  • 1980 - You never dreamed of...
  • 1991 - Faithful Ruslan
  • 2002 - Evenings on a farm near Dikanka
  • 2005 - Women's intuition
  • 2009 - Terrorist Ivanova
  • 2018 - McMafia

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Anastasia will remember that gloomy November day in 1997 for the rest of her life. It became fatal for her, but for the Bryansk customs officers, on the contrary, “lucky.” During the inspection of passengers on the Kyiv-Moscow train at Suzemka station, 700 grams of heroin were found in a thermos belonging to a pretty middle-aged woman - an unprecedented catch here. The owner of the ill-fated thermos turned out to be a Ukrainian citizen with the very exotic surname Voronina-Francisco.

Then this “catch” of Bryansk customs officers was included in all criminal reports, and then received a wide public response. The fact is that Anastasia Voronina-Francisco turned out to be the daughter of the famous Ukrainian actor Vyacheslav Voronin and Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina, who does not need a special introduction. The Russian man in the street, accustomed to public scandals, wondered what the famous mother would do to save her unlucky daughter. Lidia Nikolaevna did not utter a word, and Nastya, according to the court verdict, was sent to colony N5 of Vyshny Volochok for 3.5 years. Two years ago I visited her. Then she warmly remembered her father, her Angolan husband Nelson and her dark-skinned daughter Laura, with whom, after the end of her term, she was going to go to her husband’s homeland, where she had previously lived with him for several years, but because of the war she left the country she loved. She also complained about her health (see Trud-7, October 9, 1998).
...Recently I decided to inquire about Nastya, called the head of the “five” Galina Vladimirovna Ivanova, and she said that Voronina-Francisco had been released under an amnesty, and gave me her Kiev address. IN telephone conversation Nastya, embarrassed, it seemed to me, said that she was ready to give me an interview for 150 hryvnia. "You understand what my financial situation is..."
At the appointed time, my Kiev correspondent Stanislav Prokopchuk and I were at the desired house on Zhukova Street. We were met by a respectable, stately man of about sixty with a Rottweiler on a leash.
“You are journalists from Trud,” he said affirmatively, looking at the bouquet in my hands. “Nastya is waiting for you,” and introduced himself: I am her father, Vyacheslav Anatolyevich Voronin.
...For two years she has hardly changed in appearance. Maybe she’s lost a little weight and her hair color is different, but the resemblance to her mother is still striking. They decided to talk in the kitchen.
- Tea coffee? - Nastya suggested and put a pack of cigarettes on the table. - You can smoke.
- Thank you, I quit.
- But I just can’t. My lungs are bad, but everything is tarry. We should get examined.
- Didn’t they check you in the colony?
- I took many tests there, but after my release they didn’t give them to me. Not allowed...
- Was your early release from prison unexpected for you?
- Usually, according to my article, they sit from bell to bell. Therefore, I was sure that they would not let me go. So get freedom for 10 months and 6 days ahead of schedule was an unexpected joy for me.
- Nastya, I understand that it’s probably unpleasant for you to remember the time spent behind bars...
- Let's agree: you ask about anything, and I decide which question I can answer and which not.
- Fine. Can you tell us about your most negative impressions of life in the colony?
- I'll try. Although, what does “the most negative” mean? I simply didn’t have any others. What I saw there, what I encountered, is difficult for those living in the wild to understand and imagine. The fifth colony contains mainly “multiple convictions,” that is, women with more than one criminal record. Every prisoner there is on his own. It would seem that grief should unite people, evoke in them sympathy, compassion for the fate of their own kind. This is not in the zone. No one is interested in your problems. Formally, you are part of the squad, but essentially you are alone. In the colony, denunciation flourishes. Moreover, many do not need to be persuaded: they “knock” voluntarily, they themselves offer their services to the administration. For this they are rewarded with small handouts. I, being naive, believed that such “cooperation” should be secret, somehow veiled. I was taught from childhood: the first whip for an informer. The informers try to find a hidden meaning in every word and race to the authorities. But, apparently, he is also fed up with such activity from “well-wishers.” There were cases when colony leaders at detachment meetings, without naming names, curbed informant activity...
- How do you explain such a scale of denunciation in the women’s colony?
- First of all, the desire to win over the authorities, to get some kind of bread or quiet position, the desire to get more comfortable in the zone. Often, prisoners who were nothing at large become foremen and brigadiers.
- It seemed to me that people with authority among the convicted people were appointed to warm positions.
- We agreed: I express purely personal opinions and observations. So, in our colony, among the activists there were alcoholics and simply downtrodden, narrow-minded women. Most likely, in freedom they were constantly humiliated, but in the zone they find their “I” and take it out on those who cannot stand up for themselves in these conditions.
It is especially hard for the weak and sick here. Such people, as a rule, do not meet production standards. This means that they have no right to buy more than 5 packs of cigarettes and 250 grams of tea per month from a kiosk. Those who refuse to work are sent to a punishment cell. If you continue to adhere to “denial”, that is, contradict your superiors, you will go to “re-education” in a PKT (cell-type room - V.L.) or to strict conditions of detention.
