Alexander Dovzhenko

(Redirected from Oleksandr Dovzhenko)

Alexander Petrovich Dovzhenko, also Oleksandr Petrovych Dovzhenko[1] (Russian: Александр Петрович Довженко, Ukrainian: Олександр Петрович Довженко; September 10 [O.S. August 29] 1894 – November 25, 1956), was a Soviet film director and screenwriter of Ukrainian[2] origin.[3][4] He is often cited as one of the most important early Soviet filmmakers, alongside Sergei Eisenstein, Dziga Vertov, and Vsevolod Pudovkin, as well as being a pioneer of Soviet montage theory.

Alexander Dovzhenko
Born
Alexander Petrovich Dovzhenko

(1894-09-10)September 10, 1894
DiedNovember 25, 1956(1956-11-25) (aged 62)
Peredelkino, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow, Russia
Occupations
  • Film director
  • screenwriter
  • producer
  • editor
Years active1926–1956
SpouseYuliya Solntseva

Biography

edit

Oleksandr Dovzhenko was born in the hamlet of Viunyshche located in the Sosnitsky Uyezd of the Chernihiv Governorate of the Russian Empire (now part of Sosnytsia in Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine), to Petro Semenovych Dovzhenko and Odarka Yermolayivna Dovzhenko. His paternal ancestors were Chumaks who settled in Sosnytsia in the eighteenth century, coming from the neighbouring province of Poltava. Oleksandr was the seventh of fourteen children born to the couple, but due to the deaths of his siblings he was the oldest child by the time he turned eleven. Ultimately, only Oleksandr and his sister Polina, who later becomes a doctor, survived to adulthood.

 
Alexander Dovzhenko in 1921

Although his parents were uneducated, Dovzhenko's semi-literate grandfather encouraged him to study, leading him to become a teacher at the age of 19. He avoided military service during World War I because of a heart condition, but during the Civil War he may have served for some time in the army of the Ukrainian People's Republic.[5] In 1919 in Zhytomyr he was taken prisoner and sent to the prison on suspicion of intelligence for the UPR army. At the end of 1919, he was released at the request of Vasyl Ellan-Blakytny. After his release, for some time he taught history and geography at the officers' school of the Red Army. In 1920 Dovzhenko joined the Borotbist party. He served as an assistant to the Ambassador in Warsaw as well as Berlin. Upon his return to USSR in 1923, he began illustrating books and drawing cartoons in Kharkiv. At that time, Dovzhenko was also a member of VAPLITE.

Dovzhenko turned to film in 1926 when he landed in Odessa. His ambitious drive led to the production of his second-ever screenplay, Vasya the Reformer (which he also co-directed). He gained greater success with Zvenigora in 1928, the story of a young adventurer who becomes a bandit and counter-revolutionary and comes to a bad end, while his virtuous brother spends the film fighting for the revolution, which established him as a major filmmaker of his era.[6]

Ukraine Trilogy

edit
Earth (1930), the final film in Dovzhenko's Ukraine Trilogy

His following "Ukraine Trilogy" (Zvenigora, Arsenal, and Earth), are his most well-known works in the West. Arsenal was badly received by the communist authorities in Ukraine, who began harassing Dovzhenko - but, fortunately for him, Stalin watched it and liked it.[7]

Earth

edit

Dovzhenko's Earth has been praised as one of the greatest silent movies ever made. The British film director Karel Reisz was asked in 2002 by the British Film Institute to rank the greatest films ever made, and he put Earth second. The film portrayed collectivization in a positive light. Its plot revolved around a landowner's attempt to ruin a successful collective farm as it took delivery of its first tractor, though it opened with a long close-up of an elderly, dying man taking intense pleasure in the taste of an apple - a scene with no obvious political message, but with some aspect of autobiography. The film was panned by the Soviet authorities. The poet, Demyan Bedny, attacked its "defeatism" over three columns of the newspaper Izvestia, and Dovzhenko was forced to re-edit it.[8]

Appeal to Stalin

edit
 
Poster for Aerograd (1935)

Dovzhenko's next film, Ivan, portrayed a Dneprostroi construction worker and his reactions to industrialization, which was then summarily denounced for promoting fascism and pantheism. Fearing arrest, Dovzhenko personally appealed to Stalin. One day later, he was invited to the Kremlin, where he read the script of his next project, Aerograd, about the defence of a newly constructed city from Japanese infiltrators, to an audience of four of the most powerful men in the country - Stalin, Molotov, Kirov and Voroshilov. Stalin approved the project but 'suggested' that Dovzhenko's next project, after Aerograd, should be dramatized biography of the born in Ukraine communist guerrilla fighter, Mykola Shchors.

