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Shukshin (Øóêøèí) Vasily Makarovich
(1929—1974)

Shukshin (Øóêøèí) Vasily Makarovich(1929—1974)

Actor, film director and writer born in a peasant family in the Siberian village of Srostki, located in the Altai krai. In 1933, his father was executed either for sabotage in the kolkhoz or for inciting a riot. For the sake of the family, Shukshin's mother renounced her husband's name, and gave her son her maiden name of Popov. He lived with this name until he turned 16 years old. (Markar Shukshin was posthumously rehabilitated in 1956.)

After finishing the village seven-year school, Vasily Shukshin enrolled in the Biysk Automobile Technical College. Around this time, Shukshin started writing stories and submitting them to a Moscow journal. Presumably, these early submissions were all rejected. Since Shukshin was not in Srostki at the time, the village postmaster misatkenly delivered the returned manuscripts to a Vasily Maksimovich Shukshin, the writer's illiterate uncle, who used the paper to roll cigars. So, unfortunately, these early writings are lost forever.

After two and a half years at the technical college, Shukshin was expelled, possibly because of failing an engine mechanics course, or possibly because of barage of profanity directed at a teacher. He returned to Srostki, but the situation was difficult there, with famine threatening, so, at age 17, Shukshin left the village. He took a job as a metal worker-rigger at a pipe factory in Kaluga. He subsequently worked at a tractor factory in Vladimir and at a train-repair station.

In 1949 he was called up for military duty and served in the Navy as a radio-specialist first on the Baltic Sea, and later on the Black Sea. Suffering from a stomach ulcer, Shukshin was demobilized in 1953. He returned to Srostki, where he taught Russian language and literature while simultaneously serving as director of the village school.

Shukshin had a busy year in 1954. He married Marya Shumskaya (with whom he was to have one daughter). In May of 1954 Shukshin became a candidate member of the Communist Party, and in August of the same year he enrolled in the All-Russian Institute of Cinematography. Shukshin's original plan had been to enroll in the Gorky Institute of Literature, but he missed the application deadline.

Shukshin had his first major acting role in M. Khutsiev's 1958 film «Two Fyodors». 1958 was also the year that Shukshin published his first story, «Two On A Cart». The publishing house «Molodaya Gvardiya» issued his first collection of stories, «Village Residents» in 1963.

In 1963, working out of the Gorky Film Studios, Shukshin produced his first full-length feature film «There Lives Such a Fellow», which won the Golden Lion of Saint Mark Award at the 16th Venice Film Festival. Other films soon followed, such as «Your Son and Brother» (1965), «Strange People» (1969), and «Bench by the Stove» (1972).

Shukshin married a second time in 1964, to Lidiya Nikolaevna Fedoseeva, with whom he was to have two more daughters.

Along with his film career, Shukshin continued writing. In 1965 he produced a historical novel, «The Lyubavins». It tells the story of a Siberian family and their difficulties in coming to terms with the new Soviet regime being established in their village in the 1920s. The story spans several decades and follows several generations. The second part of the novel, called «Friendship of Peoples» was not published until 1987.

Shukshin published four more collections of stories: «There In The Distance» (1968), «Countrymen» (1970), «Characters» (1973), and «Conversations Under a Clear Moon» (1974). He also penned a second historical novel, «I Have Come To Give You Freedom» (1974), which dealt with the Cossack and peasant revolt led by Stenka Razin in the 17th century. Shukshin had hoped to turn this project into a film as well, but censorship problems prevented it.

Shukshin also wrote a play entitled «Energetic People», which was published in «Literaturnaya Gazetta» in June of 1974.

As a writer, Shukshin is considered a derevenshchik (village writer). He deals with rural settings and themes. The hero of his works is usually a chudak, an eccentric. In the story «Alone» (1963), a harness-maker loves to forget the drudgery of the day by playing his balalaika, but he must do this in secret because his wife thinks it's merely a distraction. In «Mille Pardons, Madame!» (1968), the main character regales visitors with a fanciful tale about his part in a failed assassination attempt on Hitler during World War II. And in «Cut Down To Size» (1970), a villager delights in humiliating visiting city intellectuals with what he believes is his superior knowledge, although his understanding of current events is really rather spotty.

This choice of hero sets Shukshin apart from other derevenshchiki. As Kathleen Parthe points out, Shukshin usually chooses as a protagonist, an adult male eccentric who is a truck driver or other nonagricultural worker, whereas the typical derevenshchik writes about old women or children and celebrates the dignity of agricultural labor. Shukshin's heroes live for their nights and weekends away from work, for their own "personal holiday"; the heroes of the derevenshchik are more focused on everyday reality or byt. Occasionally, Shukshin even chose a criminal as a protagonist--a relative rarity in Soviet literature--such as in the story «I Want To Live» (1966).

Perhaps Shukshin's most famous work is «Snowball Berry Red», which he published as a novel in 1973 and turned into a film (in which he himself starred) in 1974. It is the tale of an eccentric ex-convict who tries to escape his old lifestyle and start afresh with honest labor and a good woman. However, his old gang catches up with him and kills him. Censors has some questions about the suitability of the film version of this work. But Leonid Brezhnev, moved to tears at a Kremlin screening, assured the release of the film. For this work, Shukshin was posthumously awarded the Lenin Prize in 1976.

There is evidence that, near the end of his life, Shukshin was dissatisfied with his artistic endeavors to date and considered limiting his directing and acting and devoting himself more fully to writing. In an interview just a few months before his death Shukshin said:
If you are a writer, you must devote your whole life to literature. And literature calls for quiet concnetration, study of life, knowledge of life, of the world we live in....I see now that I have created practically nothing. One must probe very deeply into the essence of life, try to understand it in all its manifestations. Yet we look for multiformity, for immediate benefits, we waste so much energy on so many things and believe that we are dedicating our lives to art. But it is all hustle and bustle.

Vasily Shukshin died of a heart attack on 2 October 1974 in Kletskii, Volgagrad, while filming «The Fought for the Motherland».

After his death, several more collections of Shukshin's stories were published, including: «My Brother» (1975), «In the Autumn» (1976), «I Want To Live» (1977), and «Stories» (1977). «Before the Cock Calls Thrice» (1976) is an extravagant parody of the Russian fairy tale in which Ivan the Fool is sent on a search not for wisdom, but for a certificate attesting to his wisdom. The novella «Point of View» (1979) describes a matchmaking from four different points of view.


Russia, 2007, Altay. Shukshin Monument

Russia, Srostki. Shukshin's Readinhg

USSR, 1989.07.26, Srostki. 60th birth anniv of Shukshin

Russia, 2004, Vasily Shukshin

Russia, 2005, Birth Centenary of Mikhail Sholokhov

Russia, 2005, Zhakov and Shukshin in film «At Lake»

Russia, 2009, Vasiliy Shukshin

USSR, 1975, Scene from the film «They Fought for Their Country»

USSR, 1989, Vasily Shukshin

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