Dusan Petrovich biography. Ekaterina Andreeva: biography, personal life, husband, children, daughter (photo)

  • 13.08.2019

Ekaterina Andreeva is well known and loved by Channel One viewers. Since 1997 she has been a permanent presenter information program"Time". Fans admire the woman’s impressiveness, beauty and excellent diction.

Catherine's husband - Dusan Perovic

The star has said more than once that she is lucky to have her husband. She married a second time to a businessman from Montenegro, Dusan Perovic, and is very happily married.

They met in 1989. Dushan came to Moscow on business matters, and accidentally saw Andreeva on the air of the Vremya program. It was love at first sight. Through journalist acquaintances, he found out who this beauty was and began actively courting her.

Interestingly, at the time of the meeting with the girl, the businessman knew only a few words in Russian.

For the sake of his beloved, he began to actively study a complex language, gave bouquets and gifts. And a few months later, Catherine agreed to marry him. They got married in the same 1989, and have been living happily together for many years.

Photo: Instagram @ekaterinaandreeva_official

The couple loves to attend the theater and opera, but Dusan is indifferent to social events. In addition, the TV presenter tries not to advertise her personal life, and very rarely posts joint photos for the general public.

Daughter of Ekaterina Andreeva - Natasha

Natalya is the daughter of Ekaterina Andreeva from her first marriage. Who is her father and how long the star was married - nothing is known about this. But it is well known that Natasha is very similar to her mother.

Photo: Instagram @ekaterinaandreeva_official

In 2017, Andreeva’s daughter turned 35 years old. She graduated from school well, studied at the Faculty of Law of the Moscow Institute of International Relations, where she studied finance and law. After graduating from university, Natalya went to work in her specialty.

The girl prefers to earn a living on her own. As she herself once said: “It is unacceptable to sit on your parents’ neck.”

Natalya immediately developed an excellent relationship with her mother’s second husband, Dusan Perovic. She considers him her father. According to the girl, Dusan constantly gave her gifts, but that’s not the main thing. What is more important is that he was always ready to listen to her and, if necessary, give advice or come to the rescue.

Photo: Instagram @ekaterinaandreeva_official

The three of us love to travel. Favorite place holidays - Africa. In this state they spend all their vacations, as well as holidays and long weekends.

Unexpected confession of Ekaterina Andreeva

The famous TV presenter said in a frank interview that she often forgets dates. According to her, her family and friends know this feature, and they are not offended if Catherine forgets to congratulate them on their birthday. The star doesn’t even know how many years she has been married to Dusan Perovic. As she herself said: “I just don’t count the years.”

The presenter talked about the peculiarities of working on television, revealed a couple of her beauty secrets and talked a little about her relationship with her husband. "He wonderful person. Simply ideal. He taught me patience, listening and hearing other people,” said Ekaterina.

Ekaterina Andreeva is a woman worthy of admiration. At 55, she looks wonderful, actively works and relaxes, while still managing to be a caring wife and mother. The star does not often post photos of her family on Instagram; she does not like to show her personal life to the public.

The girl’s father worked as deputy chairman of the USSR State Supply Committee, and her mother was a housewife. By the way, Catherine has younger sister Svetlana.

Unknown childhood

At first, Ekaterina Andreeva lived on Kutuzovsky Prospekt, later on Leninsky, and then in the center. One way or another, the Kremlin has always been nearby. As a child, the girl even thought that she lived in the Spasskaya Tower. When Katya first came to kindergarten, then she told the teacher so. The kindergarten workers became alarmed and began to find out who the new girl’s parents were and whether she needed special care. By the way, when it turned out that Andreeva had lied about her position in society, then, in her own words, she got it badly. However, Catherine herself is sure that she was not lying, because it actually seemed to her that she was living in the Kremlin.

As a child, Katya Andreeva was quite slim. She was fond of basketball, and even studied for some time at an Olympic reserve school. By the way, pregnancy and childbirth did not affect the presenter’s figure in any way.

However, in her fifth year at the institute, while Ekaterina was writing her diploma and leading a fairly sedentary lifestyle, something terrible happened. The journalist herself recalls this nightmare with a shudder. She weighed about 80 kilograms. However, for her height (at that time about 170 cm), she did not look at all ugly fat, at least it seemed so to her.

