Find out more about the career of the well-known actor Julian Sands’ wife, Evgenia Citkowitz, whose whereabouts have recently been reported.
British actor Julian Sands, 65, has been reported missing in the Baldy Bowl area after hiking in the San Gabriel Mountains last week. According to the police, avalanche fears last weekend caused rescue efforts to be suspended, but routine drone and chopper searches continued.
https://twitter.com/Cromwell606/status/1615980729493504002?
According to the PA news agency, Sands went missing on January 13 at around 19:30 local time. Sands has been in popular films and TV shows like A Room with a View and Smallville.
However, since he vanished, both his personal and professional lives have drawn attention, with many people now eager to learn more about his wife, acclaimed author and journalist Evgenia Citkowitz. So let’s learn everything we can about her:
Who is Evgenia Citkowitz?
A well-known American author and journalist is Evgenia Citkowitz. Because her husband, Julian Sands, recently vanished, she has been in the news.
She was born in New York in 1968, according to the records. She is the offspring of Anglo-Irish author and socialite Lady Caroline Blackwood and American pianist and composer Israel Citkowitz.
When she was younger, she attended school in the US and the UK. She obtained an English Literature degree from Oxford University while residing in London.
In 1990, she was hitched to actor Julian Sands. They each have two daughters as children. Their first daughter, Natalya Morley Sands, was born in August 1996, and Imogen was born in December 1999.
She also has a stepson from her husband’s previous union with the journalist Sarah Harvey. Currently, they reside in Los Angeles, California. Julian, the 54-year-husband, old’s is worth $3 million.
Following the publication of her debut novella, “The Shades,” by Farrar Straus and Giroux, Evgenia Citkowitz received praise right away. Due to her success as a writer and novelist, her writing has been published in a variety of British periodicals, including The Sunday Times and London Magazine.
Her collection of short stories, “Ether,” was selected by the editors of the New York Times and was also a part of The New Yorker’s Book Club. She was also among the winners of The Word Factory’s Neil Gaiman, Fables for a Modern World story competition and made the list for The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank short story prize.