Nikolai Pogodin

Nikolai Fyodorovich Pogodin (Russian: Никола́й Фёдорович Пого́дин) (pseudonym of Nikolai F. Stukalov) (16 November [O.S. 3 November] 1900 – 19 September 1962) was a Soviet playwright. His plays were recognized in Soviet Union theater for their realistic portrayals of common life[1] combined with socialist and communist themes.[1] He is most widely known as the author of a trilogy about Lenin, the first time Lenin was used as a character in any theatrical works.

Nikolai Pogodin
Native name
Nikolai Fyodorovich Stukalov
Born16 November 1900 ((1900-11-03)3 November 1900 in Gregorian calendar)
Gundorovskaya village, Donskoy region, Russian Empire
Died19 September 1962(1962-09-19) (aged 61)
Moscow, the RSFSR, the USSR
OccupationWriter, playwright
LanguageRussian
NationalityUSSR
CitizenshipUSSR
GenrePlays, scripts
Literary movementSocialist Realism
Years active1920–1962
Notable awards

Early life and pre-theater career

Pogodin was born Nikolai Stukalov in modern-day Donetsk Oblast on 16 November [O.S. 3 November] 1900.[2] Both parents were peasants.[1] His educational career lasted through the elementary level.[2] Between 14 and 20, Pogodin worked a variety of low-level jobs: selling newspapers, distributing supplies for typewriters and dental equipment, working in a machine shop, bookbinding and carpentry.[3] During the Russian Civil War he served as a volunteer with the Red Army. In 1920 he worked as a reporter for the Rostov-on-Don newspaper Trudovaya zhizn, and was a traveling correspondent for Pravda from 1922 to 1932. From 1925 he lived in Moscow.

Pogodin died in Moscow on 19 September 1962. He was 61 years old.[1]

Novodevichy Cemetery, where Pogodin is buried

Career

Pogodin's series of three plays featuring Lenin as a character was part of a Soviet movement referred to as Leniniana, which sought to control the way Lenin was portrayed in artistic works.[4] In 1936, the government commissioned, under the People's Commissariat of Education, a collection of writers and directors to make films depicting Lenin and also the revolution in an approved format and presentation style. Among those invited to the initial commission were Alexander Korneichuk, Alexander Afinogenov, Vladimir Kirshon, and the novelist Alexei Tolstoi. Despite his historical significance of presenting Lenin in this approved style, Pogodin was not invited at first. Instead, he volunteered to join the commission and was accepted.[4]

Pogodin did not limit his writing to mainstream theater. He also lent his screenplay skills to the State Leningrad Puppet Theater of Fairy Tales[5] with a play titled The Tale of the Beast Called Indrik. Pogodin also provided a report on children's literature at the Tenth Plenary Meeting of the Union of Soviet Writers in 1946.[6]

Despite working under restrictive creative conditions, Pogodin did support the primary journal for "permitted, formal" dissent at the time, Novyi Mir.[7]

In 1929, Pogodin's first play, Tempo (Temp, 1929) was published after a visit to the Stalingrad Tractor Plant, where the play was later set.[8] The play's major theme of young Communists outdoing their American counterparts was a common theme of Soviet Realism. His later works, Poema o topore (A Poem about an Ax, 1930)[9] and Moi Drug (My Friend, 1930)[10] also touched on themes of soviet industrialism and ingenuity. His plays frequently mixed "factual reports" with dramatization.[11]

A rehearsal of Pogodin's play, Chelovek s ruzhyom (Man with a Gun).

His most popular play was Chelovek s ruzhyom (Man with a Gun, 1937), about Shadrin, a soldier who comes to Petrograd in October 1917 and gets involved in the Revolution; the climax of the play is his meeting with Lenin. The second play in his Lenin trilogy, Kremlyovskie kuranty (The chimes of the Kremlin, 1940), was set in 1920 and featured a scene in which Lenin talks with an old Jewish watchmaker engaged in repairing the Kremlin chimes so they can play the Internationale; the third, Tretya pateticheskaya (The Third: Pathetic, 1958) used the news of Lenin's death as a tragic leitmotif. Kogda lomaiutsya kop'ya (When the Spears Break, 1953) was a comedy; Sonet Petrarki (Petrarch's Sonnet, 1956) "takes the position that there are certain individual matters--personal feelings and affairs of the heart--which are none of the collective's or the Party's business."[2]

From 1951 to 1960 Pogodin was the chief editor of the theatrical journal Teatr.

Early works, style and historical context

The works of Nikolai Pogodin fall under, or closely adhere to, the wider artistic movement known as Socialist realism.[12][13] Pogodin being a Socialist Realist playwright created his works by taking topics that were prevalent in early Soviet history. Many of his works are an example of the early difficulties of the construction of the early Soviet era. His first play was "Tempo" written in 1929, a story of a tractor factory. The second play written by Pogodin was "Impertinence". This play was about the youth who lived in a commune. Third was "Poem of an Axe" written in 1930 which was a story about rust-resistant axe blades that the Soviet Union was dependent on the West for supplies. Next was the play "Snow" about Soviet scientific exploration. Pogodin next wrote "My Friend" in 1932 that was about the building of a large factory in a peasant country.

In 1933, Pogodin took part in a carefully organized writers' tour of the White Sea–Baltic Canal that was being constructed with prison labor.[14] A year later, in 1934, he wrote the play "Aristocrats" about the rehabilitation of criminals in the labor camp that was building the Canal.[2] This play became the screenplay of Convicts, a 1936 Soviet comedy about this BeltBaltLag labor camp.

