Poet
Writer
Born in 1915, Russia
 
Died in 1994
Evgeniy DOLMATOVSKY
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Евгений Аронович ДОЛМАТОВСКИЙ
Evgueni DOLMATOVSKI
From filmography
 
Writer
1958 - Dobrovoltsy (Добровольцы) from Yuri YEGOROV [fiction, 97 mn]
 
Text of songs
1987 - Zerkalo dlya geroya (Зеркало для героя) from Vladimir KHOTINENKO [fiction, 139 mn]
1978 - Piat vecherov (Пять вечеров) from Nikita MIKHALKOV [fiction, 103 mn]
1970 - Molodye (Молодые) from Nikolay MOSKALENKO [fiction, 92 mn]
1963 - Mechte navstrechu (Мечте навстречу) from Mikhail KARIUKOV , Otar KOBERIDZE [fiction, 70 mn]
1958 - Dobrovoltsy (Добровольцы) from Yuri YEGOROV [fiction, 97 mn]
1957 - Ekaterina Voronina (Екатерина Воронина) from Isidor ANNENSKY [fiction, 97 mn]
1956 - Oni byli pervymi (Они были первыми) from Yuri YEGOROV [fiction, 100 mn]
1955 - Vesennye golosa (Весенние голоса) from Eldar RIAZANOV [fiction, 71 mn]
1954 - My s vami gde-to vstrechalis (Мы с вами где - то встречались) from Nikolay_2 DOSTAL , Andrey TUTYSHKIN [fiction, 95 mn]
1949 - Vstrecha na Elbe (Встреча на Эльбе) from Grigori ALEXANDROV [fiction, 104 mn]
1948 - Tri vstrechi (Три встречи) from Aleksandr PTUSHKO , Vsevolod PUDOVKIN , Sergey YUTKEVICH [fiction, 83 mn]
1942 - Aleksandr Parkhomenko (Александр Пархоменко) from Leonid LUKOV [fiction, 94 mn]
1941 - Serdtsa chetyryokh (Сердца четырех) from Konstantin YUDIN [fiction, 96 mn]
1941 - Tainstvenny ostrov (Таинственный остров) from Eduard PENTSLIN [fiction, 94 mn]
1941 - Morskoy yastreb (Морской ястреб)
1939 - Devushka s kharakterom (Девушка с характером) from Konstantin YUDIN [fiction, 87 mn]
1939 - Istrebiteli (Истребители) from Eduard PENTSLIN [fiction, 96 mn]
 
Sites : Kino-teatr, ru-Wikipedia, fr-Wikipedia, en-Wikipedia

Biography
Poet, prose writer.
Born April 22 (May 5), 1915, in Moscow. While studying at the pedagogical college, he began publishing in the Pioneer press. From 1932-34, he worked on the construction of the Moscow metro. In 1937, he graduated from the Literary Institute. Dolmatovsky's first book of lyric poetry was published in 1934.

From 1939 to 1945, Dolmatovsky served as a war correspondent in active units of the Soviet Army. In 1941, he was surrounded and captured, from which he escaped back to the front (these events are recounted in the story "Green Gate").

Dolmatovsky gained his greatest fame for the songs he wrote to his lyrics ("Officer's Waltz," "Song of the Dnieper," and "Volunteers" by Mark Fradkin, "Sormovskaya Lyrical" by Boris Mokrousov, "My Beloved" by Matvey Blanter, and "Beloved City" by Nikita Bogoslovsky), many of which were featured in popular films ("Fighters," "Meeting on the Elbe").

For his work, Yevgeny Dolmatovsky was awarded five orders and several other government awards. Laureate of the Stalin Prize, 3rd degree (1950, for the poem cycle "A Word about Tomorrow").

Dolmatovsky also worked as a literary critic (From the Life of Poetry, 1965; To Young Poets, 1981), translator, editor, and compiler.

He died in Moscow on September 10, 1994.
 

Images
Стихи про кино
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Я не возьму тебя в кино...

Я не возьму тебя в кино —
Там честь солдата под угрозой:
Не плакавший давным-давно,
Я там порой глотаю слезы.

Но вовсе не на тех местах,
Где разлучаются навеки
Иль с тихим словом на устах
В последний раз смежают веки.

Сдержаться не могу тогда,
Когда встают в кинокартинах
Отстроенные города,
Которые я знал в руинах.

Иль при показе старых лент,
Когда мелькают полустанки,
И монументы ранних лет —
Красноармейские кожанки,
И пулеметные тачанки,
Объехавшие целый свет.

Беспечным девочкам смешно,
Как им понять, что это значит:
Документальное кино,
А человек глядит и плачет.

1957