Entertainment
Tatyana Lioznova: Google Doodle celebrates the Russian director’s 96th birthday
Google Doodle celebrates the 96th birthday of Russian director, screenwriter, and professor Tatyana Lioznova on July 20, 2020.
Who was Tatyana Lioznova
Tatyana Mikhailovna Lioznova (Татьяна Михайловна Лиознова) was born in the Russian capital of Moscow on 20 July in 1924 and proceeded to graduate from the world’s oldest film school, the All-Union State University of Cinematography, or VGIK.
Tatyana Lioznova was a Soviet film director most popular for her spy thriller TV series “Seventeen Moments of Spring” in 1973.

Tatyana Lioznova broke new ground as a female director, an uncommon profession for ladies in Russia at that point. She made her directorial debut in 1958 with “The Memory of the Heart” and saw across the country accomplishment with the 1967 romance “Three Poplars at Plyushchikha.” Lioznova arrived at new statures of fame with her enormously well known 12-part series “Seventeen Moments of Spring.”
Tatyana Lioznova additionally came back to her place of graduation VGIK and taught workshops on acting and directing to a new generation of Russian movie producers.
Known as a hard-working perfectionist, shooting simply about six highlights, this didn’t keep her from becoming the People’s Artist of the USSR. To pay tribute to her contributions to Russian cinema, Lioznova was named a People’s Artist of the USSR in 1984. She worked at the Gorky Film Studio.
Tatyana Lioznova was Jewish and was a member of the Anti-Zionist Committee of the Soviet Public from 1983 to the end of the Committee in 1994.
Tatyana Lioznova dedicated numerous efforts and much an ideal opportunity to teach. Among the students of Professor Lioznova, there is a lot of cinematographers notable today.
Tatyana Lioznova Google Doodle
On July 20, 2020, Google Doodle, pictured by Moscow-based visitor artist Sveta Mullari, praises Tatyana Lioznova’s 96th birthday celebration.
The series—which enlivened the Google Doodle work of art on Tatyana Lioznova’s right side—happens during World War II and follows protagonist Maxim Isayev, a fictional Soviet spy frequently contrasted with his British counterpart James Bond. Referenced on the left side of the fine art is Lioznova’s 1982 hit movie “Carnival,” a musical comedy she both composed and directed.
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