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Mira Stupica

Mira Stupica
Stevan Kragujevic, Vera Segan, Mira Stupica, Mira Trailovic, snimanje drame u Radio Beogradu, 1950s.JPG
Stupica, center, with Vera Šegan and Mira Trailović during a radio drama taping at Radio Belgrade in the 1950s.
Born Miroslava Todorović
(1923-08-17)17 August 1923
Gnjilane, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Died 19 August 2016(2016-08-19) (aged 93)
Belgrade, Serbia
Occupation Actress
Years active 1940–2016
Spouse(s)
  • Milivoj "Mavid" Popović
    (m. 1943; div. 1947)
  • Bojan Stupica
    (m. 1948; d. 1970)
  • Cvijetin Mijatović
    (m. 1973; d. 1993)
Children 1

Miroslava "Mira" Stupica (Serbian Cyrillic: Мира Ступица; née Todorović; 17 August 1923 – 19 August 2016) was a Serbian actress best known for her work in the theater, but also had extensive career on television and in films. Enjoying the enduring popularity for over 60 years and celebrated as the ‘actress of the century’ by her peers, she is considered one of the best Serbian actresses of all times.

Miroslava Todorović was born in Gnjilane, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes as the first child of Serb parents — Danica Stanišić from Livno and Radomir Todorović from Orašac, both gymnasium professors assigned to teach in Gnjilane at the time. After Miroslava, the couple had three more children, three sons: Predrag (died at the age of two), Zoran (died at the age of three), and Borivoje who later went on to become a famous and accomplished actor himself.

Following the couple's teaching postings, the family later moved to Gornji Milanovac, in central Serbia, where Miroslava's father, a talented violinist, died young in 1932, and then to Aranđelovac, before eventually settling in Belgrade where Mira graduated secondary school at the city's Trade Academy (Trgovačka akademija).

Todorović began acting during high school by enrolling in and completing the Artistic Theatre's acting studio in Belgrade, where she soon began acting professionally in 1940 after being noticed by Viktor Starčić. In 1941 she moved to Belgrade's National Theatre. Her early career, just like her personal life at the time, centered around then popular and established actor Milivoj "Mavid" Popović who became her husband in 1943. The couple had a daughter Mina before their four-year marriage ended. During and after World War II, she acted in theatres in Šabac (1943–45) and Niš (1945-47), after which she returned to the National Theatre in Belgrade.


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