“I was big: large face, powerful neck and arms. I realized that I’m not big, but simply huge, after weighing myself,” the presenter grins.

“I could easily sit in the kitchen in the evening and eat a frying pan fried potatoes with chicken, eat it all with a jar of pattisons, for example, and wash it down with tea and mother’s pies. I didn’t realize that I was getting better. There were no scales in the house. If someone wants to keep themselves “in the body,” then scales are a must at home; you can’t rely on clothes,” says Ekaterina Andreeva.

Then Catherine started going to the gym and went on a diet. In four years she lost 20 kilograms. By the way, old weight never returned. Now Andreeva knows better than ever what patience means. And diet and fitness have already become firmly established in her life.

It is worth noting that Ekaterina Andreeva graduated from the Krupskaya Moscow Pedagogical Institute in 1990, and also studied at the All-Union Legal Correspondence Institute, and after that she even worked at General Prosecutor's Office. There she was listed in the records management department of the investigative department.

Television career

Ekaterina Andreeva had a direct path to the profession of a lawyer, historian, or into the acting environment. However, she chose television.

At the institute, the celebrity first studied at the Faculty of Law, but when she realized that jurisprudence was not working out, she switched to the history department, because she had always been interested in history.

It was easy for Andreeva to get on television. She learned about recruitment for advanced training courses for television and radio broadcasting workers. But during her studies, the girl did not believe in her strength. Simply because she was often scolded. The teachers believed that Catherine, cold and arrogant on screen, was a kind of “ The Snow Queen" By the way, Andreeva studied with Igor Kirillov and became one of the last television personalities to go through announcer school.

Ekaterina Andreeva began working on television in 1991. First, she was an announcer for Central Television and the Ostankino television company, then the presenter of Good Morning, and since 1995 she worked at the ORT television company as an editor of information programs and a presenter of Novosti. She has been with the Directorate of Information Programs since 1995, and went on air in 1995.

Ekaterina Andreeva on video

Andreeva became the permanent and permanent host of the “Time” program on Channel One in 1998. By the way, in 1999, according to the results of an online survey, she was recognized as the most beautiful TV presenter in Russia.

By this time, Ekaterina Andreeva had already graduated from the Faculty of History and the All-Union Institute for Advanced Training of Radio and Television Workers. And besides, she wrote a dissertation on the Nuremberg trials.

“When I first went on air, my pulse was beating so fast that I could barely breathe,” recalls Katya, but now there is little that can unsettle her and she can work in any conditions. But Andreeva fights fatigue easily; she simply lies down on the nearest sofa and dozes for about twenty minutes.

Flavors

The TV presenter is very careful about her diet. She can no longer eat more than her body needs. Katya does not consider herself a gourmet and does not welcome any specialties in food.

“Everything should be simple,” says Andreeva. And he claims that the most ideal is Japanese food. They only natural products and maximum vitamins. And the products are cooked at maximum heat and quickly so that the vitamins remain “alive.” In the morning, the celebrity eats porridge, at lunch - soup with meat broth, and in the evening he eats something light.

Bad habits, style and hobbies

Perfect on screen, perfect in life bad habits. Catherine cannot live without chocolate and cigarettes. And if the passion for sweets can be explained, then Ekaterina Andreeva was already desperate to quit smoking. True, the TV presenter prefers ultra-light cigarettes and certainly Muratti. By the way, in Moscow they don’t sell your favorite brand with a carbon filter, and tobacco has to be transported from Italy.


The TV presenter is her own stylist. And at the same time she is considered one of the most stylish television workers. She prefers a strict and sophisticated style. And in everything, be it clothes, cosmetics or manners. Katya buys essential clothes herself, does her own hair and applies essential makeup.

Ekaterina Andreeva loves to walk around antique shops. According to her, she has a keen sense of smell for old things. It is impossible to deceive the presenter or sell her a fake. At the same time, she knows how to bargain if she knows that the thing is really hers.

