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- Q2525515 subject Q6436395.
- Q2525515 subject Q6646925.
- Q2525515 subject Q7478265.
- Q2525515 subject Q7484919.
- Q2525515 subject Q7583362.
- Q2525515 subject Q8692828.
- Q2525515 subject Q9710303.
- Q2525515 abstract "Pavel Grigoryevich Antokolsky (Russian: Па́вел Григо́рьевич Антоко́льский; IPA: [ˈpavʲɪl ɡrʲɪˈɡorʲjɪvʲɪtɕ ɐntɐˈkolʲskʲɪj]; July 1, 1896, St. Petersburg, Russia – October 9, 1978, Moscow, USSR) was a Russian poet and theatre director. His father was a nephew of sculptor Mark Antokolsky.In the 1930s, Antokolsky worked as a director in the Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow. During the WWII, he ran a front theatre and was awarded a Stalin Prize for a long poem about the Germans killing his son. After the war, he managed a theatre in Tomsk. His poem, "All we who in his name..." was written in 1956, the year of Nikita Khrushchev's "secret speech" condemning Stalinism, and widely circulated among student groups in the 1950s.Among other works, Pavel Antokolsky translated in Russian Le Dernier jour d'un condamne and Le roi s'amuse, by Victor Hugo.".
- Q2525515 birthDate "1896-07-01".
- Q2525515 birthName "Pavel Grigoryevich Antokolsky".
- Q2525515 birthPlace Q34266.
- Q2525515 birthPlace Q656.
- Q2525515 deathDate "1978-10-09".
- Q2525515 deathPlace Q15180.
- Q2525515 deathPlace Q649.
- Q2525515 nationality Q49542.
- Q2525515 wikiPageExternalLink antokolsky.com.
- Q2525515 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
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- Q2525515 wikiPageWikiLink Q8692828.
- Q2525515 wikiPageWikiLink Q9710303.
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- Q2525515 birthDate "1896-07-01".
- Q2525515 birthName "Pavel Grigoryevich Antokolsky".
- Q2525515 birthPlace Q34266.
- Q2525515 birthPlace Q656.
- Q2525515 deathDate "1978-10-09".
- Q2525515 deathPlace Q15180.
- Q2525515 deathPlace Q649.
- Q2525515 nationality Q49542.
- Q2525515 type Person.
- Q2525515 type Agent.
- Q2525515 type Person.
- Q2525515 type Writer.
- Q2525515 type Agent.
- Q2525515 type NaturalPerson.
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- Q2525515 type Q215627.
- Q2525515 type Q36180.
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- Q2525515 type Person.
- Q2525515 comment "Pavel Grigoryevich Antokolsky (Russian: Па́вел Григо́рьевич Антоко́льский; IPA: [ˈpavʲɪl ɡrʲɪˈɡorʲjɪvʲɪtɕ ɐntɐˈkolʲskʲɪj]; July 1, 1896, St. Petersburg, Russia – October 9, 1978, Moscow, USSR) was a Russian poet and theatre director. His father was a nephew of sculptor Mark Antokolsky.In the 1930s, Antokolsky worked as a director in the Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow. During the WWII, he ran a front theatre and was awarded a Stalin Prize for a long poem about the Germans killing his son.".
- Q2525515 label "Pavel Antokolsky".
- Q2525515 homepage antokolsky.com.