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Olga Pyzhova
Olga Pyzhova
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Olga Ivanovna Pyzhova (29 October 1894, Moscow—7 or 8 November 1972, Moscow; О́льга Ива́новна Пыжо́ва) was a Russian stage actress, director, and teacher.[1][2][3] She spent her early years with the Moscow Art Theatre before moving to the Revolution Theatre in 1928.[1][3][4][5] She taught and directed at several schools and theatres, including Lunacharsky State Institute for Theatre Arts (GITIS), All-Union State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK),[4][5][3] Moscow Central Children's Theater, and Auezov Theater.[1][3] Her awards included Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1947), People's Artist of the Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (1949), the People's Artist of the Tajik SSR (1964),[5][1] and a Medal "For Valiant Labour in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945",[5] as well as a State Stalin Prize in the third degree for her and her husband's production of Sergey Mikhalkov's play I Want to Go Home.[5][1]

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

As a child, Pyzhova lived in the Varkava area of Moscow.[6] She studied at Institute for Noble Maidens[3][4] but left before finishing to train as an accountant.[4] After her father died, the family moved to St. Petersburg to be nearer her maternal aunts, including Ekaterina [ru].[7][4][5] Her aunts introduced her to the world of theatre, inspiring her to become an actress herself. She reached out to MAT director Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, who encouraged her to go to Moscow to audition. She was one of two applicants accepted from a pool of more than 200[4][5] for the 1914/1915 season.[4][3]

Pyzhova became a student of Konstantin Stanislavski at the First Studio,[1] where she appeared as Mirandolina in The Mistress of the Inn, Viola and Sebastian in Twelfth Night (1917), and Golpana in Balladyna (1920), and traveled with the troupe to America to appear as Varya in The Cherry Orchard (1924).[2][3][4] By the time she returned to Russia, the First Studio had become the Second Studio under Michael Chekhov. She rejoined but was not cast in the theatre's new productions.[4] She and other company members left in 1928 to join Vsevolod Meyerhold's Revolution Theatre, where she worked until 1938. Her appearances there included as Xenia Travern in Man with a Briefcase (1928), Veronica in Anatoly Glebov's Inga (1929), and Nurse in Romeo and Juliet (1935).[1][4][5]

Pyzhova began directing in the 1920s.[1][3] In the 1930s, as her eyesight began to fail, she became more focused on teaching and directing than on acting and worked variously at Lunacharsky State Institute for Theatre Arts (GITIS), All-Union State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK),[4][5][3] Yermolova Theatre, and Vakhtangov State Academic Theatre, among others.[1][7][5] By the late 1930s, she was working at the Moscow State Academic Children's Music Theater with her husband, Boris Bibikov.[1][3] They both trained ethnic minorities in theatre over the duration of their careers, primarily by holding workshops.[7] At GITIS, she managed the Karakalpak, Uzbek, Tatar, Tajik, Lezgin, Turkmen, and Moldovan troupes.[5]

In 1939, she became Russia's first female Professor of Acting.[4][3] She worked at the Auezov Theater and the Mossovet Theatre during World War II as an actress, director, and teacher.[1][3] Between 1948 and 1950, she served as artistic director at Moscow Central Children's Theater. She and Bibikov taught acting workshops at VGIK;[5] their students included Vyacheslav Tikhonov,[8][3] Nonna Mordyukova, Rufina Nifontova[3] Ekaterina Savinova,[9] Svetlana Druzhinina,[10] Maya Bulgakova, Lyubov Sokolova, Leonid Kuravlyov, Tamara Nosova, Sofiko Chiaureli,[5] Yuri Belov, and Yevgeny Tashkov.[citation needed] Two of her students at GITIS were Maya-Gozel Aimedova[11] and Nadezhda Rumyantseva, the latter of which she brought with her to VGIK.[12]

Her awards included Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1947), People's Artist of the Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (1949), the People's Artist of the Tajik SSR (1964),[5][1] and a Medal "For Valiant Labour in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945".[5] In 1950, she and Bibikov were also awarded the State Stalin Prize in the third degree for their production of Sergey Mikhalkov's play I Want to Go Home.[5][1] Her memoir, Призвание (Calling), written with the help of her daughter, was published by Iskusstvo in 1974.[13]

Personal life

[edit]