Film roles

Ekaterina Andreeva can be seen on screens and not as a TV presenter. She acted in films. The first film with her participation was released in 1990. It was called “Unknown Pages from the Life of a Scout”


A year later, the presenter played in the film “Fiend of Hell,” and in 1999 she became an actress in the film “In the Mirror of Venus.”

The character of Ekaterina Andreeva was used in the animated show parody “Multi-Personality”.

Personal life of Ekaterina Andreeva

Ekaterina Andreeva managed to build a career without sacrificing her personal life. She does not hide the fact that she is happily married. Now she is married for the second time to businessman Dusko Perovic, a Montenegrin by nationality. The couple married in 1989. Ekaterina has a daughter, Natasha, from her first marriage.

Ekaterina Andreeva about a natural anomaly

Ekaterina says that her husband Dusan, having seen her for the first time on TV, found her through journalist acquaintances. For three years the young man courted his beloved. All this time, he intensively studied the Russian language; when he met Catherine, he knew literally ten words in Russian. And at one fine moment Andreeva realized that this was exactly the person she had been waiting for all her life.

By the way, my daughter Natalya graduated from the MGIMO Faculty of Law and does not intend to follow in her mother’s footsteps.

Tanya's birth. My school. Dusan Petrovic

In November 1905, something happened in our family an important event. Tanya gave birth to a daughter. My sister just returned from Switzerland, where she was treated in a sanatorium, and maybe that’s why the child was born alive.

In the morning I went into the girls' room. The nanny sat by the window, sewing, her lips pursed meaningfully, and her sister walked back and forth across the room. Her face was concentrated, excited, and occasionally a slight spasm passed around her mouth.

Tanya! - I exclaimed. - Began?

And before she could finish, she realized that she shouldn’t have asked.

Tanya looked at me reproachfully.

From my room I heard how she went into her “vault”* and how the midwife followed her. Everyone in the house waited intently and silently. An hour passed, maybe an hour and a half, I was hanging around downstairs at the door of Tanya’s room, and suddenly someone said:

Tatyana Lvovna's daughter was born!

I ran to my father, and he, as if he had sensed it, was already going down the stairs. He didn't have work that day.

Dad? Tanya's daughter was born!

Why are you crying, stupid? - he said and went back, blowing his nose and wiping away his tears.

And in the evening, when I took him books from the shelf, he suddenly said:

Why Maria?

Why do they want to call her Maria? Maria, Maria Mikhailovna, is the first wife of Mikhail Sergeevich. It’s better to call her Tatyana...

A new concern has begun. Tanya was a poor, thin girl, like a late-born chicken, she suffered from diarrhea almost from birth, and it was so terrible for this barely glimmering life that was born into the light of God after so many years of fruitless, painful waiting. The small, wrinkled creature immediately took up a large place in our house. Grandmother spent a lot of time with her. Bending low over her granddaughter, she looked at her for a long time with restless, myopic eyes.

Tanya lived with us in Yasnaya Polyana in winter. Mikhail Sergeevich was ordered to leave for warmer regions during the coldest winter months.

This time I went with him and Obolensky to Rome. And oddly enough, it was my father who encouraged me to take this trip the most. He must have seen that I was sad at times, that everything except work for him seemed hateful and boring to me. But going abroad didn’t help me either; it’s not for nothing that my father always said that you can’t run away from yourself. It’s boring, sad - look for the reasons in yourself.

The attacks of melancholy were repeated. At such moments I always wanted music. You go to your room, shut yourself up and sing songs with a guitar, and it seems that your soul is naked; if anyone hears it, you will feel ashamed. Sometimes I played the piano, but rarely. Four-hand concerts forever turned me away from amateurish performances of classics. There were only two preludes by Chopin that I knew.

I remember once after lunch everyone went for a walk. There was no one upstairs. The windows in the hall were open, and one could hear swallows and swifts flying whistling under the eaves. I entered the hall and, following a habit that had been preserved since childhood, I skated along the slippery parquet floor to the yellow bookcase in the corner, took out sheet music in a speckled binding and sat down at the piano.

There was a feeling of bliss in solitude, in the sounds of the piano, I felt the melody singing in my left hand and vague, tempting dreams were born in my head.

Oh, is it you, Sasha? And I walked and thought who was playing Chopin so well.

