Angelina Stepanova was a notable actress of Moscow Art Theatre known as
Anna Sherer in
War and Peace (1965) by
director
Sergey Bondarchuk.
She was born Angelina Iosifovna Stepanova on November 23, 1905, in
Nikolaevsk-na Amure, Russian Empire (now Nikolaevsk-na Amure, Russia).
Her father, Iosif Stepanov, was an insurance agent, her mother, Maria
Vladimirovna, was a dentist. From 1921 - 1924 Angelina Stepanova
studied acting under Evgeni Vakhtangov at 3rd Studio of Moscow Art
Theatre, making her stage debut in the legendary Vakhtangov's staging
of Carlo Gozzi's comedy 'Princess Turandot'. In 1924, Stepanova was
invited to perform in A.K. Tolstoy's play 'Tsar Fedor Ioannovich'
opposite
Konstantin Stanislavski.
From 1924 to 1994 Angelina Stepanova was a permanent member of the
troupe at Moscow Art Theatre (MKhAT). There her stage partners included
such renown Russian actors as
Ivan Moskvin,
Nikolay Khmelyov,
Nikolai Sosnin,
Alla Tarasova,
Anatoli Ktorov,
Olga Androvskaya,
Angelina Stepanova,
Anastasiya Georgievskaya,
Mikhail Yanshin,
Aleksey Gribov,
Boris Livanov,
Mikhail Kedrov,
Viktor Stanitsyn,
Vasili Toporkov,
Mark Prudkin,
Mikhail Bolduman, and the next
generation of MKhAT actors -
Oleg Efremov,
Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy,
Oleg Tabakov,
Kira Golovko,
Nina Gulyaeva,
Tatyana Lavrova,
Iya Savvina,
Olga Barnet,
Irina Miroshnichenko,
Anastasiya Voznesenskaya,
Andrey Myagkov,
Vladimir Kashpur,
Vladlen Davydov,
Viktor Sergachyov,
Vyacheslav Nevinnyy,
Stanislav Lyubshin,
Sergey Sazontev,
Avangard Leontev,
Igor Vasilev, and others.
Stepanova was a member of the board at Moscow Art Theatre (MKhAT). Her
most acclaimed stage performances at Moscow Art Theatre were as Irina
in 'The Three Sisters' (1930) directed by
Konstantin Stanislavski, and as
Betsy in Tolstoy's 'Anna Karenina' (1937), for which Stepanova won
critical acclaim on a tour in Paris. She was equally compelling playing
epic leads and character roles. During the 50s, 60s and 70s, her most
memorable appearances were in classic plays by
Anton Chekhov, such as Arkadina in
'Chayka' (aka.. 'The Seagull), as Avdotya in 'Ivanov', as Irina in 'Tri
sestry' (aka.. The Three Sisters), and as Ranevskaya in 'Vishnevy sad'
(aka.. The Cherry Orchard), the role she inherited from
Olga Knipper-Chekhova. During the
80s, Stepanova joined
Oleg Efremov after
the split of the Moscow Art Theatre in two companies. In 1998 she made
her last public appearance at the Centennial Anniversary of the Moscow
Art Theatre.
During the Stalin's era, Stepanova was rarely cast in Soviet movies,
according to "Stalin's spell" upon actors of the Moscow Art Theatre.
She made her film debut in 1946 when the Soviet State allowed filming
of the Moscow Art Theatre stage productions. At that time Stepanova,
aged 40, appeared as young Anya, Ranevskaya's daughter opposite
Olga Knipper-Chekhova. In 1953 she
appeared opposite
Alla Tarasova in
Anna Karenina (1953), another
record of a stage production by the cast of the Moscow Art Theater.
Stepanova had to wait until the age of 60 to play her best known film
role as Anna Sherer, a noblewoman in
War and Peace (1965) by director
Sergey Bondarchuk. She later
co-starred opposite
Boris Babochkin and
Donatas Banionis in
Begstvo mistera Mak-Kinli (1975),
and also played bit parts in a few more Soviet films.
Stepanova received the Stalin's Prize (1952), and was designated
People's Actress of the USSR (1960). She was awarded the State Prize of
the USSR (1977), was named Hero of Socialist Labour (1975), and
received numerous decorations from the Soviet and Russian State. She
was married to writer
Aleksandr Fadeyev, whom she
met on her first tour in Paris in 1937, and the couple had two sons,
Shura Fadeev, and Mikhail Fadeev. Angelina Stepanova died of natural
causes on May 18, 2000, in Moscow, and was laid to rest next to her
husband,
Aleksandr Fadeyev, in
Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, Russia.