Lidija Vukićević
Lidija Vukićević | |
---|---|
Лидија Вукићевић | |
Member of the National Assembly of Serbia | |
In office June 2007 – May 2012 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Kraljevo, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia | 20 July 1962
Political party | Serbian Radical Party (SRS) (2004–2012) |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Residence(s) | Belgrade, Serbia |
Occupation | Actress, legislator |
Lidija Vukićević (Serbian Cyrillic: Лидија Вукићевић; born 20 July 1962) is a Serbian film and TV actress and politician.
Best known for playing the role of Violeta a.k.a. Viki, daughter of the central Popadić family on the hugely popular Bolji život television series, Vukićević's acting career peaked throughout the mid-to-late 1980s and early 1990s.
From 2004 until 2012, she was also politically involved with the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), serving as their MP in the Serbian parliament from 2007 until 2012.[1]
She originates from the Vasojevići clan.
Acting career
[edit]Following several small roles on film and television, her cinematic career in Yugoslavia was launched in 1985 after being cast in Zoran Čalić 's Žikina dinastija , the seventh installment of the popular folksy comedy film series Lude godine. Twenty two years of age at the time, Vukićević played the role of sexy housemaid Lilika.
The exposure on Žikina dinastija, and especially regular appearances on Bolji život, led to more roles in Yugoslav movies such as the lead in Lutalica (also written and directed by Čalić), playing a beautiful small town Gypsy budding folk singer arriving in Belgrade to perform at a kafana in pursuit of a singing career. Then came prominent supporting roles in Špijun na štiklama and Vampiri su među nama (second instalment of Čalić's Ćao, inspektore film series) that roughly fall into the same genre as Žikina dinastija.
Her attractive looks and sex appeal were a prominent feature of all of her early cinematic roles.
Political career
[edit]In 2004, Vukićević joined the opposition Serbian Radical Party (SRS), a political organization whose leader Vojislav Šešelj had already been detained in The Hague for over a year, awaiting trial at the international criminal tribunal. In his absence, the party that won 27.62% of the popular vote at the most recent parliamentary election and held 82 National Assembly seats (more than any other individual party in Serbia at the time), was led by Tomislav Nikolić, Aleksandar Vučić, and Dragan Todorović.
For the 2007 parliamentary elections, Vukićević was named on the SRS electoral list. Following the election—that again saw the party perform successfully with 29.07% of the popular vote—she became one of its 81 MPs.[2][3] The following year, in September 2008, as the SRS underwent a bitter split—with many of its members, led by top-ranking officials Nikolić and Vučić, leaving to form the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS)—Vukićević decided to stay loyal to the SRS.
Along with a significant number of prominent party members, she left the SRS following the 2012 elections where the party won only 4.62% of the popular vote—below the 5% parliamentary threshold, meaning it failed to obtain any parliamentary seats.[4] Reportedly, Šešelj's personnel decisions following the election fiasco, such as naming Vjerica Radeta as the new party vice-president, precipitated the mass exodus from the SRS.[5]
Personal life
[edit]During the early 1990s, Vukićević married Red Star Belgrade footballer Mitar Mrkela. The couple divorced in 2000. They have a son Andrej Mrkela, born in 1992, who is also a professional footballer and currently plays for Eskişehirspor.
In the early 2000s, she was reportedly in a relationship with the Yugoslav Army's former Chief of the General Staff, colonel general Nebojša Pavković.[6][7]
References
[edit]- ^ 'BOLJI ŽIVOT'
- ^ Lidija Vukićević Archived 2014-02-04 at the Wayback Machine;Otvoreni parlament
- ^ Lidija Vukićević
- ^ PUCA SRS: Očekivali da Šešelj metlom počisti stranku, umesto toga pljuštale ostavke!;telegraf.rs, 28 May 2012
- ^ "Ostavke u SRS". PressOnline.rs. Kurir. 28 May 2012. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ "Radikalka u srcu i duši". B92.net. Kurir. 13 August 2004. Archived from the original on 21 December 2004. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ "Pavković i Lidija na Svetom Stefanu". Blic. 20 August 2003. Retrieved 13 December 2022.