I shuddered, for some reason I was terribly embarrassed and blushed.

“You should study,” said the father, “you have great abilities.” I'll talk to Goldenweiser.

I started studying music. At first I conscientiously drummed scales and exercises for hours, carefully went to take lessons with Goldenweiser in Velyatinki*, and in the winter twice a month to Moscow, but gradually music turned for me into something unusually boring and tedious. I felt like I was killing with my own hands the insignificant things I was learning by Mozart, Grieg, Bach. My teacher's attention was focused on technique and precision of execution. The things I learned were lost for me forever, I began to hate them. In addition, from intense exercise and working on a typewriter, my hands began to hurt and swell. I quit music. Other activities distracted me.

There was a very bad parochial school in Yasnaya Polyana. In 1891, the sisters taught the children in the so-called Kamenka - a guardhouse next to the ancient entrance gate. As a seven-year-old girl, I ran there to study. But the Tula governor Zinoviev warned the sisters that if they did not stop teaching peasant children, he would have to officially close this school due to his duty.

And so, as if in counterbalance to Tolstoy’s influence, a whole series of parochial schools were opened in our district, very poor both in terms of premises and in terms of teaching. In Yasnaya Polyana, a small, one-room school was built with an Untermark stove absurdly sticking out in the middle, low ceilings and small windows. This room could, with great difficulty, accommodate thirty or forty people, and the peasants first of all sent boys to study, believing that they needed a diploma more than girls, and besides, graduating from college gave a benefit when serving military service.

The teacher was usually spiritual rank, graduated from a four-year college. The peasants complained that the school was bad, that the children were beaten, put in corners like peas, but there was no point - they couldn’t read, write, or count properly. And so, I had the idea to teach the girls myself. I set up a school in my sister’s former workshop, where she and “Grandfather Ge” and Repin once studied painting.

I got 20–25 girls. I didn’t have any broad plans. I wanted to teach them reading, writing and counting. At that time, almost all of our women were illiterate.

You get up early in the morning, drink coffee and run. The girls are already waiting for me. We light the stove and sit down to study.

One day I was going to school, and my father met me.

Where are you going?

To school.

Does it happen that it’s hard for you to get up early, it’s hard to force yourself to study, you don’t want to, are you tired?

“No,” I answered without thinking. But the next minute his thought reached my consciousness. - Yes, sometimes you don’t want to, you have to force yourself...

Yeah! If so, then that's good. This is a sign that this is the real deal, not pampering, not toys. Well, go, go,” he said, smiling and nodding, and moved on.

Sometimes it was difficult for me with my girls. I did not know the teaching business, I acted according to my own understanding, and there were days when I could not cope with them. I was not afraid of their pranks, laughter, hints, most of all I was afraid when boredom creeped into the class. One yawns, then another, everyone gradually becomes infected, they chew pencils, dangle their legs, respond stupidly, their eyes become sleepy, dull...

Once at such a moment my father came in. He quickly glanced at the girls, and it seemed to me that he caught the mood. The girls greeted him, sat down and looked at him with curiosity.

What do you have.

Arithmetic.

I handed the problem book to my father.

What's this? Problem book? No need. Well, listen! A herd was grazing along Voronka*: 60 cows and 32 sheep. They guarded the flock: a shepherd and two shepherds. How many legs did everyone have?

One task was replaced by another. The girls woke up and vying with each other. It suddenly became noisy and fun, my boys seemed to be reborn.

In parting, the father praised the girls:

Well done! You think it's good!

He came to my school more than once. The girls got used to it, and those who were braver shouted:

Come visit us, Lev Mikolaich!

At Maslenitsa he said:

You should give your girls pancakes. So, when I had school, we baked pancakes, and then harnessed the horses and went for a ride. The guys really liked it.

I obeyed him. The cook Matryona brought us a whole bowl of pancakes. The girls arrived, dressed up, in new sundresses, their hair combed smoothly, and they felt completely different from how they did at school - they were embarrassed, affected, and refused pancakes.

At that time, Alexander Nikiforovich Dunaev was visiting us. He and I took turns baking. Having taken off his sweaty, red jacket, Nikiforovich deftly wielded his grip, placing and removing rosy pancakes from the stove. The girls sat decorously around the table, on which there were herrings, sour cream, and melted butter. Gradually they separated and stopped being shy.

