Inna Iosifovna Gulaya (Russian: Ð˜Ì Ð½Ð½Ð° Ð˜Ð¾Ì Ñ Ð¸Ñ„Ð¾Ð²Ð½Ð°
Ð"ÑƒÐ»Ð°Ì Ñ ; 9 May 1940, Kharkov â€" 28 May 1990, Moscow) was a
Soviet theatre and cinema actress. She was named a Meritorious Artist
of the RSFSR in 1976.Gulaya was born in Kharkov, Ukrainian SSR
(modern-day Ukraine). Her maternal grandfather Konstantin Makarovich
Guliy was a long-time Ukrainian revolutionary, one of the so-called
Old Bolsheviks turned a high-ranking official after the October
Revolution, serving as the People's Commissar for Labour of the
Ukrainian SSR between 1926 and 1932. In 1937 he was arrested and
sentenced to death as an enemy of the people.In 1939 Gulaya's mother
Ludmila met her future father, a native of Kharkov who left her as
soon as he learned about Konstantin Guliy. Ludmila started planning an
abortion then when she met Joseph Genfer at some party â€" at the time
a graduate of the Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. He
proposed to Ludmila immediately after he had learned about her
situation, claiming that he fell in love with her at first sight. She
agreed to marry Joseph and to keep the child, raising Inna as Joseph's
own daughter. Gulaya was made aware of her real father though and even
met him as she grew up, but, according to her mother, she was left
indifferent as he felt like a complete stranger.Genfer made a quick
career, becoming a chief manager of the Moscow-Ryazan Railway, but
this didn't last long as he died soon after. Inna was raised by her
mother, who earned money by tailoring. They lived in great poverty in
the post-war country, and Ludmila really hoped to give her daughter a
proper education, thus she prepared her to enter an institute of
foreign languages. But Inna decided otherwise. After the school she
tried to enter a theatrical academy, and after a failed attempt she
entered a studio at the Moscow Theater for Children.
Ð"ÑƒÐ»Ð°Ì Ñ ; 9 May 1940, Kharkov â€" 28 May 1990, Moscow) was a
Soviet theatre and cinema actress. She was named a Meritorious Artist
of the RSFSR in 1976.Gulaya was born in Kharkov, Ukrainian SSR
(modern-day Ukraine). Her maternal grandfather Konstantin Makarovich
Guliy was a long-time Ukrainian revolutionary, one of the so-called
Old Bolsheviks turned a high-ranking official after the October
Revolution, serving as the People's Commissar for Labour of the
Ukrainian SSR between 1926 and 1932. In 1937 he was arrested and
sentenced to death as an enemy of the people.In 1939 Gulaya's mother
Ludmila met her future father, a native of Kharkov who left her as
soon as he learned about Konstantin Guliy. Ludmila started planning an
abortion then when she met Joseph Genfer at some party â€" at the time
a graduate of the Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. He
proposed to Ludmila immediately after he had learned about her
situation, claiming that he fell in love with her at first sight. She
agreed to marry Joseph and to keep the child, raising Inna as Joseph's
own daughter. Gulaya was made aware of her real father though and even
met him as she grew up, but, according to her mother, she was left
indifferent as he felt like a complete stranger.Genfer made a quick
career, becoming a chief manager of the Moscow-Ryazan Railway, but
this didn't last long as he died soon after. Inna was raised by her
mother, who earned money by tailoring. They lived in great poverty in
the post-war country, and Ludmila really hoped to give her daughter a
proper education, thus she prepared her to enter an institute of
foreign languages. But Inna decided otherwise. After the school she
tried to enter a theatrical academy, and after a failed attempt she
entered a studio at the Moscow Theater for Children.
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