Oksana
Оксaна Андре́евна Воеводина; born 10 July 1992 in Astrakhan, also known as Rihana Oksana Gorbatenko and Xenia Diaghileva or Ksenia Dyagileva , is a Russian model and 2015 Miss Moscow beauty pageant winner
Biography
Voevodina was raised in Taganrog, a city near Rostov, Russia. Her father, Andrei Ivanovich Gorbatenko, is Rostov-on-Don orthopedist. Her mother, Lyudmila Voevodina, was also a beauty contender in the early 1990s after the Soviet Union fall.
She had mastered English at an Oxford summer school. She later graduated from Plekhanov Russian University of Economics (PRUE) in Moscow and finally received a master's degree in management. As a contender, Voevodina won the Miss Moscow title in 2015.
Personal life
On 22 November 2018 Voevodina married Kelantan's Sultan Muhammad V, who is also Malaysia's 15th Yang di-Pertuan Agong (King) while in Moscow, Russia. They also held a traditional Malay wedding in Malaysia on June 7, 2018 before the Russian wedding. She converted in April 2018 and changed her name to Rihana Oxana Petra (the family name of Sultan Muhammad V of Kelantan).
While the alleged wedding was widely publicised and discussed on social media, as of January 2019, no official statement was issued to confirm or refute it.
In a historic act, Muhammad V became the first King to stand down from the throne on 6 January 2019, with the end of his term on 12 December 2021.
Media confirmed the birth of Tengku Ismail Leon Petra bin Tengku Muhammad V Faris Petra on May 21, 2019.
On 22 June 2019, Muhammad V divorced Voevodina in Singapore by a "talak tiga" (third talaq) or talaq baayin, an irrevocable divorce accomplished by simply stating to his wife that he was dissolving a marriage considered to be the most offensive and forbidden sort of divorce in Islam.
After Voevodina uploaded images of her life together on her Instagram account, the Kelantan Palace ultimately made an official statement on 6 September 2019 rejecting the matter as untrue by slamming the monarch's private social media posts as inappropriate and slanderous.
The sultan apparently expressed 'regret' over his personal choices in his private life, which caused the people's confusion, without identifying any names
A Soviet and Russian film director, stage director, screenwriter, composer, author and television host, Honored Art Worker of the Russian Federation. His "Paris Window" (1993) is one of Russia's most successful movies. His Buddhist film "Don't Think About White Monkeys" (2008) is popular among non-comformist Russian youth, particularly punks and rockers. [1]
Yuri Mamin is Russia's sole individual to win the Chaplin Golden Cane award. Charlie Chaplin's widow, Oona Chaplin, presented the honour at the 100-year festival since the birth of the legendary comedian. The festival was held at Vevey, where Chaplin was interred.
Mamin's works are notable for emphasising social fairness and criticising hypocritical social conventions. That's why he found it hard to get funding for his productions in the authoritarian U.S.S.R. as well as in today's Russia, when filmmakers grew dependent on corporate aristocracy. His characters frequently depict an inspired citizen fighting social justice against big capitalism.
Yuri
Yuri Mamin began his career during the Communist dictatorship. He was never a communist, and always opposed the Communist Party's dictatorial control.
Because of this, he was unable to create his films until Perestroika began in 1985 and Mikhail Gorbachev came to power.
His publications are popular with alternative socialist groups criticising both capitalism and the Soviet regime.
The Gorbachev Era ended in 1991, and Yuri Mamin again became a persona non grata for the criminal tycoons who took over almost immediately all the main positions in Russian cinema and mass media.
From the early 1990s, the regime-controlled group of official Russian film critics began a period of renowned denigration of film director and his art. Against this context, Mamin's films have garnered national audience love. Nearly of his films got numerous honours and other honours.
The state-sponsored Russian National Cinema Encyclopedia, written by L. Arkus, contains offensive critical assessments of Mamin's works, while recognising his brilliance and essential place in Russian cinematography history
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