In January 1935, the Soviet film industry celebrated its fifteenth anniversary with a major festival, during which the country's most renowned director Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein, who was in trouble with the authorities, and had not been allowed to complete a film for several years, gave a rambling speech that jumped from one esoteric topic to another. Dovzhenko joined in the criticism, raising a laugh pleading: "Sergei Mikhailovich, if you do not produce a film at least within a year, then please do not produce one at all... All this talk about Polynesian females, I will gladly exchange all your unfinished scenarios for one of your films." At the end of the conference, Stalin presented Dovzhenko with the Order of Lenin.[9]

Later, Dovzhenko was summoned to the Kremlin again, and told by Stalin that he was a "free man", who was not under "any obligation" to make the film about Shchors. He took the hint, and paused work on Aerograd to follow Stalin's 'suggestion', and sent the dictator a draft of the screenplay for Schors. He was then summoned in front of the boss of the Soviet film industry Boris Shumyatsky to be told that the script contained serious political errors.[10] His request for another meeting with Stalin was ignored, so he wrote to the dictator on 26 November 1936, pleading: "This is my life, and if I am doing it wrong, then it is due to a shortage of talent or development, not malice. I bear your refusal to see me as a great sorrow."[11] Stalin's response was a brief note to Shumyatsky, in December, listing five things that were wrong with the script, including that "Shchors came out too crude and uncouth."[12]

Shchors

edit

Dovzhenko completed Aerograd in 1935. Before its release in November, Dovzhenko had begun work on Shchors. According to Jay Leyda, who was employed in the Soviet cinema industry at the time:

Shchors taught him the new difficulties of executing a suggestion from Stalin. In the three years before its release, Dovchenko had to submit every decision and every episode to a seemingly endless series of people 'who knew what Stalin wanted'. There were nightmare interview, some bitter, with the Leader himself, who was beginning to show signs of megalomania and infallibility...Dovzhenko later told friends about one frightening arrival in Stalin's office, when he refused to speak to Dovchenko, and Beria accused him of joining a nationalist conspiracy.[13]

Several of Dovzhenko's colleagues were shot or sent to labour camps during the Great Purge, in 1937–38, including his favourite cameraman, Danylo Demutsky, who worked with him on Earth.[14] But when, at last, he had completed Shchors, which was released in January 1939, he was paid a huge fee - 100,000 rubles[15] - and awarded the Stalin Prize (1941).

Later work

edit

During the war, Dovzhenko wrote an article and a screenplay Ukraine in Flames, which was denounced for its alleged 'veiled nationalistic moods'. There are two versions of who was behind the denunciation. Nikita Khrushchev, who was head of the Ukrainian communist party at the time, paid tribute to Dovzhenko in his memoirs as a "brilliant director", and described the denunciation of Ukraine in Flames as a "disgraceful affair" initiated by the head of the political administration of the Red Army, Aleksandr Shcherbakov, who "was obviously trying hard to fan Stalin's anger by harping on the charge that the film scenario was extremely nationalistic."[16] Dovzhenko had read the scenario aloud to Khrushchev, but he claimed not to have paid much attention to it because he was focused on the war.

But a police report sent at the time by the head of the NKVD Vsevolod Merkulov to the party secretary in charge of culture, Andrei Zhdanov, said that Dovzhenko greatly resented the behaviour of Khrushchev, and leaders of the Ukrainian writers' union, who had praised the scenario on first reading, but then denounced on orders from above. Dovzhenko was quoted as saying "I don't hold anything against Stalin. I hold something against .. people who throw malicious slogans at me after all their admiration of the screenplay - these people cannot guide the war and the people. This is trash."[17]

After being hauled in front of the Central Committee, Dovzhenko was excluded from various official organisations, cut himself off from fellow artists, wrote novels, and applied himself to writing a screenplay about the biologist, Michurin. The film Michurin earned him another Stalin prize, in 1949, although it was revised so many times, in order to get political approval, that according to one historian, "a large part of the final version was made without him."[18]

Khrushchev claimed that with his rise to power after the death of Stalin and the execution of the police chief Lavrentiy Beria, the persecution of Dovzhenko ended, and he was able to "live a useful active life" again.[19] He embarked on two projects, a film adaption of the novella, Taras Bulba, by Gogol and Poem About a Sea, neither of which was completed before Dovzhenko died of a heart attack on November 25, 1956, in his dacha in Peredelkino - though the latter was completed by his widow Yulia Solntseva. [20] Over a 20-year career, Dovzhenko personally directed only seven films.

