Liliana Sex

Liliana Sex




🔞 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Liliana Sex





Friday, Jul 1st 2022
6AM
14°C
9AM
19°C

5-Day Forecast


RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next

Embed icon






Embed Most Watched Videos



By embedding this you agree to our terms and conditions


Cancel
Copy code
Tick icon



Code copied



Site
Web


Enter search term:
Search


Chris Pincher: Tory whip resigns saying he 'embarrassed himself'
Chilling footage shows moment Logan's 'monster' stepbrother arrested for murder
Boris Johnson’s 2030 military spending pledge ‘feeble’, say senior Tories
Russian state TV claims 'chubby Boris Johnson is jealous of Putin's good shape'
Xi Jinping in Hong Kong to mark 25 years of handover
RICHARD KAY examines the history of Meghan's alleged bullying of staff
Checks to pick up silent killer will be available at the bookies in new plans
How Heinz provoked Tesco in the battle of the beans
Boost for Brits as No10 considers slashing VAT to ease cost of living crisis
Government tells aviation bosses to end flight chaos ahead of summer holidays




Home




News




U.S.




Sport




TV&Showbiz




Australia




Femail




Health




Science




Money




Video




Travel




Best Buys




Discounts




Published: 23:06 BST, 1 January 2021 | Updated: 00:02 BST, 2 January 2021
Soviet defector Liliana Gasinskaya, 18, jumped from a cruise ship in Sydney Harbour and swam ashore seeking asylum in 1979
It was a rare splash of colour in the Cold War when a young Soviet woman wearing only a red bikini squeezed through a porthole of a cruise liner to swim ashore in Sydney Harbour.
'BEAUTY FLEES RED LINER' the Daily Mirror afternoon tabloid's headline read two days after 18-year-old Liliana Gasinskaya's arrival. 
Gasinskaya was given political asylum in Australia and became a nude centrefold for Penthouse magazine which ran the cover line: 'The Red Bikini Girl - Without The Bikini.'
The glamorous Ukrainian made her brave swim for freedom 41 years ago, but only now have papers from the KGB file into her startling defection been released.
Gasinskaya was a lift attendant and waitress on the crew of cruise ship SS Leonid Sobinov which operated from the Black Sea port of Odessa.
After her defection she made international news as the 'Red Bikini Girl', having swum ashore in Pyrmont and in broken English asked a man walking his dog for clothes and assistance.
The Mirror found her before Soviet or Australian authorities could track her down and kept Gasinskaya under wraps in a secret location for a series of exclusive reports and bikini photographs.
'I put on my red bikini and left my ring on my finger because I knew that I could not carry anything at all with me otherwise I might be caught,' Gasinskaya (pictured) told a reporter. 'I climbed on to the bed and squeezed through the porthole and fell into the harbour'
After her defection Gasinskaya made international news as the 'Red Bikini Girl', having swum ashore in Pyrmont and in broken English asked a man walking his dog for clothes and assistance. She is pictured on board SS Leonid Sobinov before reaching Sydney 
Gasinskaya was given political asylum in Australia and became a nude centrefold for the first issue of Australian Penthouse which ran the cover line: 'The Red Bikini Girl - Without The Bikini'
Readers loved Gasinskaya's story of first falling in love with Australia when she saw pictures in a magazine and the hatred she had felt her communist homeland since childhood. 
'I put on my red bikini and left my ring on my finger because I knew that I could not carry anything at all with me otherwise I might be caught,' she told the newspaper. 
'I climbed on to the bed and squeezed through the porthole and fell into the harbour.' 
We now know the Leonid Sobinov's KGB officer himself followed her ashore, asking Australians in the port area if they had seen her, showing them her photograph.
When this failed, the liner continued without Gasinskaya to Melbourne and a Young Communists - or Komsomol - meeting was called on board.
Her KGB file shows that the group's secretary Y Makhlaichuk minuted his disgust at Gasinskaya's betrayal.
'It is bitter and insulting,' he concluded. 'For peace on earth, our parents shed blood, gave their lives.
The Daily Mirror found Gasinskaya before Soviet or Australian authorities could track her down and kept her under wraps in a secret location for a series of exclusive reports and bikini photographs. Pictured: The 18-year-old's Soviet passport
Readers loved Gasinskaya's story of first falling in love with Australia when she saw pictures in a magazine and the hatred she had felt her communist homeland since childhood. News clippings about her exploits from around the world were kept in her KGB file (pictured)
'Gasinskaya's treacherous act amazed me, shocked everyone who is on duty here, far from their homeland and their relatives.'
The night before she fled, Gasinskaya had complained of a headache and avoided a crew party, the file noted. That was January 14, 1979.
A piece of paper was found on the ship on which she had practised key English words she might need in Australia, including how to ask for 'refuge'.
Gasinskaya, the daughter of a musician father and actress mother, swam ashore without her money, passport or other documents, which remained in her cabin.
Meanwhile, back in the USSR a criminal case was opened against her by the KGB with senior lieutenant Nikolai Shumilo, 29, put in charge.
He analysed Gasinskaya's press conference in Australia and concluded that she had been coached 'by the secret services or an anti-Soviet organisation', but he also noted that she had no access to state secrets.
