- Last appeared on stage in 2011 at the age of 98.
- Known as the 'Great Dame of Polish Theatre'.
- At the age of 88, Nina Andrycz made her debut as a poetess, publishing three volumes of verse as well as an autobiography and memoirs, for which she received the literary award of the city of Warsaw.
- From 1934 until 2004 she was part of the Polski Theatre in Warsaw and was also a star of the Polish Radio Theatre and TVP Theatre.
- She studied law at the Wilno University.
- Nina Andrycz was awarded with the Golden Cross of Merit state honour as well as the Gloria Artis Golden Cross.
- Nina Andrycz rose to fame with outstanding performances as Maria Stewart, Lady Macbeth and Queen Elizabeth.
- She was childless by choice. She claimed she had no maternal instinct and refused to bear a child even after her mother assured her that she would raise her child.
- In 1996, a documentary about Nina Andrycz was made.
- From 1947 to 1968 Andrycz was married to Jozef Cyrankieicz, the five time prime minister of communist Poland.
- In the post-war period, she was a student of the Polish anthroposophist and mystic Robert Walter from Komorów, under whose guidance she explored esotericism.
- During World War II, she was a waitress.
- In her will, the actress donated her money to the foundation of the Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity. With this money, the Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity bought a first-class densitometer, a device for measuring bone density.
- She was an actress of the Warsaw Polish Theater (from 1935 to 2004 - with a break in the years 1939-1945).
- She died in the morning after a three-week stay in a Powisle hospital in Warsaw due to circulatory and respiratory problems on Friday, January 31, 2014 at the age of 101. A letter of condolence was read on behalf of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Bogdan Zdrojewski. The funeral was Catholic in accordance with the wishes of the actress.
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