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Olga
Baclanova
They called her the
Russian Tigress. Olga Baclanova (pronounced bahk-LAH-no-vah), sultry Russian actress of stage and
film, is best known today for her film appearances as Cleopatra, the
evil trapeze artist, in the legendary cult film Freaks (1932), and
as the seductive Duchess Josiana in the influential Universal silent
The Man Who Laughs (1928).
Olga's career began with a
meteoric rise as a student actress in Russia’s Moscow Art Theatre in the
1910’s, followed by an ascension to the pinnacle of success under the Soviet
regime. In 1925, her life was forever changed when she toured America and chose to stay, leaving an increasingly oppressive homeland behind
for a gamble at success in America, knowing she would never see her
family or homeland again. After performing in the stage spectacle
The Miracle, Hollywood began to notice and offer her strong
supporting roles in late silents such as The Man Who Laughs and
The Docks of New York (1928).
After a brief stardom in
1929, Olga's heavy Russian accent qualified her for featured character roles in
early talkie films such as Freaks and the rarely-seen masterpiece Downstairs (1932). By the early 1930's,
she would return to the stage, performing on Broadway, the West Coast
stage, and in roadshow tours, and finally in a tremendously successful
two-year run in the stage hit Claudia, which would be filmed in
1943 with Olga performing her stage role.
Olga
Baclanova: The Ultimate Cinemantrap
introduces this exotic blonde temptress to the web for the first time. |