Larisa Mondrus


Larisa Israelevna Mondrus is a Soviet singer, who was popular in the USSR in the 1960s. In 1973 she emigrated to West Germany.

Biography

Mondrus graduated from school and in 1962 started singing in the Riga Variety Orchestra. Soon she was noticed and moved to Moscow, where joined the Eddie Rosner Jazz Orchestra. In 1964 she started performing and recording with the orchestra that was directed by her husband, Egil Schwarz. Her first success was the song "Ticket to Childhood". From 1968 to 1972 she was a soloist with the Mosconcert concert organization. One of her most popular songs was "Siniy Lyon", composed by Raimonds Pauls. She was one of the first singers in the Soviet Union to do a dance while singing, something that was not approved of back then, in the 1960s.
In 1971, at the whim of Sergey Lapin, Chairman of the USSR State Committee for Radio and Television, Larisa Mondrus, along with several other singers of Jewish descent, was de facto barred from appearing on television. Even though she continued to tour with Egil Schwartz's Orchestra a lot, she and her husband finally decided to emigrate and in 1973 emigrated to the Federal Republic of Germany, where she continued her career as a singer, recording several albums for Polydor.
In 1982, upon the birth of her son, Loren, she retired from the music industry. She became a grandmother to twins, a boy and a girl, in 2015.

Selected filmography

;As a singer