The glamorous Ukrainian made her brave swim for freedom 41 years ago, but only now have papers from the KGB file into her startling defection been released. Pictured is the cover of the criminal case against Gasinskaya. The blue stamp in top right corner says 'Declassified'
Gasinskaya, the daughter of a musician father and actress mother, swam ashore without her money and passport, which remained in her cabin. Pictured from top left to right are Gasinskaya's birth certificate, domestic passport, sailor's passport and other documents
Still, Shumilo did not rule out that Western intelligence had somehow contrived her escape as a propaganda coup. 
Cuttings from Western papers were stashed in the file, now declassified by the SBU, the secret service in modern-day Ukraine, where Gasinskaya originally came from.
After Gasinskaya's defection a criminal case was opened by the KGB headed by senior lieutenant Nikolai Shumilo (pictured)
It was noted that before leaving Odessa on her first foreign cruise Gasinskaya had social contact with sailors from Greece, Italy and the United States, as well as Iraqi cadets.
She bought 'fashionable foreign items' from them, to which she was 'clearly not indifferent'.
The ship had voyaged from Odessa to Southampton where it picked up passengers for the trip via the Mediterranean and Red Sea, and the Indian Ocean to Australia.
The operator was a British travel agency, which leased the Soviet ship and its crew.
The file indicates there was a retrospective attempt to besmirch the Red Bikini Girl.
Gasinskaya had bad working habits and tried to socialise with foreign passengers which was strictly prohibited, it stated.
'As I learned, she began to meet with some foreigners and kiss at night on the passenger decks,' stated the ship's captain Konstantin Nikitin in his KGB interrogation over her defection.
Soviet investigator Nikolai Shumilo analysed Gasinskaya's press conference in Australia and concluded that she had been coached 'by the secret services or an anti-Soviet organisation', but he also noted that she had no access to state secrets. Pictured is her sailor's passport
Gasinskaya had been reprimanded on the voyage over her supposed interest in foreign men, but she 'defiantly' ignored the warnings saying she wanted to improve her English.
She was twice transferred to other positions, to keep her away from foreigners.
The file claims Gasinskaya had secretly gone to the cabin of an English musician on board, and then denied a charge of theft when he complained that his possessions were missing.
It also made clear Gasinskaya was being watched by the crew and that during shore leave in Fremantle before reaching Sydney she had sought to flee but was stopped by loyal Soviets.
'We studied everything - what this person did, how she was brought up, her character, hobbies, what she was interested in, what she read, in order to substantiate the motives for committing a wrongful act,' said Shumilo, now a well-known lawyer and university professor in Kiev.
A piece of paper was found on the ship on which Gasinkaya had practised key English words she might need in Australia, including how to ask for 'refuge'. The note (pictured) formed part of her recently released KGB file
Unlike many defectors, Gasinskaya (left) was not prosecuted in absentia for treason, which was punishable by up to 15 years in jail or even execution. Her passport is pictured right
The file concluded 'the motives that prompted Gasinskaya to illegally go abroad were her political naivety, frivolity, moral decline, desire for a "beautiful life" and unwillingness to work.'
Gasinskaya was granted Australian residency by the Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs, Michael Mackellar who accepted her refugee status just four days after she swam ashore. 
Unlike many Soviet defectors, Gasinskaya was not prosecuted in absentia for treason, which was punishable by up to 15 years in jail or even execution.
She was charged in the USSR only with 'illegal travel abroad'.
Her KGB file also states that Gasinskaya's letters back to her family from Australia were confiscated.
She told how she had settled in her new country and 'asked forgiveness from her relatives'.
Posing for the first Australian edition of Penthouse, for which she was paid $15,000, Gasinskaya said: 'In Russia, we don't do these things or anything that could be considered sexy.' She is pictured recently
There was criticism at the time in Australia that refugees from Vietnam and Cambodia had more credible grounds for asylum, risking their lives on rickety boats fleeing war-torn countries.
But Mr MacKellar said that Gasinskaya had 'showed initiative' and others rejected claims the Ukrainian had been given favourable treatment simply because she was white and filled out a bikini.  
One newspaper commentator wrote, 'Without being sexist I would say that being young and nubile makes her a desirable immigrant for the simple social reason that our past immigration programs have left us with a surplus of young, single men.' 
The year after her escape Gasinskaya was stripped of her Soviet citizenship. 
Gasinskaya had a relationship with Daily Mirror photographer Graeme Fletcher under whose management she found work as a professional disco dancer and DJ and appeared on TV shows including The Young Doctors. 
Posing for the first Australian edition of Penthouse, for which she was paid $15,000, Gasinskaya said: 'In Russia, we don't do these things or anything that could be considered sexy.'
A marriage to Sydney property developer Ian Hayson in 1984 faltered four years later and Gasinkaya moved to London where she and her family have lived out of the limelight.
Gasinskaya (pictured) married Sydney property developer Ian Hayson in 1984 but that union faltered in 1990. She moved to London where she and her family have lived out of the limelight
The comments below have been moderated in advance.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

