Marina Goldovskaya
Marina Yevseevna Goldovskaya (Russian: Марина Евсеевна Голдо́вская; born July 15, 1941, Moscow) is a Russian-born American documentary cinematographer famed for her candid portrayal of people. She has documented many types of people including simple folk, seamstresses, a female astronaut, literary and artistic legends, as well as political leaders. Winner of USSR State Prize (1988).[1]
The recipient of numerous documentary film and lifetime achievement awards, she currently serves as a professor at the UCLA School of Film and Television in Los Angeles. [2]
Filmography
- Anna Politkovskaya: The Bitter Taste of Freedom (2011)[3]
- Anatoly Rybakov: The Russian Story (International: English title) (2006)
- Peter Sellars: Portrait (2004)
- The Prince Is Back (1999, 2004)
- The Children of Ivan Kuzmich (1997)
- A Poet on the Lower East Side: A Docu-Diary on Allen Ginsberg (USA) (1997)
- Lucky to be Born in Russia (International: English title) (1994)
- Oskolki zerkala (Russia) (1992)
- More Than Love (1991)
- A Taste of Freedom (1991)
- I Am 90, My Steps Are Light (1989)
- Tumbalalaika in America (1988)
- Vlast' Solovetskaya. Svidetel'stva i dokumenty
- For the Theater to Be...
- Oleg Yefremov: Chtoby byl teatr (Soviet Union: Russian title) (1987)
- Arkhangelsky muzhik (1986)
- Hello, It Is Beduliya Speaking (1985)
- At Pouskin's Home (1982)
- After the Harvest (1981)
- Pouskin and Pouschin (1980)
- The Experiment (1978)
- Alexander Tvardovsky (1976)
- Arkadiy Raykin (1975)
- This Is Our Profession (1973)
- Valentina Tereshkova (1972)
Books
- A Woman with a Movie Camera
A memoir by Marina Goldovskaya, a Russian woman filmmaker, who was the first in Russia to be the combined director, writer, cinematographer, and producer of her films. Originally published in Russian. English version published in 2006 by Texas University Press