Tamara_Gverdtsiteli

Tamara Gverdtsiteli

Tamara Gverdtsiteli

Georgian Singer (born 1962)


Tamara Gverdtsiteli (Georgian: თამარ გვერდწითელი, Russian: Тамара Михайловна Гвердцители; born 18 January 1962) is a Georgian, Israeli, Soviet and Russian singer, actress and composer. People's Artist of Georgia (1991) and Russia (2004)[1]

Quick Facts Tamara Gverdtsiteliთამარ გვერდწითელი PAR, Born ...

Early life and education

Gverdtsiteli was born on 18 January 1962 in Tbilisi, in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic. Her father came from a Georgian aristocratic family, and her mother was Inna Kofman, a Jewish woman and granddaughter of a rabbi from Odessa.[2]

Gverdtsiteli graduated from the music school at the piano department of the Tbilisi State Conservatoire. In the early 1970s, she became a soloist of a children's music group called Mziuri, with which she toured the countries of Soviet Union. The singer sang in this formation for the next seven years.[3]

Career

At the age of 19, Gverdtsiteli finished in second place at the All-Union Festival in Dnepropetrovsk and won the international competition "Red Carnation" in Sochi. The songs "Music" (V. Azarashvili, M. Potskhishvili) and "Blossom, my land" brought her to fame.[2] In 1982, she took part in a popular music competition in Dresden, in 1988 she won the Golden Orpheus song contest, then performed as a guest artist at the festivals in Sopot and Sanremo. Since 1987, Gverdtsiteli has acted as a jury member of music festivals.

In 1991, Gverdtsiteli was invited by her French agent to Paris, where she met Michel Legrand and Jean Dréjac. At the same time, a contract was signed with Legrand and her first concert took place at the Olympia. Legrand, introducing the three-thousandth hall, said: "Paris! Remember this name." In Gverdtsiteli's repertoire, songs of civil sound coexisted with elegiac, lyrical songs. Gradually, more and more songs of her own composition appeared. Of the major events of her creative life, her solo concerts include at Olympia (Paris, 1994), with the A. Kozlov Ensemble at Carnegie Hall (New York, 1995), Michel Legrand Presents Tamara Gverdtsiteli (New York, 1996).[2]

From 2007 to 2008, Gverdtsiteli was a member of the Supreme Council of the Civilian Power party. In 2010, she performed the part of Carmen on the stage of the Dnepropetrovsk Opera House with the Milanese baritone Giovanni Ribichesu.[4]

In 2014, Gverdtsiteli became a judge in The Voice of Ukraine, the Ukrainian version of The Voice.[5] She was also a judge in The Voice Senior in 2020.

In the spring of 2022, Gverdtsiteli temporarily stopped performing in Russia.[6][7]

Personal life

Gverdtsiteli has been married three times. Her first husband was Giorgi Kakhabrishvili, director and vice-chairman of the Georgian Public Broadcasting.[2] The couple got married in 1984, and in 1986, their only son, Alexander, was born.[8] In 1995, the couple divorced after eleven years of marriage. Gverdtsiteli's second husband was a lawyer named Dmitry Breslav,[9][10] with whom she moved to Boston.[11] A few months later, however, Breslav died of heart failure.[12] Her third husband was cardiac surgeon Sergei Ambatelo. The couple divorced in December 2005.[13]

On 12 July 2000, Gverdtsiteli received Russian citizenship.[14]

Discography

  • 1982 – Debyut. Tamara Gverdtsiteli (min'on)
  • 1985 – Muzyka: poyot Tamara Gverdtsiteli
  • 1992 — Tamara Gverdtsiteli poyot svoi pesni
  • 1994 — Vivat, Korol'!
  • 1996 — Spasibo, Muzyka, tebe!
  • 2000 — Luchshiye pesni raznykh let
  • 2001 — Posvyashcheniye Zhenshchine
  • 2002 — Vivat, Lyubov', Vivat!
  • 2002 — Mne vchera prisnilos' nebo
  • 2003 — Izbrannoye
  • 2004 — Muzyka — Khram Dushi
  • 2008 — Vozdushnyy potseluy
  • 2008 — MP3-al'bom Izbrannoye
  • 2009 — The Best (2 CD)
  • 2016 — Tamara Gverdtsiteli
  • 2017 — Momele

References

  1. Vladimir Putin (18 November 2004). "Decree of the President of Russia No.1455" [Указ Президента Российской Федерации о награждении государственными наградами Российской Федерации] (in Russian). Moscow, Russia: Russian presidential administration, Kremlin.ru. p. 3. Archived from the original on 31 March 2014. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
  2. Уварова Е. Д. (2004). Эстрада в России. XX век. Энциклопедия. Олма-Пресс. ISBN 5-224-04462-6.

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