Well, give me a blink! - they shouted, holding out empty plates. They ate with their hands, along which butter and sour cream flowed, loudly slurping, silently and seriously, as if they were doing something.

The father came in for a minute, stood, looked at them, smiling, and left. And we went for a ride on several sleighs.

In winter we had much fewer visitors than in summer. I loved this time when we were left alone, except for Yulia Ivanovna, who had settled down with us, and the doctor. After G., Nikitin returned to us for a while, then he left again, and was replaced by Grigory Moiseevich Berkengeim - dear, a kind person. But Berkenheim did not stay long in Yasnaya Polyana, and Dushan Petrovich Makovitsky settled with us.

In his homeland, Czechoslovakia, he, together with his friend Shkarvan, stood at the head of the Tolstoy movement, translated and published his father’s books, and more than once came to Russia and to Yasnaya Polyana to see him. Shkarvan even refused military service and was persecuted.

It seems that Masha came up with the idea to ask Dusan Petrovich to stay in Yasnaya Polyana. He agreed. He went to his homeland, informed his family about his decision, said goodbye to them and returned to Yasnaya Polyana, where he remained until the end of his father’s life.

My father said about Dusan Petrovich:

Dusan is holy. But since there are no real saints, God also sent him a flaw - hatred of Jews.

Indeed, Dusan Petrovich’s kind face took on a stubborn, angry expression when they talked about Jews. He loved Novoye Vremya and Menshikov because he scolded the Jews, and tried to quietly slip his articles to his father. Dusan Petrovich never bought anything from Jews and condemned me if I went into Jewish shops.

Oh, Alexandra Lvovna, Alexandra Lvovna! Shame, shame! - he said. - Well, why buy from a Jew, why? Why not support your own people, because the Jews hate you, they will sit on your neck...

Under Dushan Petrovich, the outpatient clinic, which had fallen into some decline after the departure of Dmitry Vasilyevich Nikitin, revived. Dusan Petrovich immediately established the correct approach and visited the sick without refusal.

I started to help him, and this time my father didn’t object, but I didn’t like Dusan Petrovich’s treatment methods, it always seemed to me that he was a bad doctor, and I stopped going to the outpatient clinic with him. At first, the patients did not understand him.

Which row is on? - the doctor shouted. - On whom is the row?

Subsequently, he learned a little Russian, but he always put the accents in words incorrectly and, since we laughed at him, he completely stopped doing them, trying to pronounce words without stress. Dusan Petrovich gave very little medicine.

“Please have more school,” he said to the woman when she brought the anemic child. Baba looked at him in bewilderment.

Would you like some medicine for me, drops or powders?

Please give me more chocolate... - Dusan Petrovich insistently repeated. I had to intervene and explain that the woman not only had never eaten chocolate, but had never even seen it, and that she could not buy chocolate for her child, it was beyond her means.

Then Dusan Petrovich began to use another remedy for rickets.

“Have some peas,” he said. - Pea soup in? Rita!

What about the powders? Can you give me some?

Once the peasant woman Marfa Kubareva, with whose family we were very friendly, fell ill. I went with Dusan Petrovic to visit her. Martha coughed heavily. He poured her some dover powder and said:

Please take at the tip of the n?zha three times a day.

I tried to convince Dusan Petrovich that we needed to hang up the powders, but he said:

N? you need to, you know, on the tip of the n?zha.

The next morning, Marfina’s daughter came running after me, crying.

What are you?

Yes, mom keeps sleeping and sleeping, we just can’t wake up.

I ran to their house. Martha was fast asleep. I woke her up, but she immediately fell asleep again. I ran after Dusan Petrovich. When we brought the woman to her senses, I asked if she drank the medicine that Dusan Petrovich gave her.

Yes, I drank it all. Who knows, I thought I’d drink more, I’d feel better sooner...

The doctor could not adapt to the lack of culture of the Russian peasantry.

One day, on the way home from the outpatient clinic, Dusan Petrovich said gloomily:

Alexandra Lvovna, I am very bad person! Very bad! I sinned again today!

