"Good girl, get married." Husbands and career of Maria Maksakova Sr.
Journalists found out that shortly before the murder of ex-deputy Denis Voronenkov, his wife Maria Maksakova secretly came to Russia. The opera diva was seen in a restaurant located next to her home, where she had breakfast.
We are talking about Krasnopresnenskaya embankment; in the White House area, Maria Maksakova has an apartment that she purchased before her marriage. By the way, this is where the artist lived with her husband Denis Voronenkov recently before leaving for Ukraine. Now supposedly no one lives in the apartments. However, Maksakova was seen here quite recently.
“Literally a couple of weeks ago, she drank coffee with us and had an omelet for breakfast,” the Komsomolskaya Pravda website quotes the words of a waitress from a restaurant in the same building, literally door to door from Maksakova’s entrance.
When journalists asked a clarifying question whether the girl really saw the opera diva, she confidently confirmed her words. "Certainly! I have known her for a long time, she is our regular customer. Last time I wore curlers. But even the curlers looked very beautiful on her, under such a cheerful hat,” said an employee of the establishment.
Meanwhile, the media began to think that Maksakova suspiciously quickly ended up at the scene of her husband’s murder. After all, usually until the completion of operational investigative actions, relatives are not allowed close to the murdered. And here a woman in a state of shock is filmed by dozens of television cameras, notes the Zvezda TV channel.
By the way, the public is concerned about the future of Maria Maksakova. In particular, on the Internet, users are discussing what a newly-made widow should do now: stay in Ukraine, return to Russia or go to Germany (after all, Maria Maksakova has German citizenship). According to a colleague of the opera diva Lyubov Kazarnovskaya, the second option is most suitable for Maria.
“If Masha finds the right words and the right form to explain herself to the Russians, to tell why she and Denis spoke impartially about our country, why they had such a grudge, then I think that Russia will take her back. We have always accepted returning prodigal sons. I feel sorry for Masha and her mother, Lyudmila Vasilyevna. The murder of Voronenkov is terrible, a great grief. If I were Masha, I would return to her homeland, she has a good family, her relatives are here, whose support she really needs now. I hope she will find the right words. , to explain everything to us...” - quotes Lyubov Kazarnovskaya from Sobesednik.
Let us remind you that Denis Voronenkov was killed on March 23 in the center of Kyiv, when he was heading to a meeting with Ponomarev. The killer hit him several times - the injuries were fatal. The criminal was seriously wounded by Voronenkov's security guard and died on the operating table when doctors performed craniotomy on him.
Soviet opera singer, People's Artist of the USSR, famous owner of the lyric mezzo-soprano Maria Petrovna Maksakova born on April 8, 1902 in Astrakhan into a bourgeois family. Her father Petr Vasilievich Sidorov was an employee of the Volga Shipping Company.
"Marry her!"
Masha Sidorova studied singing in a church choir, and then at the Astrakhan Music College. At a very young age, she married a then famous baritone singer, director, entrepreneur and teacher Maximilian Maksakova, who became her mentor. His real name is Max Schwartz, he was a native of Austria-Hungary.
Maximilian Karlovich Maksakov. Photo: Commons.wikimedia.org
The future spouses met under funny circumstances. At the first meeting, Maximilian Karlovich told the girl: “Your voice is wonderful, but you don’t know how to sing.” She was offended and went to audition at the Petrograd Conservatory. To her surprise, they told her exactly the same thing. And then she returns to Maksakov. At that time, Maksakov’s wife was an opera singer. Ksenia Vasilievna Jordanskaya— was already close to death. She was dying from cholera, which raged during the Civil War in Astrakhan. Jordanskaya told her husband: “Marusya is a good girl, marry her.” Having become a widower, Maximilian Maksakov did just that. The groom was 50 years old, and the bride Masha was 18.
It was he who “made” Maria Maksakova a singer at the Astrakhan Opera Theatre. In 1923, the Maksakovs moved to Moscow. The debut of the future star was the difficult role of Amneris in Giuseppe Verdi’s opera “Aida”. Immediately after the Bolshoi's first appearance on stage, Maksakova was accepted into the theater troupe. There she works with famous masters: conductor Suk, directed by Lossky. And from the legendary soloists Sobinova, Nezhdanova, Obukhova the young artist led by example. Maksakova later wrote in her memoirs: “Thanks to the art of Nezhdanova and Lohengrin-Sobinov, I realized for the first time that a great master’s image reaches its utmost expressiveness only when great inner emotion manifests itself in a simple and clear form, when the richness of the spiritual world is combined with the sparingness of movements.”
