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Aleksandr Moiseevich Volodin
Александр Володин
Birth at
15 May 1978
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Alexander Moiseevich Volodin (real surname - Livshits) was born on February 10, 1919 in Minsk. After completing teacher courses, he taught in a rural school. In 1939, he was drafted into the Red Army, in which he served as a private until 1945; in battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, Volodin was wounded, and among other military awards was awarded the medal "For Courage". In 1949, Alexander Volodin graduated from the script faculty of VGIK, then worked as an editor at film studios "Lenfilm"
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Alexander Moiseevich Volodin (real surname - Livshits) was born on February 10, 1919 in Minsk. After completing teacher courses, he taught in a rural school. In 1939, he was drafted into the Red Army, in which he served as a private until 1945; in battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, Volodin was wounded, and among other military awards was awarded the medal "For Courage". In 1949, Alexander Volodin graduated from the script faculty of VGIK, then worked as an editor at film studios "Lenfilm" and "Lennauchfilm". The first book of stories of the prose writer was published in 1954, then were published “For the theater and cinema”, “Portrait with the rain”, “Notes of a drunk man”, “Monologues”. Five evenings.Per Volodin belongs to the plays “Factory girl”, “Big sister”, “Five evenings”, “Do not part with your loved ones”, “Dulcinea Tobosskaya” and many others who successfully went on theatrical stages. A number of films, staged by leading domestic directors on his plays, entered the “golden fund” of Russian cinema and was noted at international film festivals. In addition, the playwright worked with many directors as a screenwriter: with Sergey Gerasimov ("Daughter-Mothers"), with Alexander Mitta ("Call, open the door!"), with Elem Klimov ("Adventures of a dentist"), with Georgi Daneliya ("Autumn Marathon" and "Nastya"), with Alla Surikova ("Two Arrows"). In 1968, Alexander Volodin, according to his own script, directed the film “An incident that no one noticed.”