I laughed. Today a woman came to the outpatient clinic with scabies. While Dusan Petrovich was preparing her medicine, she was itching incessantly.

Please don't itch! - he said sternly.

But the woman, having forgotten herself, began to scratch the sore spot again. Then Dusan Petrovic slapped her hand with all his might.

I won’t, I won’t, darling, don’t be angry, it’s very itchy... - the woman said, not at all offended by the doctor.

It was so ridiculous, so funny that when I ran out to the pharmacy, I couldn’t calm down for a long time, I laughed until I cried.

If anyone in the house coughed and asked Dusan Petrovic for advice, he refused to give medicine, but only said:

Please lie down, don’t talk and don’t breathe in the drink!

When Natasha Sukhotina or I were sitting hunched over at the table, he would quietly come up, push us in the back and say:

Please, please laugh straighter!

Dusan Petrovich soon became indispensable in the house. But not as a doctor. When someone became seriously ill, they called Nikitin, Berkenheim, and Shchurovsky. Dusan Petrovich became necessary as an assistant to his father. When compiling the “Reading Circle,” my father had to re-read many books, marking with a pencil what was to be included in the collection. Dusan Petrovich remembered which books needed to be taken out of the library and which ones to check out. Dusan Petrovich also helped with visitors, trying as a doctor to distract them from his father and, as a like-minded person, explaining his views. Sometimes his father instructed him to answer letters, which Dusan Petrovich did willingly, although very briefly. But main merit Dusan Petrovich was that he was an unusually accurate chronicler*.

Everything he did, he did in good faith, with some kind of heavy persistence. Many people wrote down their father: Goldenweiser, Gusev, Bulgakov, but no one wrote down as accurately and so systematically and impartially as Dusan Petrovich. I can still see his tense, eerily motionless and strange face, his bowed bald, white head, his hand in his pocket. In his pocket he had small, sharp pencils and crumbled hard pieces of paper, which he leafed through by touch. He wrote with his hand in his pocket.

I could not calmly look at his motionless, strange figure. I wanted to tease him.

Dusan Petrovic, shall I tell you now, dad? what are you recording...

ABOUT! Alexandra Lvovna! P?please don't! Oh please!

I'll tell you now! Dad?! - I shouted across the table.

Dusan Petrovich hastily pulled his hand out of his pocket, blushed and looked at me reproachfully and pleadingly.

Dad?! Dusan Petrovich... - here I made a short pause, during which the poor doctor either blushed or turned pale... - Dusan Petrovich saw 30 patients today!

Very tired? - the father asked sympathetically.

“Nothing,” Dusan Petrovich said with relief, “nothing, I’m not tired.”

After some time the same thing happened again. Dusan Petrovich put his hand in his pocket, his eyes became glassy.

I’ll tell you now, by God I’ll tell you! - I tormented him.

This would have been terrible for Dusan Petrovic, who was most afraid that his father would notice that he was recording him.

Sometimes my father would read something out loud. As soon as he opened the book, Dusan Petrovich ran headlong downstairs. If the reading was supposed to last seven minutes, he set the alarm clock for seven minutes, lay down on the bed and instantly fell asleep like a log. Seven minutes later the alarm clock rang, Dusan Petrovich jumped up, went upstairs and wrote down his father’s feedback on what he had read.

Dusan was anemic, weak, his face was pale, there was no blood in his face, he must have been very tired. In the morning there was a reception, then he was called to the sick, sometimes he had to walk dozens of miles in the cold on bad roads in a cart or in winter in sledges. Then the notes from my father, sorting through the notes. He worked from morning to evening, and it’s no wonder that as soon as he lay down on the bed, he fell asleep. He took advantage of every free minute to have time to “warm his feet,” that is, to sleep. The doctor's bed stood with his feet facing the stove, and when the stove was heated, he really warmed his feet, which were cold during the day in the outpatient clinic and on long trips.

"Sleep, don't sin!" - said Dusan Petrovich.

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Ekaterina Sergeevna Andreeva. Born on November 27, 1961 in Moscow. Russian journalist, actress, host of the information program “Time” on Channel One.

