Eldar Ryazanov
Eldar Aleksandrovich Ryazanov was a Soviet and Russian film director, screenwriter, poet, actor and pedagogue whose popular comedies, satirizing the daily life of the Soviet Union and Russia, are celebrated throughout the [Post-Soviet states|former Soviet Union|Soviet Union] and former Warsaw Pact countries.
Biography
Eldar Aleksandrovich Ryazanov was born in Samara. His father, Aleksandr Semyonovich Ryazanov, was a diplomat who worked in Tehran. His mother, Sofya Mikhailovna, was of Jewish descent.In 1930, the family moved to Moscow, and soon his parents divorced. He was then raised by his mother and her new husband, Lev Mikhailovich Kopp. In 1937 his father was arrested by the Stalinist government and subsequently served 18 years in the correctional labour camps.
Ryazanov began to create films in the early 1950s. In 1955, Ivan Pyryev, then a major force in the Soviet film industry, suggested to him to begin work on his film Carnival Night. At first, Ryazanov refused, as he wanted to make "serious films", but then was convinced to begin, as Pyryev believed that "anybody could shoot a melodrama, but only a few can create good comedy." He won instant success, and began to release more films.
He was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1984, and received the USSR State Prize in 1977. He won the Nika Award for Best Director in 1991 for the film Promised Heaven.
Among his most famous films are Carnival Night, Hussar Ballad, Beware of the Car, The Irony of Fate, Office Romance, The Garage, Station for Two and A Cruel Romance. Ryazanov's main genre was tragicomedy.
Illness and death
Ryazanov had an acute ischemic stroke in November 2014. He was admitted to a Moscow hospital on 21 November 2015 due to shortness of breath. He died around midnight on 30 November 2015, of heart and lung failure, at the age of 88.Legacy
Ryazanov was one of the most successful film directors of the Soviet Union, and his films are still well-known in the post-USSR landscape. The Irony of Fate is still aired every December 31 in most post-USSR countries, except for Ukraine since the 2014 Revolution of Dignity. A street in Moscow was named after him in 2017, and a museum and memorial dedicated to his memory was opened on the site of his childhood home in Samara.Criticism
In his book "Nepoladki v russkom dome" Sergey Kara-Murza wrote that "Ryazanov and the artists close to him, consumed by anti-Soviet feeling, lovingly reflected and thereby in many ways created a certain social and spiritual world - and this world turned out to be possible only when it was surrounded and protected by the crude structures of the Soviet way of life."Honours and awards
- Order "For Merit to the Fatherland";
- *2nd class – for outstanding contribution to the development of national cinema and many years of creative activity
- *3rd class – for services to the state, an outstanding contribution to the development of national cinema and culture
- Order of the Red Banner of Labour, twice
- Order of Friendship of Peoples
- Order of the "Key of Friendship"
- Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters
- Commander of the Order of Honour (Georgia)
- People's Artist of the RSFSR
- People's Artist of the USSR
- USSR State Prize
- Vasilyev Brothers State Prize of the RSFSR
- Winner of the All-Union Film Festival in the "First Prize among the comedies" for 1958
- Winner of the All-Union Film Festival in the "Special Award" for 1983
- Nika awards;
- *Best Director
- *Best Fiction Film
- *Honour and dignity
- Winner of Tsarskoye Selo Art Prize
- The asteroid 4258 Ryazanov is named after him.
Filmography
- 1950 They are Studying in Moscow, documentary – author
- 1951 The Way Named October, documentary – director
- 1952 On the World Chess Championship, documentary – director
- 1953 Your Books, documentary – director
- 1953 Near Krasnodar, documentary – director
- 1954 Island of Sakhalin, documentary – director
- 1955 Spring Voices, documentary – second director
- 1956 Carnival Night – director
- 1957 The Girl Without Address – director
- 1961 How Robinson Was Created – director
- 1961 The Man from Nowhere – director
- 1962 Hussar Ballad – director / screenwriter
- 1965 Give me a complaints book – director / actor: chief editor
- 1966 Beware of the Car – director / screenwriter
- 1968 Zigzag of Success – director / screenwriter
- 1971 Grandads-Robbers – director / screenwriter / actor: the passer-by
- 1974 Unbelievable Adventures of Italians in Russia – director / screenwriter / actor: doctor
- 1975 The Irony of Fate – director / screenwriter / actor: airplane passenger
- 1977 Office Romance – director / screenwriter / actor: bus passenger
- 1979 The Garage – director / screenwriter / actor: sleeping Man
- 1981 Say a Word for the Poor Hussar – director / screenwriter / actor: confectioner
- 1982 Station for Two – director / screenwriter / actor: railroad supervisor
- 1984 A Cruel Romance – director / screenwriter
- 1987 Forgotten Melody for a Flute – director / screenwriter / actor: astronomer
- 1988 Dear Yelena Sergeyevna – director / screenwriter / actor: neighbour
- 1991 Promised Heaven – director / screenwriter / actor: man in diner
- 1993 Prediction – director / screenwriter
- 1996 Hello, Fools! – director / screenwriter / actor: manager of the bookshop
- 2000 Old Hags – director / screenwriter / actor: judge
- 2000 Still Waters – Director / Screenwriter / Actor: Radiologist / Producer
- 2003 The Key of Bedroom – director / screenwriter / actor: police constable / producer
- 2006 Carnival Night 2 – director / actor
- 2006 Andersen. Life Without Love – director / screenwriter / actor: mortician / producer
- 2007 The Irony of Fate 2 – actor