Maria Petrovna will work at the Bolshoi Theater for a year, then Maximilian Maksakov will go to teach opera in Leningrad. Maria travels with her husband and sings at the Leningrad Opera and Ballet Theater for two years. In 1928, Maria Petrovna returned to the Bolshoi, now for a long time. She would work there until 1953. Maksakova was glorified by the main roles in famous operas: Carmen, Marfa in “Khovanshchina”, Marina Mnishek in “Boris Godunov”, Ganna in “May Night” and Lyubasha in “The Tsar’s Bride”.
Artists of the State Academic Bolshoi Theater of the USSR Maria Maksakova (Marina Mnishek) and Georgy Nelepp (Dmitry) in a scene from M. Mussorgsky’s opera “Boris Godunov”. 1948 Photo: RIA Novosti / Balabanov
The wife of the "enemy of the people"
Maximilian and Maria Maksakov did not have their own home for a long time and wandered around Moscow communal apartments. They received their apartment only in 1935. But already in 1936 Maximilian passed away.
Maria Petrovna's second husband was Yakov Davtyan, Armenian revolutionary, diplomat and foreign intelligence agent, and rector of the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute. The marriage did not last long. In November 1937 he was arrested. The accusation was based on the fact that Yakov Khristoforovich allegedly participated in a counter-revolutionary organization engaged in terrorism. Davtyan was executed in 1938, Maksakova became the “wife of an enemy of the people.”The next romance is with a Bolshoi artist, baritone Alexander Volkov. In 1940, Maksakova and Volkov had a daughter. Lyudmila- now a famous actress of the Theater. Vakhtangov. But soon after her birth, Volkov emigrated to the USA. Therefore, in the birth certificates, Maksakova gave her daughter her own surname, and her patronymic - Vasilyevna.
Actress of the Theater. E. Vakhtangova Lyudmila Maksakova with her daughter Masha at home. On the wall is a portrait of the great Russian singer Maria Maksakova, the mother of the actress. 1999 Photo: RIA Novosti / Vladimir Vyatkin
At the Bolshoi Theater, Maria Maksakova was sent into retirement very early. But she, removed from the main stage of the country, not only survived, but also increased her fame by starting to tour with Russian folk songs throughout the Soviet Union. This is what the famous singer said about her style of performing songs. Sergey Lemeshev: “You can sing them in different ways: both rollickingly, and with a challenge, and with the mood that is hidden in the words: “Oh, let it all go to waste!” And Maksakova found her own intonation, drawn-out, sometimes perky, but always ennobled by feminine softness.” Famous opera singer and teacher Vera Davydova wrote about Maksakova that the singer attached great importance to her appearance. Maksakova was indeed very beautiful, and even had a magnificent figure. Perhaps her beauty did not fade because the singer always carefully monitored her external form, strictly adhered to a strict diet and persistently practiced gymnastics.
For many years, Maria Petrovna taught vocal skills to GITIS students, founded the People's Singing School, and was a jury member of many musical competitions.
Maksakova died in 1974, the great singer was buried at the Vvedensky cemetery in Moscow.
Nowadays, you won’t surprise anyone with a foreign husband. But in the Soviet years, love for a citizen of another state cost, if not life, then certainly a career! The legend of cinema of the 30s–60s is Zoya Fedorova.
“A housekeeper is a kind of internal enemy!”, “Masik! You are a idiot!” - remember these famous quotes from the heroine Fedorova from the movie “Girl Without an Address”? Leading roles, Stalin Prizes... Fate favored her until, in 1945, the bright actress's affair with American diplomat Jackson Tate became public knowledge. The man was immediately expelled from the USSR, the lovers were given only a few minutes to say goodbye, despite the fact that Zoya was pregnant. The American promised to find a way out of the difficult situation: return to Moscow or call his beloved to come to him. But the plans were not destined to come true. The letters he wrote to Zoya every week were intercepted by the NKVD. She thought that the father of the unborn child had forgotten her, and even hastily jumped out to marry the composer Alexander Ryazanov. Although, rather, it was an attempt to divert the attention of the authorities. It didn’t help... Soon after the birth of her beautiful daughter Victoria, Fedorova was arrested on charges of espionage and sentenced to 25 years in high-security camps (replaced with imprisonment). The actress’s sisters, Maria and Alexandra, also went into exile in different places (the latter took Vika, Fedorova’s daughter, to raise her).