We are no longer accepting comments on this article.
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

All Titles TV Episodes Celebs Companies Keywords Advanced Search
Fully supported English (United States) Partially supported Français (Canada) Français (France) Deutsch (Deutschland) हिंदी (भारत) Italiano (Italia) Português (Brasil) Español (España) Español (México)



Actress |


Soundtrack


Up
681
this week


Liliana Mumy was born in San Marcos, California. Her father is actor Bill Mumy. Among his many roles, her father appeared as a child in the 1961 The Twilight Zone episode "It's a Good Life". Liliana appeared with her father, as his child, in the revival series' 2003 sequel episode "It's Still a Good Life". She currently voices Beth Tezuka, in the ...
See full bio »



Born:


April 16 ,

1994

in
San Marcos, California, USA






Biography




Awards




Photo Gallery









Filmography (by Job)




Trailers and Videos









Filmography




by Year




by Job




by Ratings




by Votes




by Genre




by Keyword






Personal Details




Biography




Other Works




Publicity Listings




Official Sites




Contact Info (IMDbPro)






Did You Know?




Personal Quotes




Trivia




Trademark






Photo & Video




Photo Gallery




Trailers and Videos






Opinion




Awards






Related Items




Credited With




News




External Sites






Professional Services




Get more at IMDbPro






a list of 46 people
created 31 Aug 2012



a list of 25 people
created 14 Jun 2012



a list of 25 people
created 16 Nov 2011



a list of 22 people
created 19 Mar 2011



a list of 42 people
created 1 month ago



How Much Have You Seen?
How much of Liliana Mumy's work have you seen?






2 wins & 5 nominations.


See more awards »





Cheaper by the Dozen
Jessica Baker


Cheaper by the Dozen 2
Jessica Baker


The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
Lucy Miller


The Santa Clause 2
Lucy Miller



 Show all


 Hide all

 | 


Show by...
Job
Year »
Rating »
Number of Ratings »
Genre »
Keyword »


 | 
Edit


- Bummer Camp/Sleepstakes
(2022)
... Leni Loud


- Scoop Snoop/Eye Can't
(2022)
... Leni Loud


- Muscle Fish/King of the Chair
(2021)
... Leni (voice)



 2021

The Loud House Movie

Leni / 1600's Leni (voice)



 2020

The Loud House: The Maltese Bear
(TV Short)

Leni (voice)


- Sunken Treasure
(2020)
... Fawna (voice)


- Bedtime Stories
(2019)
... Fawna (voice)


- Special Delivery
(2019)
... Lady Lavender (voice)


- Music Videos
(2019)
... Fawna (voice)


- Cheerleading
(2019)
... Indigofly (voice)


- Won't You Please Take Me Home
(2018)
... Beth Tezuka (voice)


- Out of Reach, Not Good Enough
(2018)
... Beth Tezuka (voice)


- War Without Tears
(2018)
... Beth Tezuka (voice)


- Carol of the Arrow
(2015)
... Jane (voice)


- Substitute Cedric
(2015)
... Amy (voice)



 2018

The Loud House 360: Center of Chaos!
(Short)

Leni (voice)



 2017

The Loud House: 12 Days of Christmas
(TV Short)

Leni (voice)



 2017

Girls Mode 4: Star Stylist
(Video Game)
(voice)


- World of Witchcraft
(2017)
... Daughter (voice)



 2017

The Loud House: Deuces Wild
(TV Short)

Leni (voice)


- Miracle on Dead Street
(2015)
... Layla



 2016

The Loud House: Slice of Life
(TV Short)

Leni (voice)


- Yo-Kai Are Real!
(2015)
... Kittybug (voice)



 2014

Five Nights at Freddy's
(Video Game)

Chica (voice)


- The Music Cafe
(2014)
... Roxy (English version, voice)


- The Anthem
(2014)
... Roxy (English version, voice)


- The Secret Greenhouse
(2014)
... Roxy (English version, voice)


- The Lost Library
(2014)
... Roxy (voice)


- The Flying School
(2013)
... Roxy (voice)



 2014

The Loud House
(TV Short)

Leni Loud (voice)



 2011

Catwoman
(Short)

Ho
#Pussylips
Close Up Big Clit
Grandma Pissing

Report Page