Ekaterina Andreeva was born on November 27, 1961 in Moscow in the family of the deputy chairman of the USSR State Supply Committee. Her mother was a housewife and raised two daughters - Ekaterina has a younger sister, Svetlana.

As a child, she was thin, played basketball and spent a certain period of time at an Olympic reserve school.

After school, I entered the All-Union Legal Correspondence Institute (VYUZI) in the evening department.

The internship took place in the General Prosecutor's Office, in the investigative department, where her field of activity included complex crime areas (Stavropol and Krasnodar region). While working at the prosecutor's office, a terrible incident happened to Ekaterina. Then the girl was investigating the murder of a girl. Having been late at work, Catherine returned home late at night. Suddenly, several people approached her, took out a knife and began to demand a murder case. Catherine was saved by a man who suddenly came out from around the corner. When the bandits were distracted, Andreeva pushed one of them and ran away.

After some time, she entered the Moscow Pedagogical Institute named after Krupskaya. And after graduating from university in 1990, she entered courses for television and radio workers. Igor Kirillov himself became interested in her, and he individually taught Ekaterina voice-over skills.

TV presenter Ekaterina Andreeva first appeared on screens in 1991.

The first program in which she took part was “ Good morning" After this, Katya was assigned to present news on economic topics. Next, the presenter tried herself as a car expert on the “Big Races” program.

Ekaterina Andreeva is known for her special - overly strict - “teacher hairstyle”. She previously wore a different one.

About how her current image appeared, the TV presenter said: “Once upon a time, when I was just starting my career on television, I had a bob haircut, curls and a very beautiful hairstyle, as it seemed to me. But the editor-in-chief of the information editorial office, seeing me in such a wonderful appearance, in a slightly low-cut dress, he said: “This girl fluttered out, like from a casino.” I thought: “What about my career?” And I did this now well-known hairstyle. that it's like a teacher's hairstyle. Although I don't see anything wrong with being like a teacher? I think this hairstyle suits me, and the most important thing for me is comfort. I don’t have time to spin it around on my head.”

In 1994, the aspiring presenter was supposed to host her first episode of the “News” program on ORT, where Katya played the role of announcer. But she refused to film because of the tragedy that occurred in Budenovsk. Creative biography announcer Ekaterina Andreeva began to gain momentum again two months later.

At that time she was receiving a diploma from the Faculty of History. Her dissertation was on the Nuremberg Trials.

Since 1995, the presenter has not left the screens of ORT, and since 1998 she has become the constant presenter of the Vremya program.

Andreeva starred in several films. The first time was in 1990 in the film “Unknown Pages from the Life of a Scout.” A year later, the star was invited to star in the film “Fiend of Hell,” and in 1999 she played one of the main roles in the film “In the Mirror of Venus.”

In 2004, Ekaterina Andreeva starred in the film “ Personal number", where she played herself.

Ekaterina Andreeva's blunder

In 2006 she was awarded the Order of Friendship.

In 2007, she received “TEFI” in the category “Presenter in an information program.”

At the end of 2010, she entered the top ten popular TV presenters in Russia according to TNS Russia.

In 2011, Ekaterina Andreeva received the status of an honorary citizen of Montenegro.

In August 2014, Ukrainian authorities added Ekaterina Andreeva to the list of banned journalists.

Ekaterina Andreeva. Alone with everyone

Ekaterina regularly attends classes in Pilates, yoga, fitness, and tai chi. The presenter devotes two days a week to each lesson. In the mornings, Ekaterina always does gymnastics.

Her problem with physical fitness began in her fifth year at the institute, when the girl was writing thesis and practically did not move. She recovered to 80 kg. To reset excess weight, began to actively engage in sports, attended Gym and went on a strict diet. She managed to lose about 20 kg.

Since then, she has always been friends with sports.

"I do either yoga, Tai Chi, or go to the gym every morning. I have a fighting form of Tai Chi, but with elements breathing exercises. First of all, you need to learn to breathe correctly and correctly accumulate energy in the body, without this it is impossible,” said Ekaterina.

Ekaterina Andreeva's height: 176 centimeters.