Pogodin's earliest works were produced during the First five-year economic plan for the Soviet Union. During the Great Purge, Pogodin released several plays about Lenin and the growth of the new Soviet government. Despite the period of the Great Purge marking a shift for plots focusing on internal and external threats to the Soviet cause or Stalin, Pogodin pushed for writing that averted the simplistic to penetrate "people's traumatized psyches" in order to achieve healing.[15] Risking the ire of Kremlin and Soviet censors, Pogodin resisted attempts of the government under the guise of Socialist realism to hide the impact of policies on his characters. [16]

In his play The Three of Us Came To Virgin Lands, Pogodin tells the story of government efforts to turn parts of Siberia into a wheat-generating region despite the difficulties of agriculture in the region. His characters were portrayed as sympathetic, somewhat suffering, and "less than heroic."[17] The play was later televised, quickly recognized by the Kremlin and panned by Pravda for insulting the "patriotic movement" of communism.[17]

Awards and commemorations

He was awarded the title of Honored Art Workers of the Russian Republic. In addition to the Lenin Prize, he was given the Stalin Prize in 1941.[1] In 1949, he became an Honored Artist of the RSFSR. Pogodin was also awarded the State Stalin Prize (Stalinskaya Premia) of the second category in 1951.[18] Petropavlovsk is one of the first cities in Kazakhstan to have a theatrical life. The Pogodin Russian Drama Theater was erected in 1906.[19] In 1934, Pogodin appeared for the first time in the Petropavlovsk playbill featuring his play My Friend. Evacuated artists from surrounding theaters arrived to Petropavlovsk in 1941. The theater was named after Pogodin in 1962. In 1972, the theater moved into a modern building located in Teatralnaya Square. The mission of the Russian Theater, named after Pogodin, never ran out of artistically challenging plays. The theater is seen as a link between Kazakh and Russian cultures, by facilitating their interaction and mutual enrichment. The theater takes pride in upholding the standards of creativity in the region and preserving the moral and aesthetic values through its theater productions.[20]

References

  1. "Nikolai Pogodin is dead at 61". The New York Times. 20 September 1962.
  2. "Pogodin, Nikolai Fyodorovich". Encyclopedia of Soviet Writers. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  3. Avril Pyman in A. K. Thorlby (ed.), The Penguin Companion to Literature: European (Penguin, 1969), p. 618.
  4. Friedberg, Maurice (1977). "Solzhenitsyn's and Other Literary Lenins". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 19 (2): 123–137. doi:10.1080/00085006.1977.11091483. JSTOR 40867538.
  5. Turayev, Georgi (1992). "The State puppet theatre of fairy tales". Contemporary Theatre Review. 1 (1): 49–54. doi:10.1080/10486809208568247. ISSN 1048-6801.
  6. "The Tenth Plenary Meeting of the Union of Soviet Writers". Synthese. 5 (3/4): 170–173. 1946. doi:10.1007/bf02273747. JSTOR 20113855. S2CID 46987010.
  7. Spechler, Dina Rome (1 January 1982). "Permitted Dissent and Soviet Politics: The Case of Novyi mir". The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review. 9 (1): 1–39. doi:10.1163/187633282x00028. ISSN 1876-3324.
  8. Rogger, Hans (July 1981). "Amerikanizm and the Economic Development of Russia". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 23 (3): 382–420. doi:10.1017/S0010417500013426. S2CID 144503003.
  9. Krylova, Anna (2001). "Soviet modernity in life and fiction: The generation of the "new Soviet person" in the 1930s". The Johns Hopkins University, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing. OCLC 48035426.
  10. Gough, Maria (Summer 2009). "Back in the USSR: John Heartfield, Gustavs Klucis, and the Medium of Soviet Propaganda". New German Critique. 107 (2): 133–183. doi:10.1215/0094033X-2009-004. JSTOR 25609149.
  11. Slonim, Marc (1962). Russian Theater: From the Empire to the Soviets. New York: Collier. p. 237. OCLC 1020465691.
  12. The Oxford encyclopedia of theatre & performance. Kennedy, Dennis, 1940-. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2003. ISBN 9780198601746. OCLC 59363098.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  13. Skinner, Amy (November 2016). "Exploring the hinterlands: avant-garde temporality, socialist realism, and Pogodin's Aristocrats". Studies in Theater & Performance. 36 (3): 257–268. doi:10.1080/14682761.2016.1225184. S2CID 64322157.
  14. Klein, Joachim (1995). "Belomorkanal: Literatur und Propaganda in der Stalinzeit". Zeitschrift für Slavische Philologie. 55 (1): 53–98. ISSN 0044-3492.
  15. Krylova, Anna (1 June 2001). ""Healers of Wounded Souls": The Crisis of Private Life in Soviet Literature, 1944–1946". The Journal of Modern History. 73 (2): 307–331. doi:10.1086/321026. ISSN 0022-2801. S2CID 143911668.
  16. Klein, Joachim (1995). "Belomorkanal: Literatur und Propaganda in der Stalinzeit". Zeitschrift für Slavische Philologie. 55 (1): 53–98. ISSN 0044-3492.
  17. Taubman, Howard (30 September 1962). "WITHOUT FEAR; In Privacy of Home Pogodin Spoke Candidly of Soviet Theater". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  18. "Nikolay Pogodin IMDB". IMDb.
  19. "Old-timer building, Pogodin Russian Drama Theater".
  20. "Guide to Kazakhstan: Pogodin Russian Drama Theater".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.