
Melina Mercouri
Known for department: Acting
Birthday: 1920-10-18 – 1994-03-06
Place of birth: Athens, Greece
Biography
Maria Amalia "Melina" Mercouri (Greek: Μαρία Αμαλία "Μελίνα" Μερκούρη, 18 October 1920 – 6 March 1994) was a Greek actress, singer, activist, and politician. She came from a prominent political family for multiple generations. She received an Academy Award nomination and won a French Cannes Film Festival Best Actress Award for her performance in the film Never on Sunday (1960) and an Italian David di Donatello for Topkapi. Mercouri was also nominated for one Tony Award, three Golden Globes, and two BAFTA Awards in her acting career. In 1987 she was awarded a special prize in the first edition of the Europe Theatre Prize. Mercouri was a member of the Hellenic Parliament, elected as a representative of PASOK. In October 1981, she became the first female Minister of Culture and Sports. She has the longest tenure of any of Greece's Ministers of Culture, having served from 1981 to 1989, and then from 1993 until her death in 1994, during PASOK governments. Mercouri's political activism included her long campaign for the return of the Parthenon Marbles. One of her greatest achievements was the establishment of the European Capitals of Culture, with Athens chosen as the first capital in 1985. Description above from the Wikipedia article Melina Mercouri, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for

10:30 P.M. Summer
1966Maria
The Victors
1963Magda
Topkapi
1964Elizabeth Lipp
Never on Sunday
1960Ilya
Phaedra
1962Phaedra Kyrilis
A Dream of Passion
1978Maya / Medea
Stella
1955Stella
The Law
1959Donna Lucrezia
The Last Judgment
1961Foreign lady
Once Is Not Enough
1975Karla
Nasty Habits
1977Sister Gertrude
Gaily, Gaily
1969Lil
The Gypsy and the Gentleman
1958Belle
A Man Could Get Killed
1966Aurora / Celeste da Costa
The Uninhibited
1965Jenny
Promise at Dawn
1970Nina Kacewa
The Rehearsal
1974Self
Melina's fight for the Parthenon sculptures
2017Self (archive footage)
He Who Must Die
1957Katerina