Tamara Yandieva is a Russian actress and singer. Honored Artist of Chechen-Ingushetia, North Ossetia and Abkhazia. Laureate of the highest public award of the Caucasus "Golden Pegasus" (2008).
Biography
She was born on July 23, 1955 in the city of Karaganda, Kazakh SSR in an ordinary family. Ingush by nationality. He also has Ossetian roots on his father. Soon after her birth, the family returned to Ingushetia and settled in Aramkhi, located in the Darial Gorge. Tamara's parents worked in a sanatorium, her family also lived there.
Since childhood, Tamara dreamed of being an actress and not one concert of amateur performances took place without her participation. At school, she sang in a vocal and instrumental ensemble, read poetry, danced in children's dance ensembles, played in a school puppet theater and studied well.
After school, Tamara was going to enter LGITMiK, but her father was against her passion for the stage. But in the end, he nevertheless changed his mind, and Tamara left to get an education in Leningrad. She was offered to act in films, starting from the first year, but she studied in the class of the People's Artist of the USSR V. V. Merkuryev, an outstanding representative of the Russian academic school of theatrical art, he was against any encroachment by "filmmakers" on his students. In 1978 she graduated from the institute.
After graduation, Tamara left for Grozny, where she worked at the Chechen-Ingush State Drama Theater.
The military conflicts of 1994-1998 forced her to leave Grozny and move to Moscow with her family.
In 1994 she became an employee of the Loam Cultural Center at the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Ingushetia to the President of the Russian Federation. In 1998 she graduated from the Institute for Advanced Studies of Television and Radio Broadcasting Workers (Higher Directing Courses). Works in the cultural center at the representative office of Ingushetia in Moscow.
Career
Tamara Yandieva's film career began immediately after graduation. The Ingush actress began her work in cinema at the North Ossetian studio in 1979. She played the role of the teacher Zara in the drama "Mountain Novel". In the same year she made her debut in the role of Parvin in the film "Babek".
In 1979-1981. played in the Grozny Republican Russian Drama Theater. M. Yu. Lermontova (played Irina in the play "Duck Hunt" by A. Vampilov, directed by M. Soltsaev).
Tamara Yandieva also took part in two International Film Festivals. She worked as an acting teacher at the Chechen-Ingush State University named after I. L. N. Tolstoy. Member of the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR (Russia) since 1985. Member of the Union of Theater Workers of the Russian Federation. In 1985, at the All-Union Festival of Chekhov's Drama, she was awarded a 1st degree diploma for playing the role of Natalya Stepanovna in the vaudeville "The Proposal" from the play "Jubilee".
During her film career, the talented actress starred in 18 films and TV series, of which she played the main role in 16:
- Fiery Roads (1977-1984) - Rabiya
- Mountain Novel (1978) - Zara
- Babek (1979) - Parvin
- I'll Be Back (1980) - Shahnaz
- Year of the Dragon (1981) - Mayimkhan
- If You Love (1982) - Lola
- Bell of the Sacred Forge (1982) - Kamacic
- On the strangeness of love (1983) - Madina
- And one more night of Scheherazade (1984) - Anora, daughter of the merchant Karabay
- Long Echo in the Mountains (1985) - Karima
- Hello, Gulnora Rakhimovna! (1986) - Gulnora Rakhimovna
- Scheherazade's Last Night (1987) - Princess Esmigul
- Scheherazade's New Tales (1987) - Princess Esmigul
- Black Prince Adjuba (1989) - Shahnaz
- Feasts of Belshazzar, or Night with Stalin (1989) - Sariya Lakoba
- Return of Khoja Nasreddin (1989) - Hanifa-Tulip
- Return of the Baghdad Thief (1990)
- Black Prince Adjuba (1991) - Shahnaz
The last time she visited the set was in 1991, where she embodied the image of Shahnaz in the fantastic action movie "The Black Prince of Adjuba".
Creation
Tamara Yandieva also became famous as a pop singer. The desire to sing appeared in her as a child. She sang in the school ensemble "Covesnik" in Leningrad and on the stage of the theater in Grozny, in the performances "Love, Jazz and Devil", "The Imaginary Sick", "Songs of the Vainakhs", etc. She performed a Chechen folk song from the performance "Songs of the Vainakhs" at a concert dedicated to the work of the poet and writer Musa Geshaev on September 29 in Moscow.
In 1993, at the Permanent Representative Office of the Republic of Ingushetia under the President of the Russian Federation in Moscow, Tamara with Ruslan Naurbiev, Ibragim Vekov and Timur Dzeitov created the LOAM cultural center and a group of the same name. Since then, they have given a huge number of concerts in Moscow, Ingushetia, in various cities of Russia and abroad.
In 2004 Tamara Yandieva released her solo album Sakhiat. The song that gave the title to the album is dedicated to her beloved city of Grozny.
In 2007, the album "Malha Illy" was released.
In 2008, "for her great personal contribution to the preservation of folk musical culture, the creation of vivid artistic images in film and television," the artist was awarded the highest public award of the Caucasus "Golden Pegasus".
In 2010, Tamara Yandieva received the title of Honored Artist of the Russian Federation.
In 2011, Tamara Yandieva released the album Lir Doaga Malch.
On September 27, 2011, Tamara Yandieva was presented with the Crystal Gramophone.
Personal life
Tamara Yandieva is married. There is a son, Sols. Tamara got married while filming The Black Prince. After the wedding, Tamara's husband forbade her to continue filming.