Legacy

edit

Dovchenko was a mentor to the young Soviet Ukrainian filmmakers Larisa Shepitko and Sergei Parajanov.

 
Monument to Alexander Dovzhenko in Nova Kakhovka

The Dovzhenko Film Studios in Kyiv were named after him in his honour following his death.

In 2016, after the Ukraine government had announced a programme of 'decommunisation' of place names, Karl Liebknecht Street in Melitopol, in East Ukraine, was renamed Oleksandr Dovzhenko Street. On 30 January 2023, after Melitopol had been occupied by the Russian army during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Melitopol's Russian-installed Mayor, Galina Danilchenko announced that the street would be given back its previous name.[21]

Filmography

edit
Bukovina: a Ukrainian Land (1939)

*codirected by Yuliya Solntseva

Film award

edit

A film award called the Oleksandr Dovzhenko State Prize was named after him for his great contributions in the film sphere.[22]

References

edit
  1. ^ Oleksander Dovzhenko at the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  2. ^ Е. Я. Марголит, ДОВЖЕНКО//Great Russian Encyclopedia [1] Archived 2020-07-25 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Richard Taylor, Nancy Wood, Julian Graffy, Dina Iordanova (2019). The BFI Companion to Eastern European and Russian Cinema. Bloomsbury. pp. 1934–1935. ISBN 978-1838718497.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 187–191. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
  5. ^ Who is Hidden behind the Figure of a Genius? The Context of Dovzhenko’s Work
  6. ^ Leyda, Jay (1973). Kino, A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. London: George Allen & Unwin. p. 242. ISBN 0-04-791027-5.
  7. ^ Miller, Jamie (2010). Soviet Cinema: Politics and Persuasion under Stalin. London: I.B.Tauris. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-84885-009-5.
  8. ^ McSmith, Andy (2015). Fear and the Muse Kept watch, The Russian Masters - from Akhmatova and Pasternak to Shostakovich and Eisenstein - Under Stalin. New York: The New Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-1-59558-056-6.
  9. ^ McSmith, Andy. Fear and the Muse. p. 162.
  10. ^ McSmith, Andy. Fear and the Muse. pp. 158–59.
  11. ^ Clarke, Katerina and Dobrenko, Evgeny (2007). Soviet Culture and Power: A history in Documents, 1917-1953. New Haven: Yale U.P. pp. 289–90. ISBN 978-0-300-10646-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Clarke, and Dobrenko. Soviet Culture. p. 295.
  13. ^ Leyda. Kino. p. 354.
  14. ^ Miller. Soviet Cinema. p. 89.
  15. ^ Clarke, and Dobrenko. Soviet Culture. p. 281.
  16. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita (1971). Khrushchev Remembers. London: Sphere. p. 154.
  17. ^ Clarke, and Dobrenko. Soviet Culture. pp. 383–84.
  18. ^ Leyda. Kino. p. 395.
  19. ^ Khrushchev. Memoirs. p. 306.
  20. ^ Leyda. Kino. pp. 402–03.
  21. ^ Danilchenko, Galina. "Дорогие мелитопольцы! Улицы, проспекты, бульвары, шоссе, переулки, площади и проезды в Мелитополе вернут свои исторические названия.(Dear citizens of Melitopol! Streets, avenues, boulevards, highways, lanes, squares and driveways in Melitopol will return their historical names)". Telegram. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  22. ^ "On the State Awards of Ukraine". zakon.rada.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine - Legislation of Ukraine. Retrieved March 10, 2022.

Further reading

edit
  • Dovzhenko, Alexandr (ed. Marco Carynnyk) (1973). Alexandr Dovzhenko: The Poet as Filmmaker, MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-04037-9
  • Kepley, Jr., Vance (1986). In the Service of the State: The Cinema of Alexandr Dovzhenko, University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-10680-2
  • Liber, George O. (2002). Alexander Dovzhenko: A Life in Soviet Film, British Film Institute. ISBN 0-85170-927-3
  • Nebesio, Bohdan. "Preface" to Special Issue: The Cinema of Alexander Dovzhenko. Journal of Ukrainian Studies. 19.1 (Summer, 1994): pp. 2–3.
  • Perez, Gilberto (2000) Material Ghost: Films and Their Medium, Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-6523-9
  • Abramiuk, Larissa (1998) The Ukrainian Baroque in Oleksandr Dovzhenko's Cinematic Art, The Ohio State University (UMI).
edit