Sleeping famous TV presenter at least 8 hours a day. Ekaterina claims that before hard work and sleepless night she uses the Da Vinci method. It consists in the fact that you need to sleep every two hours for 15 minutes. After this method, strength and energy come on their own.

Personal life of Ekaterina Andreeva:

She was married twice.

She hides the first and last name of her first husband. He has a daughter, Natalya (born August 19, 1979) - she received a law degree from MGIMO.

In 1989, she met Montenegrin Dusko Perovic, who became her second husband. There are no children from this marriage.

According to Andreeva, Dushko first saw her on TV, and then found her through connections through journalist acquaintances. He looked after her for three years and actively studied Russian. When he met Catherine, he barely knew a dozen words in Russian.

The TV presenter said about how she linked her fate with Perovich: “All my friends know that I am not a material girl and it is impossible to buy me with gifts, money, expensive things, mansions, yachts. He showed that he is a wealthy man, that he can provide my future, but he understood that this was not important to me. He needed to win my heart, make me fall in love with him, and he understood that he was not succeeding.

I was still in a relationship with my first husband. I don't like having affairs on the side. I don't know how to lie, it's easier for me to tell the truth. Until that relationship was over, new ones did not arise, so he had no chance.

But he continued to court. And I understood that I probably had to leave this cold Russia. And then he gave me a medal. Such Golden medal, which in their family is passed down from generation to generation to the eldest son. I returned home, began to look at her and suddenly realized that he was not joking, he would leave and that’s it.

In the morning, without waiting for 6 am, I started calling him and got through. He picked up the phone. I said: “Well, are you packing your things? Maybe you’ll stay after all?” And he didn’t tell me: “What will happen?” He said, "Okay." That's all. And since then we have been together for many years."

Ekaterina Andreeva and Dushko Perovich

Ekaterina Andreeva with her daughter Natalya

Like, her husband is an absolutely flawless person. She never made and never makes any comments to him. Dusan does not give her the slightest reason for this. She has absolutely nothing to teach him. But Catherine herself took a lot from Dushan.

“He taught me patience and patience, how to manage my time correctly, how to listen to people, how to be tolerant of different things"- said the TV presenter.

Filmography of Ekaterina Andreeva:

1990 - Unknown pages from the life of a scout - passenger
1991 - Devil of Hell - Elena, old love Georges
1999 - In the mirror of Venus - Chistov’s wife
2004 - Personal number - cameo

December 06, 2017

The famous presenter of the Vremya program is married to businessman Dusan Perovic. The other day Ekaterina Andreeva gave frank interview, in which she admitted that her husband sometimes takes offense at her.

Ekaterina Andreeva and Dusan Petrovich / photo: globallook.com

The 56-year-old lives in a barge with Serbian businessman Dusan Perovic. The man fell in love with the TV presenter at first sight when he saw her on TV. Ignorance of the Russian language did not prevent him from winning the heart of the Russian beauty. The couple are happy together, and their couple is considered one of the strongest and most harmonious. This summer, they and the presenter shared very romantic shots from their vacation.

The other day she gave a frank interview in which she talked about the relationship in Dusan. Andreeva noted that there are no special mental differences between the Russian and Serbian people, so becoming the wife of a Serb, she did not have to get used to anything. She remembered that when she met him, she future spouse I knew only one word in Russian - “hat”, since it was very cold. Now Dushan speaks excellent Russian and even tells jokes appropriately in conversation. However, the man sometimes gets offended by Catherine, who does not teach Serbian language. “I know this language superficially, at an everyday level,” the TV presenter explained. She noted that she knows English and speaks a little French, and also understands Italian, but on serious topics she prefers to communicate with foreigners in Russian through an interpreter. However, Andreeva does not rule out the fact that someday she will learn Serbian, but for now she does not have such a need.

The TV presenter also added that they never suppressed each other’s individuality. She compared her relationship with her husband to universes: “My husband and I are two parallel worlds, sometimes intersecting: more often, less often, sometimes strongly.” Ekaterina noted that it is important for her in marriage that her husband be an equal and like-minded person. According to her, their interests in many ways do not coincide with Dusan, but that’s how it should be. For example, her husband is fond of football and even plays on the field, but she does not watch the matches, the portal Wday.ru reports.