Oksana Mysina
- Actress
- Director
- Editor
Oksana Mysina is one of Russia's most multi-faceted actors, working in
feature films, television and theater. Since her cinematic debut in
1988 with "Miss Millionaress," directed by Alexander Rogozhkin, she has
made her reputation by evolving her own unique style of mixing elements
of tragedy and comedy into each of her roles while also achieving great
psychological veracity. Critics, often struggling to describe Mysina's
distinctive presence, have compared her to an enormous range of great
actresses past and present, including Giulietta Masina, Meryl Streep,
the legendary Russian actresses Faina Ranevskaya, Serafima Birman, Inna
Churikova and others. However, as her career has developed, it has
become clear that Mysina is a personality unto herself. The first film
in which she achieved wide recognition was Vadim Abdrashitov's "Pyesa
dlya passazhira" (Play for a Passenger, 1994), a winner of the Silver
Bear at the Berlin Film Festival in 1995. Her performances as a poetic
suicide in Yury Moroz's "Kamenskaya" (2000) and a troubled single woman
in Yelena Tsyplakova's 24-episode mini-series "Semeinye tainy" (Family
Secrets, 2001) brought her national fame, while her interpretation of
the empress Maria Fyodorovna in "Bednyy, bednyy Pavel" (Poor, Poor
Pavel, 2003) has brought her numerous awards. Her talent for eccentric
comedy was on display in "Pan ili Propal" (All or Nothing, 2004) while
her knack for subtle comedy was evident in "Vyanet-propadaet"
(Wilting-Losing, 2004). She presently has appeared in approximately 40
feature and television films and, in 2020, launched her career as a film director, creating experimental films, shorts, documentaries and dramas. In theater Mysina has performed to
acclaim throughout the world, including such prestigious festivals as
Avignon, the Berliner Festspiele, BITEF and others. Her performances of
the title role in "Dear Yelena Sergeyevna" at Chicago's Victory Gardens
Theater in 1990 was instrumental in that show being named one of the
season's top events by the Chicago Sun-Times. Following sold-out
performances of her legendary one-woman show "K.I. From 'Crime'" at
Bard College's Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts in
2003, this show was invited to perform at the Foundry Theatre in New
York City in 2005. In addition to founding her own theater, the
Oksana Mysina Theatrical Brotherhood (2001-2010), she fronted her own
rock band Oksana Mysina and Oxy Rocks from 2003 to 2018, handling vocals, performing on the violin and
guitar and writing songs. She left Russia in 2018 and has lived ever since in Greece.