Zoya Fedorova and Sergei Filippov in the film “Girl Without an Address”
48-year-old Zoya Alekseevna was released only in 1955. In the 1960s and 1970s she starred, but only in episodes. Remember the commandant of the hostels in “The Adventures of Shurik” and “Moscow Doesn’t Believe in Tears”, the cook from “Honeymoon”? Perhaps this is the most tragic love story from our selection.
Beauty queen and poor student
Zoya Alekseevna's namesake, Oksana Fedorova, also fell in love with a foreigner. In 2007, German Philipp Toft became the husband of Miss Universe. At that time, very candid photographs of the spouses flashed in the press every now and then, not hiding their passion for each other. But due to Philip’s reluctance to move to Moscow, and Oksana to Germany, due to a certain infantilism of the spouse (like many Europeans, at thirty years old he was still a student, and his peer Fedorov was a candidate of sciences and a famous TV presenter), their marriage within a year it was bursting at the seams. Oksana admitted defeat and filed for divorce. She said that an unsuccessful marriage is a loss for both and nothing else.
Oksana Fedorova and Philip Toft. Photo: East News
Homewrecker director
The 15-year union of "Mary Poppins" - actress Natalia Andreichenko and American actor and director Maximilian Schell - ended in a breakup. They met in the mid-80s on the set of the film Peter the Great. She is 29, he is 26 years older... And serious circumstances, at first glance, interfere with the romance: Natalya at that time was married to the composer Maxim Dunaevsky and did not know a word of English. On their first date at a restaurant, the actors simply drew hearts on paper napkins and held hands. But neither the language barrier nor the stamp in Natasha’s passport became an obstacle to love. The actress quickly divorced and, together with her son Mitya, flew overseas. Natalya and Shella’s common daughter, Nastasya, was born there. For what reason this marriage of the actress failed is still unknown. Andreichenko returned to Russia and then moved to Mexico. They managed to remain on friendly terms with Maxim Dunaevsky. He talked about how his ex-wife lives on the pages of TV WEEK.
Natalia Andreichenko and Maximilian Schell. Photo: Oleg Buldakov/TASS
Marriage of two creative personalities
Actress Ingeborga Dapkunaite was also unable to maintain her love for her foreign husband. In 1992, she met British theater director Simon Stokes. After the wedding, the couple settled on the shores of Foggy Albion. Ingeborga successfully played on the theater stage in London and acted in films. Despite the fact that the lovers had a lot in common, the marriage of the two creative personalities broke up. After several years of living separately, the couple officially divorced. Now 54-year-old Dapkunaite is married to 38-year-old lawyer Dmitry Yampolsky.
Ingeborga Dapkunaite and Simon Stokes. Photo: Persona Stars
Can't live without each other
Dina Korzun also linked fate with a creative person, but the union turned out to be strong. In the early 2000s, her chosen one was the Belgian musician, leader of the Esthetic Education group, author and lead singer of the Atlantida project, Louis Frank. The fact that the actress was not free at that time, and her son Timur was growing up, stopped the lovers for a while. Louis moved to Canada, hoping that distance would cool his feelings. But no, in 2001, after two years of separation, he and Dina realized that they could not live without each other. Korzun divorced and married the man she loved. Now the couple lives in London, they have two children together - daughters Sofia (she is 7 years old) and Itala (9 years old).
Dina Korzun and Louis Frank. Photo: Global Look Press
Italian and Russian journalist
The marriage of TV presenter Zhanna Agalakova, popular in the early 2000s, can also be called successful. TV viewers still watch her reports from France on Channel One (Zhanna lives in Paris with her family). She met her future husband, Italian Giorgio Savonna, during a work trip to Suzdal. He ended up in Russia by accident: there were holidays and a lot of free time, and he flew to Moscow with his father, who was invited to an international symposium on the fight against organized crime. His family did not approve of Giorgio’s falling in love with a “Russian journalist” and even threatened to deprive him of his salary (the guy was still a student at that time), but everything ended well. Zhanna managed to pick up the keys to the hearts of future relatives, and she and Giorgio got married in 2002.
