Born
16 July 1933 (92)
Place of Birth
Athens, Greece
Also known as
Mary Chronopoulou
Mary Chronopoulou (Greek: Μαίρη Χρονοπούλου; 16 July 1933 - 6 Octomber 2023) was a Greek actress. She was one of the most popular actresses of the 1960s. She starred in many films, 16 of which were produced by Finos Film. She was one of the main protagonists of Greek theatre and cinema. She was born and raised in Athens. She graduated from the National Theatre School, where she appeared in dance groups and in ancient dramas. In 1957 she began collaborating with the independent theatre, performin...
Mary Chronopoulou (Greek: Μαίρη Χρονοπούλου; 16 July 1933 - 6 Octomber 2023) was a Greek actress. She was one of the most popular actresses of the 1960s. She starred in many films, 16 of which were produced by Finos Film. She was one of the main protagonists of Greek theatre and cinema. She was born and raised in Athens. She graduated from the National Theatre School, where she appeared in dance groups and in ancient dramas. In 1957 she began collaborating with the independent theatre, performing at the Acropolis in the plays by Alekos Sakellarios-Christos Giannakopoulos “The Lady” and “Romance of a Maid”. She first appeared in cinema as an extra in Dinos Dimopoulos’ Happy Beginning in 1954, when she was still a student. In 1958 she took a small role in Michael Cacoyannis’ The Last Lie. From 1963 onwards, she starred in dozens of dramatic films by Finos Film, and not only, in the roles of a damsel and a femme fatale, alongside all the male protagonists of the era, such as Nikos Kourkoulos, Phaedon Georgitsis, Dimitris Papamichael, Giorgos Fountas and Alekos Alexandrakis. Among these social and dramatic films, she also appeared in three successful musicals by Yannis Dalianidis: The Sea Beads, A Lady with a Bouzouki and Mermaids and Guys. In the period 1967-1968, she won the Critics' Association Award for Best Leading Actress. In her theatrical career, she collaborated with all the major troupes of Athens. In 1972 she formed her own troupe, with which she staged the plays: "What Time Will You Come Back, Penelope" by Somerset Maugham and "A Hot Girl" by Iakovos Kambanelis. She also had important performances in the new Greek cinema, such as in Theodoros Angelopoulos' films The Hunters and Journey to Kythera, while she won the Best Actress award at the Thessaloniki Festival with the film The Swallow's Children by Kostas Vrettakos, in 1987. On June 16, 2021, Mary Chronopoulou was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the IRIS Awards Ceremony by the Hellenic Film Academy. She passed away on October 6, 2023, at the age of 90.
Towards Freedom
1996
The Children of the Swallow
1987
Voyage to Cythera
1984
The Gigolo of Athens
1982
Panic in the Schools
1982
The Hemline
1980
Each With Their Own Madness...
1980
Savage Hunt
1980
The Hunters
1977
Feminism
1973
Hippocrates And Democracy
1972
The Jungle of Cities
1970
In the name of the law
1970
Visibility Zero
1970
When the City Dies
1969
Mermaids for Love
1968
The Avenue of Hate
1968
A Woman's Past
1968
A Lady In Bouzoukia
1968
Too Late for Tears
1968
Bread for a Fugitive
1967
The Blue Beads from Greece
1967
Tears for Electra
1966
Zero Hour Society
1966
The Fear
1966
Blood on the Land
1966
The Ruthless
1965
The Naked Brigade
1965
Scream
1964
The Sunday girl
1964
Cyprus in flames
1964
The Red Lanterns
1963
Lazy like a dog
1963
Τα παληόπαιδα
1963
Without Identity
1962
Stournara 288
1959
A Matter of Dignity
1958