Izya Gershtein
Izya Gershtein | |
---|---|
Born | Kiev, USSR | 22 June 1923
Died | 13 February 2013 Haifa, Israel | (aged 89)
Occupation | Film director Screenwriter Cameraman |
Awards | Lenin Komsomol Prize |
Izya Abramovich Gershtein (Russian Изя Абрамович Герштейн; born on 22 June 1923 in Kiev, USSR – 13 February 2013 in Haifa, Israel[1]) was a notable Kyrgyz Soviet documentary filmmaker, cameraman and director. , Honoured Culture Worker of Kyrgyz SSR (1974), Lenin Komsomol Prize Laureate.[2]
Biography[]
In 1941 and 1942 he worked as a technician at the Aktyubinsk power plant. In 1942 became an assistant cameraman at the Frunze "Sibtechfilm" news and documentary film studio.
Later in 1942 he started working at the Kyrgyzfilm studio, eventually becoming a director. Directed (and often wrote the screenplays) the following documentary films (a short list) "Right flank man" (Russian «Правофланговый») (1960), "Three answers for the mountains" (Russian «Три ответа горам») (1963), "Shift" (Russian «Смена») (1964), "Boomerang" (Russian «Бумеранг») (1965), "There, past the mountains, lies the horizon" (Russian «Там, за горами, горизонт») (1966), "Cape of the bay runner" (Russian «Мыс гнедого скакуна») (1966), "Chingiz Aitmatov" (Russian «Чингиз Айтматов») (1968), "Pamir – the roof of the world" (Russian «Памир — крыша мира») (1969), "A happy man" (Russian «Счастливый человек») (1972), "Why the reward?" (Russian «За что премия?») (1973), "Sheepherders" (Russian «Чабаны») (1977), "Farewell, windmill" (Russian «Прощай, мельница») (1978), "Four portraits" (Russian «Четыре портрета») (1979), "For sale to demolish" (Russian «Продаётся на слом») (1982; Winner of the Oberhausen International Short Film Festival prize, 1983) and others.
His work is characterized by a sharp journalistic vision and an expressive editing style.[3]
Emigrated to Israel in the second half of the 1990s.
Gershtein died on 13 February 2013, in Haifa, Israel.[4]
Filmography[]
Most notable works
(1960–1983)[]
№ | Info about the film |
---|---|
01 | "Right flank man" (Russian "Правофланговый"), documentary film (1960) |
02 | "Semion Chuikov, the artist" (Russian "Художник Семен Чуйков"), a documentary essay (1962) |
03 | "Three answers for the mountains" (Russian «Три ответа горам»), documentary film (1963) 3 parts, color |
04 | "Shift" (Russian «Смена»), documentary film (1964) b/w, wide screen, Soviet wide screening |
05 | "Boomerang" (Russian «Бумеранг»), documentary film (1965) 2 parts, color, popular science, Soviet wide screening |
06 | "There, past the mountains, lies the horizon" (Russian «Там, за горами, горизонт»), documentary film (1966) 5 parts, b/w, Soviet wide screening |
07 | "Cape of the bay runner" (Russian «Мыс гнедого скакуна»), documentary film (1966) 2 parts, b/w, Soviet wide screening |
08 | "Chingiz Aitmatov" (Russian «Чингиз Айтматов»), documentary film about the People's Writer of Kyrgyzstan Chingiz Aitmatov (1968) 2 parts, b/w, popular science, Soviet wide screening |
09 | "Pamir – the roof of the world" (Russian «Памир — крыша мира») (1969), documentary film, 3 parts, color, Soviet wide screening
|
10 | "A happy man" (Russian «Счастливый человек») (1972), documentary film |
11 | "Why the reward?" (Russian «За что премия?») (1973), documentary film |
12 | "Sheepherders" (Russian «Чабаны») (1977), documentary film |
13 | "Farewell, windmill" (Russian «Прощай, мельница») (1978), documentary film, 2 parts, color
|
14 | "Four portraits" (Russian «Четыре портрета») (1979), documentary film |
15 | "For sale to demolish" (Russian «Пр��даётся на слом») (1982) 2 parts, color, Soviet wide screening
|
(2000)[]
№ | Info about the film |
---|---|
01 | "While I remember, I'm alive (Russian "Пока я помню, я живу..."), documentary film (2000). Gershtein's last film, in which the daughters of Solomon Mikhoels, Natalia and Nina, talk about their father's fate. |
Encyclopedic mentions[]
- Cinema: An encyclopedia glossary (Russian Кино: Энциклопедический словарь)/S.I. Yutkevich; Y.S. Afansiev, V.E. Baskakov, I.V. Weisfeld, Small Soviet Encyclopedia, 1987.- 640 pages., 96 photographs.[3]
- Soviet filmmaker association guide, 1981 edition.[6]
References[]
- ^ Notice of death Archived 12 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Jump up to: a b "История кино – ГЕРШТЕЙН Изя Абрамович". Kin9.ru. 22 June 1923. Archived from the original on 1 April 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- ^ "Gershtein Izya Abramovich – famous Kyrgyz documentarist died-Kyrgyz Cinema". Kyrgyzcinema.com. 20 February 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Документальные фильмы". Kirgizfilm.ru. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- ^ Герштейн, Изя Абрамович — (in Russian). Rudata.ru. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
External links[]
- A University of Toronto research on I. Gershtein
- St. Michaels College at University of Toronto film collection
- Worldcat Identities – Kyrgyzstani cinema
- An article in the "Lechaim" magazine (in Russian)
- Kyrgyzfilm personalities (in Russian)
- Award winning films at Kyrgyzfilm (in Russian)
- Russian Jewish Encyclopedia (in Russian)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Izya Gershtein. |
- 1923 births
- 2013 deaths
- Film people from Kyiv
- Ukrainian Jews
- Soviet film directors
- Soviet screenwriters
- Male screenwriters
- People's Artists of Kyrgyzstan
- Ukrainian emigrants to Israel