词条 | Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya |
释义 |
| name = Yelizaveta Yakovlevna Tarakhovskaya | image = Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya.jpg | imagesize = 170px | caption = | pseudonym = | birth_date = {{birth date|1891|7|26|mf=y}} | birth_place = Taganrog, Russian Empire | death_date = {{death date and age|1968|11|11|1891|7|26|mf=y}} | death_place = Moscow, USSR | occupation = Poet | nationality = Russian | period = 1925-1968 | genre = children books | subject = | movement = | notableworks = play By the Pike's Wish | influences = | influenced = | website = }} Yelizaveta Yakovlevna Tarakhovskaya ({{lang-ru|Елизаве́та Я́ковлевна Тарахо́вская}}; 1891–1968) was a Russian poet, playwright, translator, and author of children's books. BiographyYelizaveta Tarakhovskaya (born Parnokh) was born in the city of Taganrog on July 26, 1891 in a pharmacist's family. She is sister to poet Sophia Parnok and twin sister to founder of Soviet Russian jazz Valentin Parnakh. She graduated from the Taganrog Girls Gymnasium, later studied in Bestuzhev courses in Saint Petersburg and started to write poems in her childhood. In 1925, her first books were published: On How Chocolate Came to MosSelProm and Tit Will Fly. Since then, she wrote many children's books, including Metropolitan (1932), The Moon and the Lazy Fellow (1933), The Seagull (1965, dedicated to Valentina Tereshkova, Soviet Russian cosmonaut, the first woman to go into space). She is the author of poems for grown-ups: The Violin Clef (1958), The Bird (1965). The verses of Tarakhovskaya are lyrical, thoughtful, and almost always full of humor, with most of them being the poetry of ordinary and everyday things around. Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya translated into Russian many poems for children written by various Soviet and foreign authors: verses of Polish poet Julian Tuwim, Uzbek poet Kuddus Muhammadi (Muhammadiev), Azerbaijani poet Mirvari Dilbazi, Georgian poet Mariki Baratashvili(მარიკა ბარათაშვილი), Lithuanian poet Eduardas Mieželaitis, Bulgarian poet Assen Bossev and many more. Today Tarakhovskaya is probably most known for her play By the Pike's Wish, which was staged by Sergey Obraztsov in the Moscow State Academic Puppet Show named after Serguei Obraztsov in November 1936 and has remained in the theater's repertoire ever since. The play By the Pike's Wish (Po shchuchuyemu veleniyu) is considered by theater experts as the greatest puppet show of the 20th century, making quintessence of Meyerhold's methods. It was also released as a motion picture in 1938 (directed by Aleksandr Rou). Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya died in Moscow on November 11, 1968 and was buried on Novodevichy Cemetery near her twin-brother Valentin.[1] A memorial plaque dedicated to Parnok family was placed on the wall of their birth house in Taganrog in 2012.[2] Works (alphabetical list)
External links and references1. ^Новодевичье кладбище. Тараховская Елизавета Яковлевна (1891-1968) {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823105440/http://novodevichye.narod.ru/tarahovskaya-eya.html |date=2011-08-23 }} {{Portal |Children's literature}}2. ^A memorial plaque inaugurated in honor of three members of Parnokh family
21 : 1891 births|1968 deaths|People from Taganrog|People from Don Host Oblast|Russian Jews|Jewish poets|Russian children's writers|Russian dramatists and playwrights|Russian writers|Russian women writers|Soviet poets|Soviet children's writers|Soviet women writers|Soviet dramatists and playwrights|Sephardi Jews|Twin people from Russia|Women children's writers|Russian women poets|Women dramatists and playwrights|20th-century women writers|Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。