Varvara Obukhova was a notable Russian actress of Maly Theatre in
Moscow, and a member of the Obukhov family of musicians and actors.
She was born Varvara Aleksandrovna Obukhova on August 12, 1901, in the
ancestral estate of her parents in Russia. Her great-grandfather was
the Russian poet Aleksandr Boratynsky. Her grand-uncle, Sergei Obukhov,
was director of Imperial Theatres in Moscow. Young Varvara Obukhova was
brought up in a highly intellectual environment of her parents and
their circle. She was trilingual, in addition to her native Russia, she
was fluent in French and German, having a Swiss lady Blan as a private
tutor. Varvara Obukhova studied music under the guidance of her aunt,
who was a renown singer of Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. She also took
advise from her grand-uncle, Sergei Obukhov, was a professional opera
singer trained in Italy. From 1919 - 1922 she studied acting under
Yevdokiya Turchaninova at
Theatrical College known as Maly Theatre Drama School (Shchepkin
School), graduating in 1922 as an actress.
From 1922 - 1988 Varvara Obukhova was a permanent member of the troupe
at Maly Drama Theatre in Moscow. There her stage partners were such
actors as
Vera Pashennaya, Olga
Sadovskaya,
Nikolai Annenkov, A.
Yablochkina,
Varvara Massalitinova,
Varvara Ryzhova,
Yelena Gogoleva,
Yevdokiya Turchaninova,
Yelena Shatrova,
Elina Bystritskaya,
Rufina Nifontova,
Tatyana Eremeeva, Aleksandr Yuzhin,
Mikhail Tsaryov, Aleksandr Ostuzhev,
Vladimir Davydov,
Sergei Aidarov,
Stepan Kuznetsov,
Prov Sadovsky, Boris Ravenskikh,
Boris Babochkin,
Mikhail Zharov,
Igor Ilyinsky,
Pavel Olenev,
Mikhail Sadovsky,
Konstantin Zubov,
Viktor Khokhryakov,
Vsevolod Aksyonov,
Nikolai Ryzhov,
Evgeniy Vesnik,
Viktor Korshunov,
Evgeniy Samoylov, and many other
notable Russian actors.
She made her film debut in
The Mistress (1953), a film
adaptation of
Konstantin Zubov's stage
production of the eponymous play by
Maxim Gorky at Maly Theatre. Obukhova's
other stage performances were also captured on film, such as her stage
character in the play 'Gore ot uma' (aka.. Woe from Wit) by
Aleksandr Griboyedov. The stage
play 'Woe From Wit' was captured on film as
Gore ot uma (1952) by director
Sergei Alekseyev. During the
1970s Obukhiva was regarded for her portrayals of grandmothers as
typical Russian "Babushka" in such films as
Balamut (1979),
_I snova Aniskin (1978 TV movie)_,
and in the popular Russian TV series
Khozhdenie po mukam (1977)
based on the book by
Mikhail A. Bulgakov.
Varvara Obukhova was designated People's Actor of Russia (1961), and
also received numerous decorations from the Soviet State. She died on
February 16, 1988, in Moscow, and was laid to rest in Vagankovskoe
Cemetery in Moscow, Russia.