Posted on 02/10/2020 5:05:07 PM PST by CondoleezzaProtege
On this day in 1890, the writer Boris Pasternak was born into an affluent and cultured Russian-Jewish family. His father, Leonid, was a renowned artist and professor at the Moscow School of Painting; his mother Rosa, nee Kaufman, was a concert pianist. His parents social circle included notable figures of the day such as Sergei Rachmaninoff and Leo Tolstoy. The influence of this creative community led the young Pasternak to study first music and then philosophy, both in Russia and abroad. In 1912 he abandoned academia to pursue his true calling: poetry and prose.
The outbreak of World War I signaled changing tides for Pasternak; unable to serve in the army (having fallen off a horse as a child and been left with one leg shorter than the other), he spent four years as a clerk in a Ural factory. Despite his trepidation about the brutality employed by the revolutionaries, Pasternak opted to stay in Russia as the rest of his family emigrated to Germany. Over the next few decades Pasternak would alternate between despair and optimism in his new role as a Soviet poet.
Pasternaks relationship with the Soviet state was complex and contradictory. Although an initial supporter of the revolution, by the late 1920s he became disillusioned with the usage of art primarily to exalt the Soviet government. After refusing to sign a 1937 statement from the Union of Soviet Writers supporting the death penalty for defendants of a show trial, he fully expected arrest, but was spared by Stalin himself (who thought the poets Tolstoyan philosophies to be harmless).
On the other hand, his fumbling defense of his fellow poets garnered him a mixed reputation among the more dissident Soviet literary elite. Pasternaks political reputation was never a straight line.
Pasternaks work was inseparable from his rich and tumultuous personal life. He suffered two failed love affairs before his 1922 marriage to Evgeniya Lurye, both of which are recounted in his early poetry. While his wife was abroad for medical treatment in 1930, Pasternak met and fell in love with the married Zinaida Neuhaus, for whom he would divorce his wife and marry two years later. Although he would remain married to Zinaida for the remainder of his life, in 1946, Pasternak would meet the much-younger Olga Ivinskaya, who would become his longtime mistress. Ivinskaya would spend nearly a decade of her life imprisoned for her association with the poet.
Pasternak was and perhaps is still best known in Russia as a poet. His first collection, My Sister, Life (1922) was a literary sensation. He was one of the four great poets of the 20th century along with Anna Akhmatova, Marina Tsvetaeva, and Osip Mandelshtam. He is also renowned for his translations, particularly of Shakespeare, which remain popular with readers although critics find them to be very pasternakized.
In the West, his most lasting legacy is his novel Doctor Zhivago, a musing on the brutality of the Russian revolution and the inner turmoil of love and self-actualization. Pasternaks life itself served as a basis for the novel. The setting alternates between Pasternaks familiar Moscow and Ural locales, the characters bear resemblance to Pasternaks own acquaintances (particularly the character of Lara to real-life Ivinskaya), and the protagonist navigates the same revolution and newfound state that Pasternak found himself caught up in. Completed in 1956, the book was rejected by Soviet publishers and was instead smuggled abroad for publication. The 1958 announcement that Pasternak would receive the Nobel Prize was met with outrage by the Soviet state, and out of self-preservation Pasternak turned down the award. He would live in relative poverty for the remaining two years of his life, before succumbing to lung cancer in 1960.
His house in Peredelkino, where he wrote some of his most famous works, was only opened as a museum on Feb. 10, 1990.
Have not read the book but the movie was great. One of the best ever.
It certainly was one of the best. Loved it.
The book was like 600 pages long. Russkies did not believe in word count.
Did Lara use men?
One of my favorite movies! Some day I’ll read the book although after Brothers K I’m still recovering from Russian literature. That was a slog!
I’ve not seen the movie...suppose it’s online?
I am not sure but I ordered it on DVD several years ago for not much.
Found Prime has it for 2.99 rental
It's available on streaming services. Do yourself a favor and get the remastered Bluray. The cinematography is fantastic.
It was my mothers favorite movie. The music alone makes it worth watching.
My all time favorite movie. First saw it in 1965 in the very first row of the theater. Came away freezing cold between air conditioning and all of the snowy scenes. Seven years later I took a Russian history class in college from a Russian emigre. As we progressed through the class he would often point out members of his family he was related to. One of the most interesting people I’ve ever met.
Thank you...I’ll look for it...does that mean I have to stream it?
Not sure ...there’s some on Amazon that say remastered...I want to get the right one...suggestions?
The DVD I have is sharp but I would like to see it in Blu-Ray. Mine has a lot of extras including interviews with the stars etc.
You too? I have seen it so many times I have it memorized word for word, all 3:17 of it. I find in that film a precedent for all of the socio-political byplay that's transpired since. It is a masterpiece, one of a kind.
The Hollywood studio version is indeed magnificent but is nothing when compared to the little known Grenada version which was made to more faithfully follow the Pasternak vision and meaning.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ZhivagoDVD.jpg
True dat.
Mark
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