Tatyana Anatoliyevna Dogileva (; born 27 February 1957) is a Soviet Union and Russians film and stage actress, Meritorious Artist of Russia (1989), and People's Artist of Russia (2000).
In 1978, Dogileva graduated from the Lunacharsky State Institute of Theatrical Art, where she studied under Vsevolod Ostalsky.
She was then invited to three theaters in Moscow, and she chose Lenkom Theatre, where she worked until 1985. Among her best-known Lenkom parts was that of Nelly in Cruel Games, staged by Mark Zakharov, which was an important theatrical event at the time.
Having transferred in 1985 to the Yermolova Theatre, Dogileva participated in the productions of director Valery Fokin's Sports Games, Speak, Shaky Balance, and Our Decameron., a play by Roman Viktyuk.
In the eight-hour play by Peter Stein "Oresteia" Aeschylus (1994), staged at the base of the Russian Army Theatre, Dogileva played Electra. According to critics, her performance was the main event of that Russian theatrical season. With the same performance on an international tour, she earned recognition from audiences in France, Germany, Greece, Great Britain and the Netherlands.
Among the theatrical works of Tatyana Dogileva in the 1990s were Twelfth Night at the Mossovet Theatre and "The Incredible Session", along Mikhail Kozakov. She subsequently performed in the plays Honoring, at the Anton Chekov Theatre, and 'The Ideal Husband'', staged in 2004 at the Theater-Studio under the direction of Oleg Tabakov '.
The role of saleswoman Vera in The Blonde Around the Corner (1984) directed by Vladimir Bortko was especially noteworthy; along with Andrei Mironov, the actress created a new type of character for the screen - charming in a feminine way, yet firmly independent from the "omnipotent" Soviet service sector.
The actress received more recognition among audiences with the role of nurse Lida in the picture Forgotten Melody for a Flute (1987), directed by Eldar Ryazanov. Dogileva played the heroine of her time, sternly confronting life difficulties while saving her lover from moral death. The same theme recurred in her role of Marina from Afghan Breakdown (1993), directed by Vladimir Bortko.
Among the films in her later years, there were The Bridegroom from Miami (1994), Hello, Fools! (1996), East/West (1999) as well as the TV series Plot (2003), Lyuba, Children and the Plant (2005-2006 sitcom), Hobo (2007, 2009) and Mine (2009).
In 2005-2007, Tatyana Dogileva hosted the psychological talk show Two Truths on NTV.
Then there were The Ones In Love do not Renounce... (2000); Moscow Passions based on Alexander Ostrovsky's play It's Not All Shrovetide for the Cat at the Mikhail Kozakov Theater, and the comedy The Lady Waits, the Clarinet Plays (2004), with the creative association "Duet". In 2011, her play Fallen Angels premiered at the Central House of Musicians.
Dogileva herself acted in almost all the plays she directed. Her directorial debut was the film Lera (2007).
In 2010, Dogileva publicly criticized fellow cinematographer Nikita Mikhalkov for destroying several historical buildings in downtown Moscow to build his own hotel there. She was arrested for picketing the construction site. Переулок заблокировал актрису
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