
Anatoli Sofronov
Writing
Born 1911-01-06 · Minsk, Russian Empire [now Belarus] · Died 1990-09-09
Anatoly Vladimirovich Sofronov (Russian: Анато́лий Влади́мирович Софро́нов; 19 January 1911 – 9 September 1990) was a Soviet Russian writer, poet, playwright, scriptwriter, editor (Ogonyok, 1953-1986) and literary administrator, the Union of Soviet Writers' secretary in 1948-1953. Sofronov was a Stalin Prize laureate (twice, 1948, 1949) and a recipient of the Order of the Hero of Socialist Labour (1981). An ominous figure with the reputation of "one of the most feared literary hangmen of the Stalinist era," Sofronov is best remembered for his play Stryapukha (Стряпуха, The Kookie) which was followed by three sequels and the popular comedy film of the same name. Working with composers like Semyon Zaslavsky, Matvey Blanter, Sigizmund Kats, he co-authored dozens of songs, made popular by the artists like Vladimir Bunchikov, Vladimir Nechayev, Vadim Kozin, Nikolai Ruban, Vladimir Troshin, Olga Voronets, Maya Kristalinskaya, Iosif Kobzon and Nani Bregvadze. Source: Article Anatoly Sofronov"" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Acting
Crew

Inheritance
Story

Summer Dreams
Writer

Reckoning
Screenplay

The Cook
Writer

The Cook
Theatre Play

The Heart Does Not Forgive
Novel

The Heart Does Not Forgive
Writer

The Heart Does Not Forgive
Lyricist

Dangerous Trails
Lyricist

The Horsemen
Lyricist

Happy Flight
Lyricist

Karandash on Ice
Lyricist

A Noisy Household
Lyricist

In the Long Voyage
Lyricist
