Viktoria spesivtseva biography templates
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Dossier: Foreign language submissions
Osama
Director: Siddiq Barmak
Synopsis: A 12-year-old girl pretends to be a boy in order for her and her mother to survive in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
Cast:: Marina Golbarhari, Khwaja Nader, Arif Herati
Fests: Cannes, London, Montreal, Valladolid, Telluride, Toronto, AFI Fest
Awards: Cannes’ youth jury prize and Camera d’Or jury special mention; London fest’s Sutherland Trophy; Montreal’s Louve D’Or for best feature; Valladolid Golden Spike
Distrib: United Artists
Valentin
Director:Alejandro Agresti
Synopsis: A coming-of-age story told through the eyes of a precocious 10-year-old boy who lives with his grandmother in turbulent 1969 Argentina.
Cast:: Rodrigo Noya, Carmen Maura, Julieta Cardinali
Fests: Toronto, Rotterdam, Mar del Plata, Los Angeles Latino Film Festival, Munich, Cork, Seattle, Atlanta, Maui
Awards: Mar del Plata special jury prize; Netherlands Golden
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(aka "Sev beni" or "Люби меня" or "Lyuby Mene")
directed by Maryna Gorbach, Mehmet Bahadir Er
Turkey/Ukraine 2013
Sasha (Viktoria Spesivtseva) desperately wants to have a baby. When her married lover goes back to his wife, Sasha decides to mål a foreigner for a one night stand in order to achieve her goals. Fortunately, Cemal (Ushan Çakir) has been dragged from Istanbul to Kiev by his uncle (Güven Kiraç) and randy cousin (co-director Mehmet Bahadir Er) for his bachelor party and fryst vatten immediately träffad by the sight of the seemingly cold and aloof Sasha (who he initially believes wants to harvest his organs when she insists he tvätt up so she can poke holes in his condoms). Their assignation fryst vatten interrupted, however, when Sasha's mother (Olena Stefanska) shows up to tell her that her grandmother (Margaryta Kosheleva) has e • Olga Spessivtseva, graduate of the St Petersburg Theatre School, famed interpreter of Giselle, star of Serge Diaghilev’s ill-fated 1921 London production of The Sleeping Princess, and legendary ballerina of the Paris Opera in the 1920s, was contracted to come to Australia in 1934 as principal dancer with the Dandré-Levitoff Russian Ballet. Spessivtseva, or Spessiva as she was officially known on the tour, joined the company in Singapore, along with her companion (the retired American businessman Leonard G. Braun), her dancing partner Anatole Vilzak, and others who were to join the company. Following the Singapore season, in which she did not perform, she travelled with the company through Java, where she did dance, and on to Australia where the company was to fulfil engagements in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and eventually Perth. The Australian component of the tour has generated a good deal of interest as a result of the fact that Spessivtseva left the tour in an apparent |