Vladimir Konstantinovich Konstantinov (real name is Pevzner ; May 21, 1930 , Leningrad - July 31, 1996 , St. Petersburg ) [1] - Soviet and Russian writer, playwright, satirist and poet. In a duet with Boris Razer, he was one of the most prolific Soviet playwrights. [2]
| Vladimir Konstantinov | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Vladimir Konstantinovich Pevzner |
| Date of Birth | May 21, 1930 |
| Place of Birth | Leningrad , USSR |
| Date of death | July 31, 1996 (66 years old) |
| A place of death | Saint Petersburg , Russia |
| Citizenship | |
| Profession | playwright , writer , poet |
| Years of activity | 1957-1996 |
| IMDb | |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 Filmography
- 2.1 Scenarios
- 2.2 Lyrics
- 3 notes
- 4 References
Biography
Vladimir Konstantinov graduated from the philological faculty of Leningrad University, in 1953-1958 he taught in high school. Since 1957, in collaboration with Boris Razer, he began to write pop couplets, poems, feuilletons, interludes for entertainers. [1] The works of Konstantinov and Razer were distinguished by comedy, easy humor, and a swift disclosure of the theme. They also wrote a large number of scripts for films and performances, as well as lyrics of such composers as Gennady Gladkov , Andrei Petrov , Vladimir Dmitriev , Andrei Eshpay and others. [3]
Filmography
Scripting
- 1974 - Screen Star
- 1978 - Robbery at Midnight (film production)
- 1978 - Hanuma (film production)
- 1982 - Bird seller
- 1985 - Maritsa
- 1992 - To be in love
- 1992 - Bride from Paris
- 1992 - Tartuffe
Lyrics
- 1978 - Hanuma (film production)
- 1980 - Dulcinea Tobos
- 1992 - Tartuffe
Notes
- β 1 2 Encyclopedia of Russian pop
- β Kommersant. Died Boris Razer
- β Official site of the Russian Copyright Society (RAO) (inaccessible link)
Links
- Encyclopedia of Russian pop
- Official site of the Russian Copyright Society (RAO) (inaccessible link)