The junior staff - controllers - are especially zealous in instilling discipline and implementing all kinds of rules. Sometimes, if something goes wrong, they can hit you with a rubber truncheon... But among the colony employees there are also decent, sensitive women. The head of our detachment was someone like that, God bless her... In general, I want to write a book about the order in the zone, and there I will tell you in detail about the life of prisoners.
- They wrote you letters, sent you parcels, maybe someone came for a date?
- No one came to the date. And I myself didn’t want to see anyone. I often thought about my daughter Laura and my father, but meeting them in the colony was an unbearable torment for both me and them... But letters and parcels came regularly after your publication about me in Trud. In prison, people become hard-hearted. But you can’t imagine how surprised I was, no, amazed, when I received the first letters from my kindergarten teachers, from my classmates from Zherdevka (a village in the Tambov region, where Nastya lived with her paternal grandmother and studied in primary school. - V. L.), whom I had not seen for more than twenty years. They sent both parcels and money transfers. Low bow to you, my dears. I will be grateful to you for the rest of my life. Complete strangers also wrote. Thanks to everyone who supported me in trouble. It is a pity that the letters were not preserved. They cannot be taken into the wild, so I destroyed them. But I still have the addresses, and as soon as I recover from the zone, I will definitely write to everyone.
- After your release, did you immediately go home to Kyiv?
- On July 14, I was released, having received 199 rubles as settlement. I didn’t have enough for a ticket to Kyiv, and I went to St. Petersburg to see Olga (L. Fedoseeva’s daughter from V. Shukshin - V.L.), with whom we corresponded. I didn’t find her, I went to a friend with whom I was sitting in Vyshny Volochyok, and borrowed money from her. I was home on July 20th. I was in a hurry for Laura’s birthday (she turned 14 on July 25 - V.L.), but at that time she was vacationing in the Carpathians...
I was returning home via Moscow. I admit, I was tempted to go see my mother. I didn’t know her phone number, but I had her address. At the last moment I got scared: suddenly the door wouldn’t open. Or will he meet me and say: you are soon 40 years old, good-for-nothing, what do you want from me? And I don’t know how to answer. I understand perfectly well that my mother gave up on me a long time ago.
- How were you greeted at home?
- Fine. Both my father and Laura understand how difficult it is for me now. Laura studies at boarding school N14, attended competitions in Artek, and became the champion of Ukraine in all-around among schoolchildren. We get along well.
- How are you going to live further?
- This question haunts me. I can’t sit on my father’s neck. He has his own family. I have to work, but I don’t know where to go. In the colony I sewed quilted jackets, but here I’ll probably have to earn my living by trading at the market. The stall seller is paid 10 hryvnia per day. A pittance, of course, but what to do?
- Two years ago you said that after your release you would go to Angola with Laura. Are you hoping to find your husband Nelson there?
- I would like to go there, but not to my husband. Everything ended with him. I would like to return to Angola and join the Portuguese company where I once worked.
- Sorry, Nastya, but it seems to me that you are disconnected from the realities of life. You’ve forgotten your language, you have no money, no one is waiting for you there...
- I’m afraid of being left without a job, but in Angola, I’m sure I’ll find one... Or maybe you’re right, I don’t know. But it’s scary to live without a prospect, so in moments of despair, obsessive thoughts and fantasies appear... I knew before foreign languages, graduated from state courses. I wish I could update that knowledge... But this cannot be done for free. A vicious circle: no work - no money.
- Could old friends and relatives help you?
- I do not have something like this. As for the old connections that brought me to jail, I broke them decisively and irrevocably. There are no rich relatives either. Except for the mother. I have no complaints about her. Everything has passed and boiled over. But she has a granddaughter, and if my mother financially helps me raise Laura, I will be very grateful to her...
While we were talking in the kitchen, Vyacheslav Anatolyevich went to pick up his granddaughter at the boarding school. Dark-skinned, slender Laura speaks Russian well, slightly embarrassed. Nobody hurts her at the boarding school. Moreover, she was elected "Miss School". I would go to Angola, but not for good. Dream? Become a champion at the next Olympics.
Vyacheslav Voronin tries to keep himself in shape. And he succeeds, since he is invited to act in films. Currently playing the role of a deputy with ties to the mafia in the TV series Werewolf. “It’s impossible to live on a pension of 79 hryvnia,” says the artist. He fondly remembers his communication with Vasily Shukshin, with whom he studied at the institute. He hasn’t held a grudge against Lydia Nikolaevna for a long time. “If she rang the doorbell now,” Voronin argues, “I would sincerely invite her: come in, you are welcome. Without kisses, but we would meet and talk intelligently”...
Saying goodbye, I wished Vyacheslav Anatolyevich health and new roles. Laura wants to study well and become an Olympic champion. And Anastasia - to be loved by her neighbors and to find herself in a new life.

Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina was married to actor Vyacheslav Voronin for four years. They broke up when the woman met director Vasily Shukshin. Since then, the relationship between the mother and her child from her first marriage has deteriorated. The girl remained to live with her father. It was only in the early 90s, when Anastasia was barely 20 years old, that they met for the first time. It was still not possible to maintain a warm relationship.

On the air of the “You Won’t Believe” program, Anastasia admits that she always tried to establish communication with her mother. When they met, there would be an awkward pause during their conversation. According to the artist’s eldest heiress, her parent did not even congratulate her on the birth of her daughter Laurinda. Now the 30-year-old granddaughter of the star grandmother says that she crossed paths with Lydia Shukshina on the set, where they managed to exchange only a couple of short phrases.

“No matter what, I remain her daughter, I am her daughter. You know, when I lost my dad, I really wanted to meet her, I really wanted to call her. I understand that these minutes will never return,” Anastasia explained the situation.

The eldest heiress Fedoseeva-Shukshina warns that she under no circumstances lays claim to her mother’s apartment, the total cost of which is 30 million rubles. She assures her stepsisters that she has no intention of taking property from anyone. She has her own apartment, which at one time she inherited from her father, Vyacheslav Voronin. It is worth noting that Anastasia’s daughter Laura lives separately from her mother. She is raising her son Martin, who has been early childhood dreams of becoming an actor.

It’s hard for Anastasia to come to terms with the idea that after so many years she hasn’t been able to have a normal conversation with her parent. It seems stupid to her that circumstances turned out this way. Laura tries to support her mother and believes that they will not impose themselves on anyone.

“I still don’t understand her actions. Okay, when it was when I was young, but when so many years have passed. It was already possible to establish communication. I have a position that you won’t be nice by force. Well, if a person doesn’t want to communicate, then we won’t,” said the granddaughter of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina.

Anastasia recalls that her father compared her to Shukshina from childhood. In his opinion, the daughter of the famous artist exactly resembled her parent. According to those around the family, the two relatives really have a lot in common in appearance and character. Anastasia lived 56 years of her life with the thought that one day she would be able to make up for the lack of maternal love that she had lacked for many years.

The woman is sure that if Shushkina makes herself known, she will leave everything she has in Kyiv and go to her mother. “If she needs help, but not material, because I can’t give anything, physical, moral, then please. I would probably run as fast as I could. If it comes to caring for her, then yes, I will do everything, but if it concerns money, then I am powerless here. I want her to understand that she has a daughter,” Anastasia said frankly.

TO Strangely enough, in the voice of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina’s first husband, Vyacheslav Voronin, no matter how hard I tried, I did not hear the slightest regret about the unsuccessful marriage “due to youth,” only complete indifference. He did not curse himself for the fact that once, in 1959, he took Lydia as his wife, and remembering the story of Shukshin with Fedoseeva (Voronin was not yet divorced from her), he was not angry. And he wasn’t even offended... She became nothing to him a long time ago. And they don’t take offense at anything. Everything he regretted was connected with Nastya.

