Lisitsian was born on 3 March 1923 in
Tiflis (now Tbilisi) to Marfa Ivanovna and Nikolai Pavlovich Lisitsian. On her father's side, she was a cousin of the opera singer
Paval Lisitsian. Lisitsian's father died when she was nine years old, leaving her mother to raise her daughter on her own. In 1939, Lisitsian attended the acting department of the
Tbilisi Theatre University, and in 1941, she was moved to the Moscow City Theatre School, where she completed her studies from 1944 to 1946. When the
Great Patriotic War broke out in 1941, Listisian requested to
Аlexander Shelepin at the Moscow City Committee of the Komsomol to be sent to the front. She was then assigned to a special-purpose reconnaissance and sabotage unit on the
Western Front, sent behind enemy lines, and was captured. She managed to escape the concentration camp in Ukraine and joined a partisan group, taking part in combat operations. During one such operation, Lisitsian received a concussion and was hospitalised. After the end of the war, Lisitsian married Luigi Longo, the son and namesake of
one of the leaders in the
Italian Communist Party whom she met in Georgia in 1938. They lived in
Italy for several years, with Lisitsian working as the head of the editing department at the representative office of
Sovexportfilm. In 1952, Lisitsian returned to the USSR with her husband and son Sandro, studied at the directing department of
GITIS, and in 1954, under
Vsevolod Pudovkin's advice, she moved to
Grigori Kozintsev's directing workshop at
VGIK, where she graduated there in 1959. As her diploma work, in 1959, Lisitsian directed her first full-length film based on
Sergey Mikhalkov's children's story
Sombrero (). During her internship at
Мosfilm, Lisitsian met her second husband, camera operator
Viktor Listopadov. During the 1970s and 1980s, Lisitian directed several more feature films in the USSR, as well as writing stories in issues of
Almanac of Film Travels (). In 1997 in Italy, and in 2002 and 2005 in Russia, Lisitsian published her autobiographical book
War Broke Us... (). She was a member of the
Communist Party of the USSR from around 1958, while also part of the Association of Filmmakers of the USSR in Moscow
. Lisitsian died on 29 November 2009 in Moscow, and was buried at
Vagankovo Cemetery. == Filmography ==