Zhanna Agalakova and Giorgio Savonna. Photo: Global Look Press
Music connected them
Opera diva Lyubov Kazarnovskaya and Austrian impresario Robert Roscik lived their whole lives together. They met in the mid-80s, when Robert came to St. Petersburg (then Leningrad) to audition young opera talents. Lyuba worked at the Mariinsky Theater at that time. At first, they and Rostsik were connected only by a great love for music; the romance began a year later, in 1989 they became spouses. But they were able to get married only on the fourth attempt, because in the USSR it was difficult to marry a foreigner, the registry office did not want to accept the application. In addition, Lyuba was summoned to the party and local committees, intimidated and persuaded to leave the foreigner so as not to spoil her career. She chose love and left not Robert, but the theater. Roscik, for the sake of Lyuba and love, had to leave his native Vienna, move to Moscow and focus only on his wife’s career. But, of course, he doesn't regret it. The marriage turned out to be happy. Their son Andrey is 24 years old.
Lyubov Kazarnovskaya and Robert Roscik. Photo: Global Look Press
Love at first sight
Lyudmila Maksakova also managed to create a strong family. True, not immediately, but on the second try. For 43 years she has been married to German citizen Peter Andreas Igenbergs, with whom she gave birth to a daughter, Maria Maksakova. Peters is a native of Prague, the son of a German from Latvia. He fell in love with the actress at first sight and proposed to her almost on the first date. The Soviet government did not put any obstacles in formalizing relations, but Maksakova’s career suffered. For several years she was not given roles in the theater and was not invited to act.
Lyudmila Maksakova and her son Maxim, daughter Maria and husband Peter. Photo: From the personal archive of Lyudmila Maksakova
This incredibly gifted and beautiful woman does not need to be introduced to the reader. The name of Lyubov Kazarnovskaya speaks for itself. Her deep, expressive soprano can be heard in Verdi's "Requiem", the operas "Salome" by Strauss, "Eugene Onegin" by Tchaikovsky, "Manon Lescaut", "Tosca" by Puccini, "Force of Destiny", "La Traviata" by Verdi and many others. Kazarnovskaya has performed at Covent Garden, Metropolitan Opera, Lyric Chicago, San Francisco Opera, Wiener Staatsoper, Teatro Colon, and Houston Grand Opera. Her stage partners were Pavarotti, Domingo, Carreras, Araiza, Nucci, Cappuccilly, Cossotto, von Stade, Baltza, Cura, Alagna. The singer’s daily routine includes concerts in Russia and abroad, filming on television, recordings on the radio, a weekly author’s program “Vocalissimo” at Orpheus, master classes in Moscow and the international academy “Voice and Violin”. The portal's correspondent met with Doctor of Music, Professor Lyubov Yurievna Kazarnovskaya to congratulate her on her 35th anniversary of creative activity and talk about the inextricable connection between creativity and faith in God in the singer’s life.
- Lyubov Yuryevna, tell us how your creative career began?Thirty-five years ago I performed the program “Pushkin for all times,” and they paid attention to me after my first performance. I remember that Irakli Andronikov, Dmitry Likhachev and all the cream of Russian philology were sitting in the hall of the Pushkin Literary Museum. My teacher Nadezhda Matveevna Malysheva-Vinogradova, the widow of the famous Pushkinist academician Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov, who was Chaliapin’s accompanist and studied with Stanislavsky, accompanied me. After graduating from the Moscow Conservatory, I became a soloist of the Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Musical Theater, and later - a leading soloist of the Kirov State Academic Theater - the famous Mariinsky Theater.
- How did your path to the temple, to God begin?
You know, our grandmother, father’s mother, Nadezhda Ivanovna, baptized my sister and me in infancy, at an unconscious age. When dad, who occupied a rather large position, asked her: “Mom, why do you drag your children to church on Saturdays and Sundays?” - she said: “Yurochka, I do everything quietly. Nobody will know anything." And we either went to the Novodevichy Convent or went to the Filippov Church.
Granny, being an incredibly religious person, apparently lit this spark in me
Granny, being an incredibly religious person, apparently lit this spark in me. My grandmother worked very hard, and her son, my dad, was in the care of his aunt. She was never married, raised her dad, and lived with us. My father’s aunt, like our grandmother, graduated from both a regular and an Orthodox gymnasium; both have been believers since time immemorial.
