In Moscow, the estate of actress Larisa Golubina centers on a three-room apartment on Seleznevskaya Street. The property has become a focal point in discussions about family rights and ownership, drawing attention to how fame intersects with legal processes that govern who inherits what after a loved one passes away.
A lawyer explained that if there is no will specifying a different distribution, the inheritance follows the applicable law. Under that framework, the primary heirs are children, a spouse, and parents. After six months, a beneficiary can obtain the inheritance certificate upon presenting the required documents, a timeline that often governs the speed of asset transfer in such cases.
In 2013, the apartment was the subject of a court proceeding. Golubina had lived in a two-room apartment since 1975, while her husband Andrei Mortov occupied a nearby one-room dwelling. After Mortov’s death in 1987, she merged the two homes and safeguarded the studio associated with the renowned actor Andrei Mironov. She financed the joint dwelling, but the legal ownership of the entire house was not established until 2013, a turning point that clarified the property’s ownership record and formalized her rights to the full residence.
Current listings estimate the three-room apartment on Seleznevskaya Street at about 27 million rubles, a reflection of its location and scale within the city’s real estate market. The valuation underscores the importance of the asset within Golubina’s family and the broader context of inheritance discussions that often accompany celebrity estates.
Golubina passed away on March 22, and the farewell ceremony was scheduled for March 25 at the Russian Army Theater, marking a moment of public acknowledgment for a long career in stage and screen work.
Earlier, Boris Shcherbakov spoke about the loss felt by the theater and cinema communities in Golubina’s passing, noting the impact of her absence on colleagues and fans who valued her contributions to the arts.