The program is dedicated to the life and work of actress Tatyana Drubich.
Tatyana Lyusenovna Drubich is a striking example of a multifaceted talent.
She began acting as a teenager, then received a medical education and worked as an endocrinologist in a district clinic, which did not prevent her from appearing on screen again.
She became famous for her roles in the films "Ten Little Indians" and "Assa".
Tatyana was born on June 7, 1960 in Moscow, in the family of economist Lyubov Vladimirovna and engineer Lyusien Izrailevich Drubich.
The girl's mother herself dreamed of an acting career all her life and, never being demoralized in this profession, decided that her dream should be fulfilled by her daughter.
So eleven-year-old Tatyana first appeared on a film set.
The schoolgirl was approved for a role in the drama "Fifteenth Spring" by Inna Tumanyan.
In 1975, Sergei Solovyov's film "One Hundred Days After Childhood" was released, in which Drubich got the leading role of Lena Ergolina, after which all Soviet boys fell in love with the 14-year-old beauty.
At school, Tanya got straight A's and B's, but until the last moment she could not decide what she wanted to become in the future.
Drubich refused an invitation to VGIK, entered a medical institute and studied to be an endocrinologist.
After graduating from the university, Drubich, in parallel with her work on the set, worked as a doctor in a local clinic.
In 1977, Tatyana starred in Pavel Arsenov's film "Confusion of Feelings", working with Sergei Nagorny and Elena Proklova.
In 1979, she starred in Sulambek Mamilov's detective film "Especially Dangerous", which pleased the audience with its stellar cast: Boris Nevzorov, Lev Durov, and Zinovy Gerdt.
In 1980, Tatyana worked with director Solovyov again, starring in his melodrama "The Rescuer".
Two years later, Solovyov again invited Drubich to his new project - a screen adaptation of Alfonso Lopez Michelsen's novel "The Chosen".
That same year, another film was released with Drubich in the leading role - "The Heiress in a Direct Line", and again from Sergei Solovyov.
The film completed the director's trilogy, which began with the films "One Hundred Days After Childhood" and "The Rescuer".
In 1983, shortly after filming the film "The Chosen", Tatyana married director Sergei Solovyov, despite the 16-year age difference.
The couple had a daughter, Anna (born in 1984), and divorced in 1989. In 1987, Tatyana played one of her most striking roles in Solovyov's crime detective drama Assa.
Soon, Tatyana played in director Stanislav Govorukhin's film Ten Little Indians based on Agatha Christie's work of the same name.
In 1989, she starred in the film Black Rose Is an Emblem of Sorrow, Red Rose Is an Emblem of Love.
Two years later, Drubich starred with the famous French actress Jeanne Moreau in the art-house drama Anna Karamazoff, made in the aesthetics of silent cinema.
In 1993, Tatyana took part in an unexpected project for Sergei Solovyov – the film-performance “Uncle Vanya”, which brought together a truly stellar cast of actors: Yuri and Vitaly Solomin, Valery Babyatinsky, Viktor Bortsov, Tatyana Eremeeva.
Three years later, the viewer saw Drubich in the lead role in Eldar Ryazanov’s comedy “Hello, Fools!” Photos and videos of Anna, daughter of Tatyana Drubich.
Video: Tatyana Drubich about Oleg Yankovsky on the set.
Video: Sergei Solovyov talks about actress Tatyana Drubich.
Video: The host and Tatyana Drubich walk in the park, Tatyana Drubich shows her photo album.
The program uses photos from Tatyana Drubich’s archive, fragments of films.
Drubich Tatyana Lyusenovna is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actress.
Sergei Aleksandrovich Solovyov is a Soviet and Russian film director, screenwriter, film producer, teacher; laureate of the Lenin Komsomol Prize and the USSR State Prize, People's Artist of the Russian Federation.
Oleg Ivanovich Yankovsky is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, film director, People's Artist of the USSR, Laureate of the USSR State Prize and two State Prizes of the Russian Federation.
17.03.1998