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  1. Valentina Vasilyevna Serova (Russian: Валенти́на Васи́льевна Серо́ва; 23 December 1917 – 12 December 1975) was a Soviet film and theatre actress born in Ukraine. Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1946). Winner of the Stalin Prize of the second degree (1947).

    • 12 December 1975
    • Actress
    • Russian
  2. Valentina Serova was one of the most popular actresses of the Soviet Union of the late 30s and early 40s. When the film A Girl with a Character appeared on the screens the actress became popular. You know, she was the muse of the famous poet Konstantin Simonov , Marilyn Monroe of the Soviet cinema.

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    • Valentina Serova5
  3. 29 de feb. de 2024 · Valentina Semyonovna Serova (née Bergman, 1846–1924) began her professional life in music with her enrolment at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory in 1862 as a pianist, having secured a scholarship from the Russian Musical Society.

  4. Russian composer and music critic (b. 1846 in Moscow; d. 24 June 1924 in Moscow ), born Valentina Semyonovna Bergman (Валентина Семеновна Бергман); known after her marriage as Valentina Semyonovna Serova (Валентина Семеновна Серова).

  5. Valentina Serova. Valentina Serova became famous when she starred in the comedies “Girl with character” and “Hearts of four”. In the theater, she played in the dramas of Maxim Gorky and Edmond Rostand. For her role in the historical film “Glinka” Serova was awarded the Stalin Prize. A military film with her participation “Immortal ...

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    • Valentina Serova2
    • Valentina Serova3
    • Valentina Serova4
    • Valentina Serova5
  6. Actress: The Great Glinka. Valentina Serova was born on 23 December 1917 in Kharkov [now Kharkiv], Ukraine. She was an actress, known for The Great Glinka (1946), Four Hearts (1944) and Devushka s kharakterom (1939). She died on 12 December 1975 in Moscow, Russian SFSR, USSR [now Russia].

  7. The painter's mother, Valentina Serova (nee Bergman, 1846-1924), was the opposite 5: much younger than her husband, an excellent pianist and later a composer herself, she belonged to the shestidesyatniki, the generation of the 1860s which propagated populist ideals.