There were icons on the shelf in my grandmother’s room. I really loved one of them (it was an icon of Seraphim of Sarov). I came up and asked: “Grandma, who is this old man and why is he standing like that with a stick, bent over?” And she told me everything. I read his life when I was four and a half years old. For me it was such an amazingly light topic. Then we went to the Tretyakov Gallery a lot. And I, little, always stopped in front of Nesterov’s painting “Appearance to the Youth Bartholomew.”
-Have you kept this childhood faith further?There was always faith in the family, but it somehow faded into the background. This was Soviet times. My studies came first, a lot of classes, concerts, performances... My dad and mom were members of the party. Since dad always held quite responsible positions, mom, as the wife of a responsible worker, was simply forced to join the party. And conscious faith came to me when perestroika and the collapse of the Soviet Union began.
- Did something push you to do this?
My mother is dying. I am in such a state that I don’t want to sing or do anything else, I don’t want anything at all... The devastation is complete. Mom was so adequate, so young at heart, that I perceived her as my friend, I could tell her everything. When she was gone, I realized that my only salvation, besides having a husband friend nearby, was in God. I simply came to the temple and said: “Let Your will be done. I will sing, I won’t, but give me strength, because I can’t live.” I started to sing something and saw her sitting on the sofa... When my mother was alive, I told her: “You are my corridor pulpit.” She cried, gave some wise advice, and let everything I do pass through her.
She left so suddenly, so tragically for me... I was in Vienna, my husband Robert was in Moscow. He calls me: “You urgently need to fly to Moscow!” I ask: “Is something wrong with mom?” - “Yes.” But he didn't tell me that she left. He was just then preparing a concert for Placido Domingo, who came to Moscow. Dad was at the dacha and arrived at 7 am. He was in a completely foggy state. I arrived and realized that I needed to look for support somewhere. I didn't even really have anyone to talk to. The sister received one of her first contracts in France and Switzerland. She taught French grammar. Although she also flew in before the funeral, I had no one to pour out my grief to.
- And then you went to the temple?
Father gave me absolutely amazing advice: “You know, only time... This grief will not go away, but it will push away this pain, this acuteness.”
Yes, I talked very seriously with the priest. We sat with him for a very long time, and he gave me absolutely amazing advice: “You know, only time... This grief will not go away, but it will push away this pain, this severity.”
It was so important to me then, at that moment, that I immersed myself in religion, bought a prayer book, began to read prayers for everyone every day, pray for my father, for my sister, for Robert. And it was then that my husband decided to convert from Catholicism to Orthodoxy. He was baptized on March 1, his birthday, and this is the day of remembrance of Patriarch Hermogenes. Robert was given this name.
Since then, faith has become an inseparable part of my life. Without praying, I didn’t want to leave the house, I didn’t want to talk to anyone. It came into my life without any hesitation or antics. And I understand that, probably, for a creative person this is existence. I believe that all of us, creative people, are kissed on the top of the head - some more, some less. For some, faith is their daily breath, for others it is an attribute, but, one way or another, a creative person cannot exist without faith.
Lyubov Yuryevna, now special days are coming in the life of a believer - days of fasting. What does this time mean to you?
For me, this is a kind of turnaround. I know that the fast will end and miracles will happen in my life. Fasting is a search for oneself, one’s own path to understanding the great, diverse facets of the Creator. And this is possible only in prayer, in silence, in focusing on the inner world, calming the flesh. Then the spirit comes to life, and the feeling of your individual inner “I” begins to awaken, not clogged with the opinions and attitudes of the world around you, your eyes open.
If you pray, the help is incredible!
For a creative person who does not imitate spiritual work, but is a servant of art, this is a way of life. Constant spiritual work, searching, mastering great texts, creating images inside and then embodying them on stage. For artists, embodiment is in paintings. For writers, it is in the birth of the text. If the spirit is “clogged” with unnecessary fuss, aggression, irritation, slander, hatred, envy, and at the same time Lenten meals are observed, this is not fasting, but a diet and self-soothing: “Like, I am fasting.” And presence at church services also does not save low souls from spiritual emptiness. Unfortunately, sometimes we see on stage spiritual emptiness, Jesuitism and distance from God.
Co-creation with God is a great work, limiting the whims of the “ego”. Immersion in the inner work of body and spirit, fasting work is like prayer. And if you pray, the help is incredible! Working on “aligning” oneself, a sense of duty and at the same time freedom - this is the truth that arises when the spirit takes the path of getting rid of false ideals, when the desire to please one’s “ego” recedes. This is what fasting is. This is a great thing.