Private life

Anastasia

Lidiya FEDOSEEVA-SHUKSHINA hardly knows that her daughter,
Anastasia VORONINA-FRANCISKU, has been in the Bryansk pre-trial detention center for two months

A Nastasia was detained in December at the Suzemka station, Bryansk region, bordering Ukraine, during an inspection of the Chisinau-Moscow fast train. Russian border guards, who discovered a cargo of drugs from a citizen of the once fraternal and now sovereign Ukraine, did not hesitate to take the woman to a pre-trial detention center. It was only during the investigation that it began that it became clear which bird was caught in the net.

Fame came to the third (more precisely, the first, eldest) daughter of Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina quite recently, when meticulous journalists found out that Anastasia, who lives in Kyiv, was married to an Angolan citizen, from whom she has a young daughter of the same skin color. Several newspapers immediately rushed to remind the movie star that she was the grandmother of a cute black child. Interviews with Anastasia were also circulated, in which she, to put it mildly, did not speak very flatteringly about her mother, sisters and Vasily Shukshin. But it didn’t turn out to be a super scandal.

And now 37-year-old Anastasia reminded herself again. Until the end of the investigation, FSB officers refuse to comment on the Voronina-Francisco case. The heads of the pre-trial detention center also did not allow me to meet with Anastasia. We only managed to find out that the daughter of a movie star does not enjoy any privileges: a common cell, where seven more people live besides her, a common regime, and regular food. It’s that doctors have to pay more attention to Anastasia than others, but this is understandable - now the person under investigation is undergoing treatment for a venereal disease. According to the head of the pre-trial detention center, only journalists seem to be interested in the fate of Voronina-Francisco. Neither relatives nor friends even tried to visit her.

Mikhail SOLOVYANOV

DAUGHTER DIVIDED IN COURT THIRTEEN TIMES

AND Anastasia lived with her grandmother, my mother. I was just on the set when she (Voronin ex-wife mostly calls her by her pronoun, and not Lida or by her last name) asked: can I take my daughter to Sudak for the duration of filming? Well, okay, I say, take it... After a while I come to Sudak to visit Nastya. And while I was walking along the embankment to their hut, they already told me everything. Filmmakers, like journalists, know everything about their own... They say to me: “Why did you come? She’s with Vaska!”

I go into the house. Vasya woke up. “Hello, Slava, we need to talk, let’s go have a drink,” Shukshin said to me. By the way, that year he and his wife, also Lida, had a roughly similar story - a family collapse, in short... I didn’t go out for a drink: why? Baba, should I drink it? And talk... About what?

“We,” said Shukshin, “got along with Lida.” I knew that it was not with his Lida, but with mine, but there was no news in this. Of course, Fedoseeva assured Shukshin that with ex-husband, that is, she broke up with me, although at that moment this was not officially the case... In general, I felt sorry for Vasya, because she simply used the chance to arrange her personal life in Moscow... Then, when Shukshin Finally he understood and began, as she herself admitted, “to chase her around the house with a stake.”

Occasionally, Nastya was briefly taken by her second grandmother, her mother’s mother, to Leningrad. But calls soon began from there: it was difficult to support the child, there was not enough money. Everything is correct. Old men...

Time has passed. He arrives: he needs to officially get a divorce. Can I get my last name back? Yes, what problems! Be not Voronina, but Fedoseeva - please. Years pass... Nastenka has already started school, suddenly she files a lawsuit to get her daughter back. The first court awarded Anastasia to her grandmother... The second court, a higher instance, awarded it to her. The third court, an even higher instance, is for the grandmother. The fourth court - higher than the previous one - to Fedoseeva, the fifth - to the grandmother, the sixth - to the mother... Nastya grew up and declared: “I don’t want to live with anyone but my grandmother!” In general, the last, thirteenth court, by decision of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, left Nastya to my grandmother, my mother. And everyone calmed down. And when my daughter was in ninth grade, my grandmother died. Then Nastya moved to Kyiv with us.”

In Kyiv, Nastya studied with straight A's. The younger brother Slava (they have a fifteen-year age difference) was terribly proud of his stepsister: “She was an authority both in the yard and at school!”

