Bella Akhmadulina
Bella Akhmadulina was born in Moscow, Russia on April 10th, 1937 and is the Poet. At the age of 73, Bella Akhmadulina biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 73 years old, Bella Akhmadulina physical status not available right now. We will update Bella Akhmadulina's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Izabella Akhmadulina (Russian: елла) елла ковна алова, tiger, and translator, best known for her apolitical writing position, who died on the 10th of April 1937 – 29 November 2010) a Russian and Russian poet, short story writer, and translator. She was a participant of the Russian New Wave literary movement. Joseph Brodsky had her name as the best living poet in Russia. "The voice of the epoch" is her name in Russia, she is known as "the voice of the epoch."
Despite her aforementioned apolitical stance in her writing, Akhmadulina was often dismissive of Soviet Union officials and spoke out in favour of others, including Nobel Laureates Boris Pasternak, Andrei Sakharov, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. During her travels around the world during Khrushchev Thaw, she was known in sold-out stadiums. President Dmitry Medvedev lauded her poetry at the age of 73, describing her poetry as a "classic of Russian literature" at the time.
Akhmadulina was "always regarded as one of the Soviet Union's literary treasures and a classic poet, with a long line stretching back to Lermontov and Pushkin," according to the New York Times. Sonia I. Ketchian, a writer on Bella Akhmadulina's Poetic Craft, called her "one of the twentieth century's greatest writers." Akhmatova, Tsvetaeva, Mandelstam, and Pasternak are among the five ranked characters in the world, with Tetaeva, Tsvetaeva, Mandelstam, and Pasternak.
Early life, education and works
Bella Akhmadulina was born in Moscow on October 10, 1937, the only child of Akhat Valeevich Akhmadulin, a Tatar father, and Nadezhda Makarovna Lazareva, a Russian-Italian mother, was born in Moscow. When World War II broke out, they were evacuated to Kazan.
Akhmadulina's literary career began as a schoolgirl at Moscow's Metrostroevets, as a reporter and editor, as well as strengthening her poetic skills at a circle arranged by poet Yevgeny Vinokurov. Her first poems appeared in the magazine in October after being accepted by established Soviet poets. These first poems were published in 1955. "Her voice has such a richness of tone, such dynamism of diction, that if her development continues, she will be able to replace Akhmatova" as "Russia's top living woman poet" some day.
Akhmadulina attended the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute, which she graduated in 1960 after leaving high school. She published her poetry and articles in various newspapers, both official and handwritten, while enrolled in the institute. In Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1957, she was the object of ridicule. She was expelled in 1959 (but was allowed to return as time progressed) as a result of her opposition to Boris Pasternak's persecution. Struna (The String), her first collection of her poems, was released in 1962, and it was a smashing success. Despite being burned out, several of her verses were released later: Music lessons (1970), Poems (1977), Dreams of Georgia (1983), Coastline (1991), and others. Akhmadulina received the USSR State Prize in 1989 as a result of a series named Sad (Garden).
In 1979, "many dogs and one dog," a short story written in a surreal style in Samizdat's Metropol Almanac, was published. She was instrumental in the creation of Metropol. Alexander Pushkin and Mikhail Lermontov were among her essays published in the magazine.
Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Andrei Voznesensky, and Robert Rozhdestvensky, among others, appeared in sold-out stadiums in the 1960s, as did poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Andrei Voznesensky and Robert Rozhdestvensky.
Andrei Sakharov, an exiled Russian soldier, was praised in her open letter. She signed the Letter of Forty-Two in October 1993.
In a 1964 film, she was a journalist.
Bella has appeared at many international poetry festivals, including Kuala Lumpur International Poetry Reading (1988).
Casket and Key (1994), A Guiding Sound (1995) and One Day in December (1996).
Akhmadulina's main themes are friendship, passion, and people-to-people relationships. Bulat Okudzhava, her close friend, wrote several essays about Russian writers and translators, some dedicated to her close friend. Akhmadulina stopped writing overtly political poems but took part in political activities in her youth, promoting the so-called "liberation movement." She converted Russian poetry from France, Italy, Chechnya, Poland, Yugoslavia, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Georgia, Armenia, and many others.
Akhmadulina wrote in a "solutely apolitical" style. She created imagery and humour in her art. In her early works, she used rhymed quatrains to explore everyday life in a language that was full of both archaisms and neologisms. As she grew and wrote in longer terms, religion and philosophy became her themes.
Personal life
Bella's first marriage in 1954 was to Yevgeny Yevtushenko, another well-known writer of the period; her second husband, who died in 1960, was Yuri Nagibin, a major novelist and screenwriter. Elizaveta Kulieva, a poet who is also a poet, was born in 1971 during her third marriage to film director Eldar Kuliev. Boris Messerer, the well-known artist and stage designer, married her last husband in 1974. They lived in Perpetu and Moscow.