I read in books that both in pre-Petrine times and under Peter I, during Great Lent in Russia they fasted like this: for 40 days only bread and water. And people knew what they were doing - even those who worked in the fields, and this is a lot of physical labor. So all this is nonsense, that “there will be no strength.” If a person consciously enters both spiritual and, so to speak, “dining fasting,” completely different forces awaken in him.
- How did you fast in your family?
I remember my grandmothers. During the morning, the morning began with turi - black bread cut into tea, for lunch empty cabbage soup and porridge with water, and dinner - either empty tea or tea with crackers. It's iron. This is how we lived for 40 days of Lent. Nothing. When the neighbors asked the grandmother: “Nadezhda Ivanovna, don’t you even bake pies?” She answered: “No, I don’t bake pies. I'm not tempted. Pies should be fluffy and tasty. I’ll definitely add something there, but that’s all.”
Grandma didn’t feel sick at heart, she always smiled. She was incredibly kind
When we were sick, my grandmother would say: “Baby, drink some tea with lemon or raspberry jam poured over with boiling water.” My grandmother was never sick and didn’t know what a virus was. She was already approaching 80 years old. She didn’t feel sick at heart, she always smiled. She was incredibly kind. They went to her as if they were a psychologist: “Nadezhda Ivanovna, what should I do? What to do here? My husband scolded me." - “And you forgive him, mentally cross him and say: “The Lord is with you!” I love you"". - “Oh, Nadezhda Ivanovna, thank you. Everything was suddenly resolved.”
During Lent, my teacher Nadezhda Matveevna Malysheva-Vinogradova treated me to cold, lightly baked millet, which she sprinkled with freshly grated berries - raspberries, blackberries, currants. She prepared it herself. She drank “fig coffee” - barley with chicory - and said: “I feel great.” But neither for her, nor for my grandmothers, nor for my family - not only and not so much a Lenten meal. If we are talking only about meals, this is a diet. She has nothing to do with the post. For me, faith is something more than churching and piety. It's much more than that. This is the volume of my heart and soul. This is my being. This is my life.
We are talking about Krasnopresnenskaya embankment; in the White House area, Maria Maksakova has an apartment that she purchased before her marriage. By the way, this is where the artist lived with her husband Denis Voronenkov recently before leaving for Ukraine. Now supposedly no one lives in the apartments. However, Maksakova was seen here quite recently.
ON THE TOPIC
“Literally a couple of weeks ago, she drank coffee with us and had an omelet for breakfast,” the Komsomolskaya Pravda website quotes the words of a waitress from a restaurant in the same building, literally door to door from Maksakova’s entrance.
When journalists asked a clarifying question whether the girl really saw the opera diva, she confidently confirmed her words. “Of course! I’ve known her for a long time, she’s our regular customer. The last time she was wearing curlers. But even the curlers looked very beautiful on her, under such a cheerful hat,” said the employee of the establishment.
Meanwhile, the media began to think that Maksakova suspiciously quickly ended up at the scene of her husband’s murder. After all, usually until the completion of operational investigative actions, relatives are not allowed close to the murdered. And here a woman in a state of shock is filmed by dozens of television cameras, notes the Zvezda TV channel.
By the way, the public is concerned about the future of Maria Maksakova. In particular, on the Internet, users are discussing what a newly-made widow should do now: stay in Ukraine, return to Russia or go to Germany (after all, Maria Maksakova has German citizenship). According to a colleague of the opera diva Lyubov Kazarnovskaya, the second option is most suitable for Maria.
“If Masha finds the right words and the right form to explain herself to the Russians, to tell why she and Denis spoke impartially about our country, why they had such a grudge, then I think that Russia will take her back. We have always accepted returning prodigal sons. I feel sorry for Masha and her mother, Lyudmila Vasilievna. The murder of Voronenkov is terrible, a great grief. If I were Masha, I would return to her homeland, she has a good family, her relatives are here, whose support she really needs now. I hope she will find the right words. , to explain everything to us..." - Lyubov Kazarnovskaya is quoted by Sobesednik.
Let us remind you that Denis Voronenkov was killed on March 23 in the center of Kyiv, when he was heading to a meeting with Ponomarev. The killer hit him several times - the injuries were fatal. The criminal was seriously wounded by Voronenkov's security guard and died on the operating table when doctors performed craniotomy on him.
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