Pyzhova and Vasily Kachalov fostered a romantic relationship during his marriage to Nina Litovtseva, who Pyzhova became close to during her time touring America. Her daughter, Olga Vasilievna, was born in 1929; it is disputed whether Kachalov was her father or if she just bore his name.[14][8][7][15] The Olgas remained close with the Kachalovs even after Pyzhova and Vasily's affair ended, so much so that Olga Vasilievna lived with them as a child.[15] Pyzhova later married actor Boris Bibikov. She died in Moscow on 7 or 8 November 1972[3] and is buried in Novodevichy Cemetery.[6][16]

Filmography

[edit]
Film
Date Film Role Ref
1937 Without a Dowry Kharita Ignatyevna Ogudalova [3]
The Lonely White Sail Madame Storozhenko [3]
1953 Alyosha Ptitsyn Grows Up Grandmother Olya [3]
1966 They're Calling, Open the Door Natalia Ivanovna [citation needed]

Theatre

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Acting
Date Play Role Company Note(s) Ref
The Blue Bird Bérylune Moscow Art Theatre First Studio [1][7][13]
It Tears Where It Is Thin Governess of Bieneme [1][3][13][14]
The Cricket on the Hearth Fairy [1]
1915 The Deluge Lizzie Directed by Yevgeny Vakhtangov [1][4][7][13]
1916 The Story of Lieutenant Ergunoff Hummingbird/Kolibri Directed by A. Krasnopolska [1][4][3][7][13]
1917 Twelfth Night Viola/Sebastian Directed by Yevgeny Vakhtangov [3][4][7][13]
1920 Balladyna Goplana [1][3][4][7]
1922 Archangel Michael Lucille [13]
1924 The Cherry Orchard Varya Traveled on the American tour [1][4][3][13]
The Mistress of the Inn Mirandolina Toured in France and America; directed by Konstantin Stanislavski [4][13]
1925 Dialogues Moscow Art Theatre Second Studio [13]
1926 Evgraf, Adventurer Dina Kraevich [1][3][13]
King of the Square Republic Katarina Her [1][13]
In 1825 Varenka [13]
1928 Man with a Briefcase Xenia Travern Revolution Theatre [4][1][3][13]
1929 Inga Veronica [4][3][13]
1934 Personal Life by Solovyov Lena [1][3][4][13]
1935 Romeo and Juliet Nurse Directed by Aleksey Popov [1][3][4][13]
Golgotha Glafira [1][3]
Street of Joy Kixi [3][4]
1938 Fuenteovejuna Auezov Theater [1][3]
1943 Taming of the Shrew [1]
Invasion Talanova Mossovet Theatre Co-directed with Boris Bibikov [1][3][13]
Match Between Two Fires With Sofia Giatsintova and Mikhail Chevkov [3][7]
Directing
Date Play Company Note(s) Ref
1937 Scapin the Schemer Moscow Children's Theatre [1][3]
1939 Fairy Tale Co-directed with Boris Bibikov [3][13]
1940 Twenty Years Later [3][1][13]
1943 Taming of the Shrew Auezov Theater [3][17]
Invasion Mossovet Theatre Co-directed with Boris Bibikov; also played Talanova [13]
1949 I Want to Go Home Auezov Theater Won the USSR State Prize in 1950[1] [3]
Her Friends [1][18]
1950 Twenty Years Later Moscow Central Children's Theater Co-directed with Boris Bibikov [3][1][13]
The Snow Queen Auezov Theater [1]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Olga Ivanovna Pyzhova was a Russian Soviet actress, theatre director, and influential acting pedagogue known for her stage work with the Moscow Art Theatre, her memorable film performances in the 1930s and 1950s, and her decades of teaching at leading Soviet institutions that shaped generations of actors. Born on November 30, 1894, in Moscow, Pyzhova joined the Moscow Art Theatre's First Studio without formal acting education and graduated in 1914, becoming a troupe member (later with the MAT Second Studio after 1924). She excelled in psychologically nuanced roles infused with irony, appearing in notable productions such as The Blue Bird (as the Fairy), The Cherry Orchard (as Varya), Twelfth Night (as Viola and Sebastian), and The Mistress of the Inn (as Mirandolina). In 1928 she joined the Theatre of Revolution, where she performed until 1934, and during World War II she worked with the Mossovet Theatre in evacuation in Alma-Ata while also directing at the Kazakh Drama Theatre named after M. Auezov. From 1948 to 1950 she served as artistic director of the Moscow Central Children's Theater. Pyzhova began her teaching career at GITIS in 1934 and moved to VGIK in 1942, where she and her husband Boris Bibikov led a prominent acting workshop; she had earlier headed national studios at GITIS for various ethnic groups, contributing to the formation of national theatre troupes. In 1939 she became the first Soviet actress awarded the title of professor on the acting faculty. Her students included prominent performers such as Nonna Mordyukova, Rufina Nifontova, Lev Kulidzhanov, Leonid Kuravlev, and others who formed the core of Soviet theatre and cinema. In film, Pyzhova appeared in early silent works before the Revolution and later in sound features, including Kharita Ignatiyevna Ogudalova in Without Dowry (1936), Madame Storozhenko in The Lonely White Sail (1937), and Alyosha's grandmother in Alyosha Ptitsyn Develops Character (1953). Her screen work was noted for its humor and lifelike quality. She received the Honoured Worker of Arts of the RSFSR title in 1947, the Honoured Worker of Arts of the Tatar ASSR in 1949, the Honoured Worker of Arts of the Tajik SSR in 1964, and the USSR State Prize in 1950 for the play "I Want to Go Home!" co-directed with Boris Bibikov. Pyzhova died on November 7, 1972, in Moscow.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Olga Ivanovna Pyzhova was born on 30 November 1894 in Moscow. She spent her childhood in Moscow, where her family lived until her father's death prompted their relocation to Saint Petersburg.

