Irena Anders


Irena Renata Anders, born Iryna Renata Jarosiewicz , was a Polish stage actress and singer. During World War II she performed with Henryk Wars' troupe and later with the Polska Parada band, entertaining the Polish Armed Forces in the West. She was one of the first singers to perform the anthem, Czerwone maki na Monte Cassino.

Life and career

She was born as Iryna Yarosevych into a Ukrainian family in Bruntál, where her father Mykola Yarosevych was a chaplain for Greek-catholic soldiers in the Austro-Hungarian army. Her mother Olena Yarosevych came from a Ukrainian family which counted theater artists and musicians as their members, was the native sister of composer Ostap Nyzhankivsky and opera singer Oleksandr Nyzhankivsky. Right before the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the proclamation of West Ukrainian People's Republic, the family returned home where her father became chaplain of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen and later was a priest in the villages Sapohiv and Bryn. In 1926 the family moved to Lviv, where Iryna went to a Greek Catholic gymnasium and Ukrainian trading school. From 1929 to 1939 she also studied in the Lysenko Lviv Musical Institute, in her cousin Nestor Nyzhankivsky's fortepiano class, and later in the vocal class of Mariya Sokil and Lidiya Ulukhanova.
She used the stage name Renata Bogdańska. After World War II, she remained in the United Kingdom. In 1948, she married General Władysław Anders.
She starred in several movies. In 2003, a documentary film was made about her. On 12 May 2007, the Polish president, Lech Kaczyński awarded Anders the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, "for outstanding contribution to the independence of the Polish Republic, for Polish community and social activities" .
She died at age 90 from a heart attack on 29 November 2010, in London.

Family

Her parents were the Greek Catholic priest Mykola Yarosevych and his wife Olena Yarosevych. Her father before World War I had Russophile views, for which, after the war broke out, the Austrian government sent him to Talerhof Concentration Camp. After the war he became Ukrainophile. On her mother's side she came from a family of Ukrainian nobles of patriotic and musical traditions. Her mother's brothers were Ukrainian composer, singer and politician Ostap Nyzhankivsky, and Ukrainian composer and opera singer Oleksandr Nyzhankivsky. Her cousins were Ukrainian composer and pianist Nestor Nizhankivsky, and Ukrainian composer and music author of March of Ukrainian Nationalists Omelian Nyzhankivsky. In her youth she participated in Ukrainian Scouts Organisation, as did her brother Anatol, who was in the same group as Roman Shukhevych. Brother Stepan was killed in the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.

Selected discography

Gramophone (78 rpm) records