Ivan Fedorovich Popov ( 1886 - 1957 ) - Soviet journalist , writer , playwright and screenwriter .
| Popov Ivan Fedorovich | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | ||||
| Place of Birth | Kamenka, Moscow province Russian empire | |||
| Date of death | ||||
| Place of death | ||||
| Citizenship (citizenship) | ||||
| Occupation | writer , playwright , journalist , screenwriter | |||
| Direction | socialist realism | |||
| Genre | play script | |||
| Language of Works | Russian | |||
| Awards | ||||
Content
Biography
Popov Ivan Fedorovich was born on August 23 ( September 4 ), 1896 in the village of Kamenka, Podolsky district, Moscow province (now the City District of Podolsk , Moscow Region )
He graduated from the Faculty of Economics of the University of Brussels (1913). He took an active part in the revolutionary struggle.
Member of the RSDLP from 1905 to 1914. For participating in the politic. The struggle was in 1905 arrested and exiled to the Arkhangelsk province. In 1908 he emigrated to Belgium, where he liaised the Central Committee of the RSDLP with the International Socialist Bureau. One of the oldest correspondents of Pravda, collaborated in Enlightenment, Le Peuple, and other publications. During the years of the world imperialist war was captured by the Germans. In 1918, he returned to Soviet Russia, worked as a sales agent in Switzerland, then in the publishing house of the NK RCI, in the press and theater organizations.
He began his literary career in 1908 as a journalist. Since 1927, the founder and editor-in-chief of Roman-Gazeta . In 1929-1930 - Chairman of the Moscow Association of Writers.
In the 30s, he began working as a screenwriter for films ("Spring Days", "Ruddy's Career", "Puppets", "Petersburg Night", etc.) and as a film critic. The story "Under the Star of Moscow" (1942) is dedicated to the Belgian patriots and their confrontation with German troops. The plot of the novel “The Lost and Returned Homeland” (1941–42, entitled “Illuminated”, 1945) describes the activities of the Bolsheviks after the 1905 revolution. In 1949, a play about the Ulyanov family “The Family” was put on the basis of which the script for the film “The Ulyanov Family” (1957) was later written. Perov's novel belongs to the novel “At the End of the Night” (1950) and the memoirs “One Day with Lenin” (published 1963). Popov's works have been translated into foreign languages.
I.F. Popov died on December 10, 1957, was buried in Moscow at the Novodevichy Cemetery (5th grade, 14th row, 1 grave).
Filmography
- 1934 - Spring Days
- 1935 - Kara-Bugaz
- 1940 - Crime and Punishment
- 1957 - The Ulyanov family
Awards and Prizes
- 2 orders of the Red Banner of Labor (10/12/1946; 09/19/1956)
- medals
Literature
- Brief Encyclopedia of Literature, Ch. ed. A.A. Surkov. - M .: Owls. Encycl., 1962-1978. Kakurina D.A. Popov I.F.