Path to Theater

After relocating to Saint Petersburg following her father's death, Olga Pyzhova enrolled in the Institute for Noble Maidens but left before completing her studies. She subsequently pursued accounting courses, which she completed before taking on clerical work in a bank and the Senate archive department. Her maternal aunts, whose proximity in Saint Petersburg brought the family closer to artistic circles, helped foster her interest in theater; one aunt, the writer Ekaterina Pavlovna Sultanova, recommended her for a charitable performance where she appeared alongside professional actors. In April 1914, during the Moscow Art Theatre's tours in Saint Petersburg, Pyzhova approached Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko and secured his invitation to audition in Moscow. She traveled to Moscow and passed the competitive examination, becoming one of only two accepted out of over two hundred candidates for the 1914/1915 season at the Moscow Art Theatre. This marked her formal entry into professional theater training under the company's auspices.

Moscow Art Theatre Years

Training and First Studio

Pyzhova was accepted into the First Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre in 1914, one of only two candidates selected from over 200 applicants after a competitive examination following her direct appeal to Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko during the theatre's tour in St. Petersburg. There she became a student of Konstantin Stanislavski, participating in the First Studio's experimental training environment, which served as a laboratory for developing his psychological approach to acting through intensive exercises focused on inner life, concentration, and authentic emotion. The First Studio, established in 1912, allowed Stanislavski to test and refine elements of his emerging system with a select group of young performers, including techniques aimed at achieving truthful behavior on stage. Following the Moscow Art Theatre's American tour in 1923, in which the First Studio participated, the group was reorganized in 1924 as the independent Second Moscow Art Theatre under the leadership of Michael Chekhov. Pyzhova rejoined the reorganized company but faced limited casting in its new productions.

Key Roles and Tours

During her time with the Moscow Art Theatre and its First Studio, Olga Pyzhova established herself through a series of notable stage performances, many under the direction of Evgeny Vakhtangov and prepared in alignment with Konstantin Stanislavski's system. On the main stage, her appearances were limited to smaller roles, including the Fairy Bérylune in Maurice Maeterlinck's The Blue Bird. In the First Studio, Pyzhova portrayed Lizzie in Henning Berger's The Deluge (1915), directed by Vakhtangov, and took on the roles of Viola and Sebastian in William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night (1917), also directed by Vakhtangov. She later played Goplana the mermaid (described as a village rusalka) in Juliusz Słowacki's Balladyna (1920), directed by Vakhtangov. In the First Studio, she appeared as Hummingbird (Kolibri) in The Story of Lieutenant Ergunoff (1916). A highlight of her MAT period was preparing and performing the title role of Mirandolina in Carlo Goldoni's The Mistress of the Inn under Stanislavski's direction, a part characterized by vibrant temperament and joyful combativeness in her interactions. She achieved particular success during the Moscow Art Theatre's American tour in the early 1920s, where her performances as Mirandolina and as Varya in Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard (notably during the 1924 segment of the tour) earned high praise and marked her as one of the troupe's promising talents in Stanislavski's estimation.

