Marianna Yablonskaya (Russian: Марианна Викторовна Яблонская) (1938–1980) is a Russian/ Soviet writer, playwright, theater actress and theater director. She was an actress at the Mayakovsky Theatre and the Lensoviet Academic Theatre.

Marianna Yablonskaya
Born(1938-02-09)February 9, 1938
Leningrad, Soviet Union
Died10 November 1980(1980-11-10) (aged 42)
Moscow, Russia
OccupationTheater actor, theater director, writer, playwright
NationalityRussian
GenreFiction, drama, plays

Biography

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Yablonskaya was born in Leningrad in 1938, daughter of Viktor Yablonsky (Виктор Яблонский), a Moscow Art Theater actor and director. In 1959 she graduated from A. N. Ostrovsky Leningrad Theatrical Institute, L. F. Makarev's course. She was one of the leading actors of Lensovet Theater in Leningrad,[1]

Her most notable role in theatre is Negina in "Talents and Admirers" by Alexander Ostrovsky, staged by Maria Knebel at the Mayakovsky Theater in Moscow.[citation needed]

Her most famous play, Plush Monkey in a Crib (The Role) was staged at the Gogol Theatre in Moscow.[1][2]

Personal life

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Yablonskaya married a rocket scientist, Arkady Yarovsky. Their daughter, Marianna Yarovskaya, is a filmmaker who works in the United States. Her 2018 short documentary film, Women of the Gulag, was nominated for an Oscar.[3]

Selected works

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She wrote 11 plays and two books of short stories, including:[4]

Books

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  • (1984). Focusi/ Tricks. Moscow: Soviet Writer. 30,000 copies. 216 pages.(in Russian)
  • (1992). Summer is Over/ Leto Konchilos. Short stories, play. Afterword by Sergey Yursky. - Moscow: Olimp/ Soviet Writer. 339 pages. ISBN 5-265-02498-0 (in Russian)
  • (2016). Sdaeshsia?/Surrender? Ripol Classic. Foreword by Sergey Yursky, articles by Marianna Yarovskaya and Yuri Nagibin. ISBN 538608965X (in Russian)

Plays

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  • Ozhog (in Russian)
  • Plushevaia Obeziana v Detskoi Krovatke (in Russian)
  • Black April (in Russian)

References

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  1. ^ a b Алейнова, Наталия (5 February 2021). "Современная драматургия? Что это?". Театр To Go (in Russian). Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  2. ^ "eLIBRARY.RU - Журнал "Театральная жизнь"". www.elibrary.ru. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  3. ^ Feldschreiber, Jared (18 January 2019). "'Women of the Gulag' tells five astonishing stories of survival". KyivPost. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  4. ^ Sovremennaia Dramaturgiia, 1986. Plushevaia Obeziana V Detskoi Krovatke. A play. Pages 172–204.(in Russian)
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