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Boris Pasternak(1890-1960)

  • Writer
  • Music Department
  • Additional Crew
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Boris Pasternak
Boris Pasternak was born in Moscow on February 10, 1890 into an artistic family of Russian-Jewish heritage. His father was an acclaimed artist named Leonid Pasternak, who converted to Christianity, and his mother was a renown concert pianist named Rosa Kaufman. Their home was open to family friends such as composers Sergei Rachmaninoff and Aleksandr Skryabin as well as writers Rilke and Lev Tolstoy. Pasternak had a happy childhood, being brought up by prominent intellectuals in a cosmopolitan atmosphere. He studied music at the Moscow Conservatory and philosophy at the University of Marburg, Germany. In 1914 he returned to Moscow and published his first collection of poems. His work at a chemical factory in the Urals during WWI was later used as material for his novel "Doctor Zhivago".

In 1917 he fell in love with a Jewish girl and wrote "My Sister Life", a collection of passionate metaphoric poems that brought him international recognition and had an impact upon Russian Symbolist and Futurist poetry. Pasternak cautiously supported the Russian revolution, but was shocked with the brutality of communists. His parents and sisters emigrated to Europe in 1921. During the "Great Terror" of 1930s, Pasternak became disillusioned with the Soviet reality. He came under severe political attack and devoted himself to making translations of classic works: Shakespeare's "Hamlet", "Macbeth", "King Lear", Goethe's "Faust", as well as Paul Verlaine, Rainer Maria Rilke and other Western poets. His translations of Georgian poets favored by Joseph Stalin probably saved his life. Stalin spoke with Pasternak in 1934 over the phone, and questioned his association with poet Osip Mandelstam, who was executed upon Stalin's order. Later Stalin crossed Pasternak's name off the arrest list, quoted as saying "Don't touch this cloud dweller", alluding to his book "The Twin in the Clouds".

During 1940s-50s Pasternak wrote his autobiographic novel "Doctor Zhivago". A model for Lara in the novel was the poet's muse, beautiful and kind Olga Iwinskaja, an editor at "Novy Mir" magazine. In 1949, when she was pregnant by Pasternak, she was arrested by KGB on false accusations of "spying" and spent 4 years in prison-camp. Their unborn baby was lost, and Pasternak suffered a heart attack. After the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953, Olga Iwinskaja was released and reunited with Pasternak, who completed "Doctor Zhivago". He tried to publish it in the Soviet magazine "Novy Mir", but was rejected. The manuscript of "Doctor Zhivago" was secretly smuggled out of the Soviet Union and was first published in Italy in 1957.

Pasternak was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958. But Soviet authorities declared him a "traitor" and attacked him with a campaign of persecution, terrorizing Pasternak up until his death in 1960. He was so abused by the Soviet authorities, that he became unable to go to accept the Nobel Prize and was forced to decline the honor. He lived the life of fear and insecurity that was imposed upon him and millions of others under the Soviet totalitarian system. He ended his life in poverty and a virtual exile in an artist's community of Peredelkino near Moscow. His last poems are devoted to love, to freedom, and to reconciliation with God. Pasternak was rehabilitated posthumously in 1987. In 1988, after being banned in the Soviet Union for three decades, "Doctor Zhivago" was published in the same "Novy Mir" magazine as a sign of changing times. In 1989 Pasternak's son accepted his father's Nobel Prize medal in Stockholm.
BornFebruary 10, 1890
DiedMay 30, 1960(70)
BornFebruary 10, 1890
DiedMay 30, 1960(70)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 1 win total

Known for

Geraldine Chaplin, Julie Christie, and Omar Sharif in Le docteur Jivago (1965)
Le docteur Jivago
7.9
  • Writer
  • 1965
Docteur Jivago (2002)
Docteur Jivago
7.3
TV Mini Series
  • Writer
Mikhail Nazvanov, Elza Radzina, and Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy in Hamlet (1964)
Hamlet
8.2
  • Writer(as B. Pasternak, 1941 Russian translation)
  • 1964
Doctor Zhivago
TV Series
  • Writer

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Writer



    • Doktor Zhivago (2006)
      Doktor Zhivago
      7.5
      TV Series
      • novel
      • 2006
    • Ne delayte biskvity v plokhom nastroenii (2003)
      Ne delayte biskvity v plokhom nastroenii
      8.1
      • poems
      • 2003
    • Docteur Jivago (2002)
      Docteur Jivago
      7.3
      TV Mini Series
      • novel
      • 2002
    • Albert Camus in Un siècle d'écrivains (1995)
      Un siècle d'écrivains
      7.5
      TV Series
      • excerpts from a work by
      • 1998
    • Pasternak (1990)
      Pasternak
      6.2
      TV Movie
      • Writer
      • 1990
    • Bene! Quattro diversi modi di morire in versi: Majakovskij-Blok-Esènin-Pasternak (1977)
      Bene! Quattro diversi modi di morire in versi: Majakovskij-Blok-Esènin-Pasternak
      7.9
      TV Movie
      • poems
      • 1977
    • Jüri Järvet in Le roi Lear (1970)
      Le roi Lear
      8.0
      • Russian translation, 1949
      • 1970
    • Geraldine Chaplin, Julie Christie, and Omar Sharif in Le docteur Jivago (1965)
      Le docteur Jivago
      7.9
      • from the novel by
      • 1965
    • Mikhail Nazvanov, Elza Radzina, and Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy in Hamlet (1964)
      Hamlet
      8.2
      • Writer (as B. Pasternak, 1941 Russian translation)
      • 1964
    • Doutor Jivago
      7.7
      TV Series
      • novel
      • 1959

    Music Department



    • Aleksey Lyubimov, Tatyana Rudina, and Marina Yakovleva in Predel zhelaniy (1983)
      Predel zhelaniy
      6.1
      • lyricist (as B. Pasternak)
      • 1983
    • Aleksandr Kalyagin and Vyacheslav Nevinnyy in Staryy novyy god (1981)
      Staryy novyy god
      7.1
      • lyricist (as B. Pastenak)
      • 1981

    Additional Crew



    • Sergei Parajanov and Mikhail Vartanov in Paradjanov: Le Dernier Printemps (1992)
      Paradjanov: Le Dernier Printemps
      7.3
      • poems
      • 1992

    • In-development projects at IMDbPro

    Personal details

    Edit
    • Alternative names
      • B. Pastenak
    • Born
      • February 10, 1890
      • Moscow, Russian Empire [now Russia]
    • Died
      • May 30, 1960
      • Peredelkino, Moscow Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSR [now Russia](heart ailment, lung cancer, stomach bleeding)
    • Spouses
        Zinaida Nikolaevna Neigauz1934 - May 30, 1960 (his death, 1 child)
    • Other works
      Book: "Letters to Georgian Friends"
    • Publicity listings
      • 2 Biographical Movies
      • 2 Print Biographies
      • 3 Portrayals
      • 3 Articles

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      His poem opens Paradjanov: Le Dernier Printemps (1992) which also features the poetry of Sayat Nova, whose poem closes it.
    • Quotes
      Man is born to live, not to prepare for life.

    FAQ

    Powered by Alexa
    • When did Boris Pasternak die?
      May 30, 1960
    • How did Boris Pasternak die?
      Heart ailment, lung cancer, stomach bleeding
    • How old was Boris Pasternak when he died?
      70 years old
    • Where did Boris Pasternak die?
      Peredelkino, Moscow Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSR (now Russia)
    • When was Boris Pasternak born?
      February 10, 1890

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