Revolution Theatre Period

Transition and Major Productions

In 1928, Olga Pyzhova left the Second Moscow Art Theatre following a conflict with Mikhail Chekhov and transitioned, along with the so-called "Dikiy group" of actors led by Aleksey Dikiy, to the Theatre of the Revolution (now the Mayakovsky Theatre). She remained an actress with the company until 1934, a period during which the theatre staged a number of significant Soviet-era productions. Among her notable appearances were roles in "Man with a Briefcase" (premiered 1928), "Inga" (premiered 1929), and "Personal Life" (premiered 1934). She also performed in "Golgotha" as Glafira and "Street of Joy" as Kixi during her time at the theatre.

Acting Roles

Olga Pyzhova performed a series of notable acting roles at the Moscow Theatre of the Revolution during her engagement there from 1928 to 1934. Her work in this period featured characters from contemporary Soviet drama as well as classical repertoire, highlighting her ability to portray complex figures in the context of revolutionary theater. She debuted at the theatre in 1928 as Xenia Travern in Aleksey Faiko's Man with a Briefcase. In 1929 she played Veronica in Anatoly Glebov's Inga. Her portrayal of the party organizer Lena in Viktor Solovyov's Personal Life came in 1934. Pyzhova also took on the role of Glafira in Chizhevsky's Golgotha and Kixi in Nikolai Zarhi's Street of Joy. These performances were among her most acclaimed at the theatre.

Directing Career

Shift to Directing

In the 1920s, Olga Pyzhova began working as a director while continuing her acting career primarily at the Second Moscow Art Theatre and later the Theatre of Revolution. By the 1930s, however, her eyesight deteriorated sharply and blindness began to progress, forcing her to retire from major acting roles on the large stage relatively early and shift her primary professional focus to directing and teaching. This health-related transition marked a significant change in her career trajectory, as she increasingly dedicated herself to staging productions at various theaters. In the late 1930s, she frequently collaborated with her husband Boris Bibikov at the Natalya Sats Central Children's Theatre (also known as the Third Moscow Theatre for Children), where they co-directed several works including Molière's The Tricks of Scapin in 1937, Mikhail Svetlov's The Fairy Tale in 1939, and Svetlov's Twenty Years After in 1940. She also directed at the Mossovet Theatre, co-staging Leonov's Invasion with Bibikov. During the war years while evacuated in Alma-Ata, she directed performances at the Kazakh Drama Theatre named after M. Auezov.

Notable Productions

Olga Pyzhova frequently collaborated with her husband, the actor and director Boris Bibikov, on directing projects during her later career. One of their joint productions was Leonid Leonov's Invasion at the Mossovet Theatre in 1943, where Pyzhova also performed the role of Talanova. From 1948 to 1950, Pyzhova served as artistic director of the Moscow Central Children's Theater. During this tenure, she co-directed Sergey Mikhalkov's I Want to Go Home with Bibikov in 1949–1950; the production earned them the joint State Stalin Prize of the third degree in 1950.

Teaching and Mentorship

Academic Positions

In the 1930s, Olga Pyzhova increasingly devoted herself to teaching and pedagogical work in Soviet theater education. She taught at the Lunacharsky State Institute for Theatre Arts (GITIS), where she had been active since 1924, and in 1939 became the first Soviet actress to receive the title of professor of acting. From 1942 she also taught at the All-Union State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK), where in 1949 she and her husband Boris Bibikov began jointly leading an acting workshop. Pyzhova additionally taught acting mastery at the Vakhtangov Studio and the Ermolova Theater-Studio.

