Chernobyl's real-life Lyudmila tearfully breaks her silence: Hero fire-fighter's widow reveals abuse she endured after her baby died because she nursed radio-active husband through his painful death
- Lyudmila Ignatenko was pregnant when husband Vasily hurried to the disaster
- She stayed with him in hospital where he died painfully of radiation poisoning
- HBO's series Chernobyl featured a character based on her in the hit TV series
- Lyudmila claims she was not consulted and was left 'hurt', but HBO disputes this
A widow who inspired a central character in HBO's Chernobyl has spoken out for the first time since the series aired, revealing tearfully how her firefighter husband gave her flowers from his hospital bed before he died of radiation poisoning.
Lyudmila Ignatenko was pregnant with her first child when her husband Vasily hurried to the scene of the 1986 nuclear disaster.
She stayed with him in hospital where he gave her carnations from under his pillow, but died painfully of radiation poisoning two weeks after the accident.
Speaking to BBC News, Lyudmila said she had suffered abuse from viewers outraged that she had stayed in the hospital with her unborn baby, who lived for only four hours after being born.
Taking aim at HBO, she also revealed she had been 'hounded' since the series aired and claimed she had not been consulted, although HBO disputes this.
Emotional: Lyudmila Ignatenko revealed tearfully how her firefighter husband gave her flowers from his hospital bed before he died of radiation poisoning
Family: Lyudmila and her husband Vasily (pictured on their wedding day with their family) were expecting their first child at the time of the 1986 nuclear disaster
Vasily Ignatenko was one of the first responders at the power plant when it exploded in the early hours of April 26, 1986, in what was then the Soviet Union and is now Ukraine.
Ignatenko was summoned to the blaze but suffered severe poisoning from the radiation which was released into the atmosphere.
Lyudmila was by his bedside in hospital, in a scene depicted in the HBO series which was released earlier this year.
'He stood up and gave me three carnations from underneath his pillow. They were the last flowers he brought me,' the real-life Lyudmila recalls.
'I shall remember until the end of my life how we stood by the window together. We didn't know this was the last time we would share a romantic moment.'
Lyudmila was seven months pregnant when her husband died. Two months later, she went into labour but the baby survived only a few hours.
Revealing how she had been criticised for 'killing her baby' by staying with her poisoned husband while pregnant, she said: 'How could I leave him? I thought my baby was safe inside me. We didn't know anything about radiation then.'
Dramatisation: Lyudmila was by her husband's bedside in hospital, in a scene depicted in the HBO series which was released earlier this year (above)
Depicted: Lyudmila looks at her dramatised self in the HBO series. She claimed she had not been consulted and was left feeling 'hurt and uneasy' by the series
Although Lyudmila praised the 'attention to detail' of the HBO series, she said she was left feeling 'hurt and uneasy' by the series, in which she was played by Jessie Buckley.
'There were people hounding me at my flat,' she said, saying she had not given permission to HBO or Sky to be featured in the series.
She said she received a call from Moscow after the series had already been filmed, offering her $3,000 because she was featured in the show.
However, she did not believe the call was genuine and did not believe she would be offered $3,000 for doing nothing.
'Of course I thought it was fake, some sort of fraud,' she said, saying that the Russia-Ukraine conflict had added to her suspicion.
HBO disputes this account, telling the BBC that producers had 'multiple exchanges' with Lyudmila 'before, during and after' the filming of the series.
She was offered an 'opportunity to participate in the storytelling process and to provide feedback', and never indicated she was unhappy, they claim.
Portrayal: Jessie Buckley in the role of Lyudmila, who says she was not consulted - but HBO said they had 'multiple exchanges' with her and say she never voiced concerns
Tearful: Lyudmila recalled how she stayed with Vasily in hospital where he gave her carnations from under his pillow, but died painfully of radiation poisoning two weeks after the accident
Mourning: Lyudmila Ignatenko at a ceremony in 1990, four years after the nuclear radiation disaster which killed her husband
Disaster: The ruined Chernobyl nuclear power plant in May 1986, weeks after the explosion whose radioactive effects are still felt today
Clean-up: Workers in protective clothing in Pripyat earlier this month where a new structure has been put in place to contain the radioactive remains of the power plant
Lyudmila said she had only seen a few snippets of the series on Ukrainian TV.
She has never remarried since Vasily died, but did later raise a healthy child.
The death toll from the explosion is widely disputed, but listed as 4,000 by the United Nations.
Up to 350,000 people were not evacuated from the surrounding areas for 36 hours after the initial explosion.
In addition, more than five million have lived in radiated land around the area in the 33 years since.
Around 116,000 people were permanently evacuated from the exclusion zone around the power plant, with villages and towns left to go to ruin.
Radiation levels in the region are still too high for humans to live in, but some wildlife has returned to the area.
Most watched News videos
- King Charles makes appearance at Royal Windsor Horse Show
- Zelensky calls on Ukrainians on Orthodox Easter to unite in prayer
- Kim Jong-un brands himself 'Friendly Father' in propaganda music video
- House of horrors: Room of Russian cannibal couple Dmitry and Natalia
- Tears for Daniel Anjorin: Mourners gather at vigil for 14-year-old
- Keir Starmer addresses Labour's lost votes following stance on Gaza
- King Charles makes appearance at Royal Windsor Horse Show
- Susan Hall concedes defeat as Khan wins third term as London Mayor
- Pro-Palestine flags at University of Michigan graduation ceremony
- Aerial efforts to support people continue after floods ravage Brazil
- Rescue team smash through roof to save baby in flooded Brazil
- Keir Starmer says Blackpool speaks for the whole country in election