Natalya Negoda

Acting

Natalya Negoda

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Nov 12, 1963 (61 years old)

Natalya Negoda

Known For

Van Goghs
1h 43m
DOLBY
Movie 2018

Van Goghs

Mark Ginzburg is a talented artist who is always depressed....

Tambourine, Drum
1h 45m
DOLBY
Movie 2009

Tambourine, Drum

A mining town in Russia at the end of the...

The Comrades of Summer
1h 30m
DOLBY
Movie 1992

The Comrades of Summer

Sparky Smith (Joe Mantegna) was manager of the Seattle Mariners...

Back in the USSR
1h 27m
DOLBY
Movie 1992

Back in the USSR

A vacationing American and a sultry Russian thief lead police...

How Dark the Nights Are on the Black Sea
1h 55m
DOLBY
Movie 1989

How Dark the Nights Are on the Black Sea

In this farcical dark comedy/melodrama, Lena manages to lose her...

Selfportrait of an Unknown Man
1h 14m
DOLBY
Movie 1988

Selfportrait of an Unknown Man

A strange combination of circumstances leads the forty-year-old engineer Igor...

Little Vera
2h 8m
DOLBY
Movie 1988

Little Vera

Vera is a troubled teenager fresh out of school feeling...

This Fantastic World 11
DOLBY
Movie 1985

This Fantastic World 11

Air Force Colonel and former astronaut Greg Darwin is visited...

Biography

Natalya Negoda was born in Moscow in the creative family of director Tamara Pavlyuchenko and actor of the Moscow Young Generation Theater Igor Negoda, which determined their daughter's addiction to theater and cinema. After graduating from school, Natalya Negoda entered the studio school of the Moscow Art Theatre, which she graduated in 1986. In 1987, Natalya Negoda first appeared in a full-length film — in the drama by Yuri Kara "Tomorrow Was the War." In 1988, the world saw the picture of Vasily Pichul “Little Vera”, in which Negoda played a major role. This work brought world fame to the Soviet actress, she received the Nika Award for Best Actress and was also awarded the Silver Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival. In the early 1990's, Natalya emigrated to the United States, where she continued to work as an actress. In 2009, after a long acting career break, she starred in Alexei Mizgiryov's film “Tambourine, Drum,” for which she received prizes from the Russian Guild of Film Critics and the Golden Eagle Award for Best Actress.