True, in the tenth grade, dad recalls, Anastasia skipped classes for more than a month (“I found cigarettes in the pocket of her sheepskin coat!”), and then showed up home with a completely lisping girl: “I’m quitting school, and we’ll go to a store school!”

Both father and stepmother, whom Anastasia loved and called not mother, but Sveta, were able to insist on their own. Nastya completed her studies, graduated from school very well and suddenly decided to enter VGIK. She didn’t resort to anyone’s help (neither her father nor her own mother)... And although the third round at VGIK was “covered” for applicant Voronina, she was more upset about another matter. In Moscow, she wanted to visit Lydia Fedoseeva. With a box of chocolates. But they didn’t open the door for the girl... She got into the car, freaked out, threw candy into the back seat and burst into tears.

“I don’t know, maybe Nastya met with her mother later... They said that she seemed to have given her silver earrings for the wedding... Why did Nastya marry a black man? Who knows... When Nelson came to our house, he called Svetlana "tessya", that is, "mother-in-law", and me - "daddy", this is "daddy".

One day Svetlana told him: “Nelson, in this house there will always be a hundred grams and a plate of borscht for you, but first, the registry office.” He replied: “Got it!” And they got married... The daughter and Nelson flew to Africa. And when the war began in Luanda, Nastya and Laura rushed to Moscow on literally the last Soviet plane. It was November, snow, and they were in shorts and flip-flops... Nelson sent a telegram: meet them, they say!

We were rushing about because neither the date nor the flight was indicated... In general, Nastya bought some kind of coat for herself at Sheremetyevo, and a fur coat for her daughter so as not to freeze... They arrived in Kyiv. And Nelson was in captivity for a year and a half, then he was released... Now he works at the Luanda airport. He sends letters, wants them to come there... Well, I don’t know.”

Laura, who gained all-Russian fame thanks to journalists, is the daughter of Anastasia Voronina, studying at the Kiev Lyceum.

“She has something wrong with her stomach, we need to check, otherwise she’s not eating this, and she’s not eating that! — Kyiv grandmother Svetlana laments. - In general, she is so smart! And she dances gorgeously, and sings, and plays.”

“Can you imagine? Laura plays the bandura. This is something! A little black girl plays the bandura,” admires the grandfather, Voronin Sr. And the younger one assures that his niece, who knows “a bunch of languages,” “speaks with a Ukrainian accent.”

This is understandable. If I was in Moscow, it was only while passing through.

Lydia DENISENKO
  • Vyacheslav Voronin with his daughter and granddaughter.
  • In the entire history of the Bryansk pre-trial detention center, the only celebrity among its inhabitants was Valery Chkalov, who crashed his fighter somewhere nearby while trying to fly under a power line. For several days the legendary pilot awaited his fate in cell No. 12, from where he was released without any trial or punishment on Stalin’s personal orders.

* * *

Anastasia about Shukshin:

"N and a man (as it turned out later, Shukshin) was sleeping in a dead sleep. Apparently, he had taken a good dose of alcohol, because, having opened his eyes, he began throwing chervonets out of his trouser pockets, scattering them in a fan across the floor. I had never seen money thrown around like that before, and with the curiosity inherent in any child, I watched this shamanism from around the corner. And Shukshin, receiving some inexplicable satisfaction from the wild dance, stepped barefoot on the bills, rejoicing that they stuck to the soles of his feet. Finally, noticing me, he winced in disgust..."


Anastasia about sisters:

"M Asha always tried to emphasize that she was not interested in her mother’s past, and when I called, she answered the phone with disappointment: “Ah-ah, is that you? Wait, I’ll call my mother now.” Olga, on the contrary, is very open and sympathetic. In my opinion, this is the only person in that family who tried to show interest in my fate.”

From an interview with the newspaper Pravda Ukrainy.


Anastasia about her mother:

"WITH To say “mama” is hard to come by, and Lidiya Nikolaevna sounds pretentious and official. My mother and I are united only by kinship of the flesh, but not of the spirit.”

From an interview with the newspaper “Pravda Ukrainy”

Photos by N. Kochnev, L. Kudryavtseva, N. Semenova, M. Solovyanov and from the archive of the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper



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