ACTOR

Barbara Brylska

1941 - Today

Photo of Barbara Brylska

Icon of person Barbara Brylska

Barbara Brylska (born 5 June 1941) is a Polish actress who gained critical acclaim in 1960s and was featured in numerous films throughout the countries of the Warsaw Pact including the Soviet Union. Read more on Wikipedia

Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Barbara Brylska has received more than 184,191 page views. Her biography is available in 23 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 20 in 2019). Barbara Brylska is the 1,077th most popular actor (up from 1,174th in 2019), the 335th most popular biography from Poland (up from 345th in 2019) and the 7th most popular Polish Actor.

Memorability Metrics

  • 180k

    Page Views (PV)

  • 58.39

    Historical Popularity Index (HPI)

  • 23

    Languages Editions (L)

  • 3.33

    Effective Languages (L*)

  • 2.96

    Coefficient of Variation (CV)

Page views of Barbara Brylskas by language

Over the past year Barbara Brylska has had the most page views in the with 196,541 views, followed by Polish (99,187), and English (24,230). In terms of yearly growth of page views the top 3 wikpedia editions are Estonian (1,159.26%), Tajik (137.61%), and Italian (76.75%)

Among ACTORS

Among actors, Barbara Brylska ranks 1,077 out of 13,578Before her are Bernard Blier, Kathryn Joosten, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Rosemary Harris, Joan Plowright, and Amrish Puri. After her are Hema Malini, Stacy Keach, Pedro Infante, Megan Fox, Tchéky Karyo, and Robert Ryan.

Most Popular Actors in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1941, Barbara Brylska ranks 122Before her are Goh Chok Tong, Jorge Solari, Infante Alfonso of Spain, Peter Coyote, Adrian Lyne, and Barbet Schroeder. After her are Stacy Keach, Ahmed Shafik, Gunpei Yokoi, Florinda Bolkan, Raúl Ruiz, and Martha Stewart.

Others Born in 1941

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In Poland

Among people born in Poland, Barbara Brylska ranks 335 out of 1,694Before her are Ewald Georg von Kleist (1700), Kurt Schumacher (1895), Mieczysław Weinberg (1919), Eberhard von Mackensen (1889), Tommy Wiseau (1955), and Tekla Bądarzewska-Baranowska (1834). After her are Casimir Pulaski (1745), Hans Karl von Diebitsch (1785), Leopold Infeld (1898), Roman Dmowski (1864), Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff (1699), and Johann Daniel Titius (1729).

Among ACTORS In Poland

Among actors born in Poland, Barbara Brylska ranks 7Before her are Klaus Kinski (1926), Pola Negri (1897), Hanna Schygulla (1943), Lilli Palmer (1914), Daniel Olbrychski (1945), and Tommy Wiseau (1955). After her are Anny Ondra (1903), Dita Parlo (1906), Aleksander Krupa (1947), Paul Wegener (1874), Beata Tyszkiewicz (1938), and Janusz Gajos (1939).

Television and Movie Roles

The Irony of Fate. The Sequel
Nadezhda Vasilevna
Zhenya and Nadya go their separate ways. Nadya stuck with her bureaucrat boyfriend, married him and had a daughter, also called Nadya. Zhenya married and had a son, Konstantin. Both later divorced. More than 30 years later, Konstantin ends up drunk in the flat where the younger Nadya finds him. He is there as part of a convoluted ruse by his father's friends to get Zhenya back into the arms of the woman with whom he shared a magical night. The waylaid son is the bait to get Zhenya back to Leningrad, now called St. Petersburg. One romance is rekindled and another between the son and daughter is struck up.
Pharaoh
Kama
Young Pharaoh Ramses XIII clashes with Egypt's clergy over influence on the affairs of the state and its coffers. inexperienced, but quite ambitious pharaoh is putting up a fight against a powerful clan of priests usurping rule over the country.
The Irony of Fate, or Enjoy Your Bath!
Надя Шевелёва
A group of old friends have a tradition of going to a public bathing house on New Year's Eve. Occasionally too much vodka and beer makes two of them unconscious. The problem is that one of them (Sasha) has to go to Leningrad but another one (Zhenya) goes. Zhenya wakes up at Leningrad airport. Believing that he is still in Moscow he takes a taxi and goes home. The street name, building and even apartment number, the way an apartment complex looks the same and the key coincide completely - just typical Soviet-type 'economy' architecture. Imagine the surprise of Nadya when she enters her apartment and finds a man without trousers in her bed. What's more - Nadya's fiancé also finds him there...