Training Ethnic Ensembles

In collaboration with Boris Bibikov, Olga Pyzhova dedicated a significant portion of her pedagogical career to training theater professionals from various ethnic minorities through specialized workshops at the Russian Institute of Theatre Arts (GITIS). This work formed part of the broader Soviet initiative in the 1930s to establish and develop national theater traditions in the republics and autonomous regions by preparing dedicated acting troupes. Together, Pyzhova and Bibikov led workshops and courses for Karakalpak, Uzbek, Tatar, Tajik, Lezgin, Turkmen, Moldovan, and other ethnic groups, equipping actors with the skills to form and sustain professional ensembles in their respective regions. Their joint efforts resulted in the establishment of multiple national studios at GITIS, fostering the growth of indigenous theater across diverse Soviet nationalities. This specialized training emphasized adapting Stanislavski's system to cultural contexts of ethnic minorities, enabling the creation of authentic national performances while maintaining high artistic standards. Pyzhova's involvement helped shape generations of actors who returned to their regions to build and lead local theaters.

Prominent Students

Olga Pyzhova's pedagogical career at GITIS from 1924 and at VGIK from 1942, including her leadership of an acting workshop with Boris Bibikov starting in 1949, produced many prominent Soviet actors who achieved lasting fame in theater and cinema. Among her notable students were Vyacheslav Tikhonov, Nonna Mordyukova, Rufina Nifontova, Maya Bulgakova, Nadezhda Rumyantseva, Svetlana Druzhinina, Leonid Kuravlev, Sofiko Chiaureli, Tamara Nosova, and Lyubov Sokolova. Nadezhda Rumyantseva began her studies under Pyzhova at GITIS and was brought by her to VGIK when Pyzhova transferred there, continuing as a favored pupil.

Film Appearances

Roles in Soviet Cinema

Although Olga Pyzhova was best known for her extensive work in theater, she made occasional appearances in Soviet cinema, often in supporting character roles that drew on her dramatic experience. Her film credits reflect a selective engagement with the medium, spanning several decades but remaining secondary to her stage career. In 1937, she played Kharita Ignatyevna Ogudalova in the film Without a Dowry directed by Yakov Protazanov. The same year, she portrayed Madame Storozhenko in The Lonely White Sail, an adaptation of Valentin Kataev's children's novella directed by Vladimir Legoshin. These pre-war roles showcased her ability to embody strong, memorable matriarchal figures in classic literary adaptations. After a hiatus, Pyzhova returned to the screen in 1953 as Alyosha's grandmother in the children's film Alyosha Ptitsyn Develops Character, directed by Anatoly Granik. Later, in 1966, she appeared as Natalia Ivanovna in the youth-oriented film They're Calling, Open the Door. Her cinematic work, though limited in quantity, complemented her theatrical legacy by bringing nuanced character portrayals to Soviet audiences across different eras and genres.

Personal Life

Relationships and Family

Olga Pyzhova had a romantic relationship with actor Vasily Kachalov while he was married to actress Nina Litovtseva. The two women had become close during the Moscow Art Theatre's tour in America, where they rehearsed together. Pyzhova frequently visited the Kachalov household and spent significant time with the family at their dacha in Nikolina Gora. In 1929, Pyzhova gave birth to a daughter named Olga Vasilievna, who was given the patronymic after Kachalov. The question of the daughter's biological paternity has been a matter of discussion; Kachalov reportedly believed the child was his and treated both mother and daughter as part of his family, even insisting on their inclusion in a joint evacuation in 1941. Other accounts suggest the girl may not have been his biological daughter, though he regarded her as such within the family circle. The daughter spent time living with the Kachalovs during her childhood. Pyzhova later married actor Boris Bibikov, and the couple lived together for 46 years until her death in 1972. They also collaborated professionally in training ethnic theater ensembles.

Memoir

Olga Pyzhova's memoir Призвание (Calling) was published posthumously in 1974 by the Iskusstvo publishing house, two years after her death in 1972. The book was co-written with her daughter Olga Vasilievna Pyzhova. The memoir presents a narrative account of Pyzhova's life and creative journey as an actress, director, and pedagogue. It focuses on her associations with key figures in Russian theater history, including Konstantin Stanislavsky, Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, Evgeny Vakhtangov, Vasily Kachalov, and others from whom she learned, with whom she collaborated, and whom she befriended. A substantial section of the work details her nearly forty-year effort in founding and directing national theater studios at the State Institute of Theatre Arts (GITIS).

Awards and Recognition

References

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