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Aleksandr Moiseyevich Volodin (Russian: Александр Моисеевич Володин; 1919 – 2001), born Lifschitz, was a Soviet and Russian playwright, screenwriter and poet. His first play was The Factory Girl (1956).
The famous playwright, screenwriter, and poet Aleksandr Lifshitz was born in Minsk in 1919, into a Jewish family. When Aleksandr was five, his mother died; his father remarried, and the boy was sent to be raised by relatives in Moscow. From early childhood, Aleksandr exhibited a love for theater.
Aleksandr Volodin may refer to: Aleksandr Volodin (linguist) (1935–2017), Soviet and Russian linguist. Aleksandr Volodin (playwright) (1919–2001), Soviet and Russian playwright, screenwriter and poet.
Aleksandr Moiseyevich Volodin (Russian: Александр Моисеевич Володин; 1919 – 2001), born Lifschitz, was a Soviet and Russian playwright, screenwriter and poet. His first play was The Factory Girl (1956).
Five Evenings. Paperback – October 28, 1966. The Russian playwright Aleksandr Volodin represents a "new wave" of Soviet dramatists, who appear to be primarily interested in personal relationships and values within a framework that is social rather than specifically socialist or communist.
- Aleksandr Volodin
Volodin is the author of the plays Factory Girl (staged in 1956), Five Evenings (1959), Visiting and at Home (1960), Elder Sister (1961; and the film of the same name, 1967), and The Assignment (1963).
The Russian playwright Aleksandr Volodin represents a "new wave" of Soviet dramatists, who appear to be primarily interested in personal relationships and values within a framework that is social rather than specifically socialist or communist.