
1926
March 24: Mathilde Kshessinskaya, the
former sweetheart of Tsar Nicholas II and prima-ballerina of the Mariinsky
Theatre of St. Petersburg, who after the death of her husband, Grand Duke
André Vladimirovich Romanoff, lives on the address 38 Villa Molitor,
Paris, opens the doors of her school of ballet, 6 Avenue Vion-Whitcomb,
on March 6. The school is consecrated by Metropolitan Evlogi.
April 4, 1926: World Conference of Russians in Paris. 420 deputies from 26 countries gather here, headed by chairman Pierre Struve, and they speak about which possibilities the people of Russia have to free themselves from the communist yoke.
May 2, the night of Russian Easter: Grand Duke André Vladimirovich Romanoff and Mathilde Kshessinskaya have invited Serge Diaghilev and his company. Mathilde: `The cars I rented brought all of us to the Cathedral of Nice. After midnight mass we returned to the villa for the ``razgoveni'', the traditional Easter meal with ``pashka's'' and ``kulich'', painted eggs, ham and other tasty dishes. (...) After the meal the guests started to dance. Serge Lifar, who was a little bit tipsy, wanted to court Tamara Karsavina, but Diaghilev was offended and put an end to the flirt by saying, ``Young man, you are obviously a little too merry! It is time to go home!'', and they left together for Monte Carlo.'
May 14: General Vrangel, now the President of the ROVS (Union of Russian Veterans in France) writes, `My labour hasn't been for nothing. By founding the ROVS in 1924, we have brought together all organizations of officers in exile. Today more than 40,000 men are member of the ROVS; what an army! (...) What is the purpose of this organization? To go to battle against the communists who have occupied Russia, without compassion. The Russian people still hope for improvement of the situation. Only the Russian people have the right to determine which form of government Russia will have in the future.'
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya is born.
August 22: Alec Ignatieff becomes an engineer and leaves for Sierra Leone. His brothers Nick and Dima Ignatieff leave for Canada.
1927
Paris, April 27: Princess Vera Meshchersky
founds the `Russian House', in the Rue de la Cossonerie, Saint-Geneviève-des-Bois.
The Russian House is a home where about 250 retired Russian refugees can
be accommodated.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky publishes his book The catastrophe; his own story about the Russian Revolution.
From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: August 22, 1927: A letter from my mother, `Father is arrested and thrown into a dungeon. I don't know why. He hopes it's a misunderstanding.'
August 24: Out of the gatherings of old and young Russian writers in the salon of the writer Dmitri Merezhkovsky and his wife Zinaida Hippius `The Green Lamp' comes into being, a literary circle with a respectable number of members.
Nice, France, September 14: After finishing her book My Life the dancer Isadora Duncan dies, in a car, just like her children Deirdre and Patrick. Her long scarf gets stuck in the spokes of her car, and literally strangles her. Isadora Duncan caused a stirr by appearing on stage barefooted and only dressed in a tunic. In 1922 Isadora married the Russian poet Serge Esenin. They met in February 1921, when Isadora danced with the Bolshoy Theatre in Moscow. From 1921 to 1924 she had a school of dance in Moscow.
December 28: The writer and poet Serge Alexandrovich Esenin (1895-1925), who was married to Isadora Duncan and in Russia is criticized for his shocking statements, commits suicide in Hotel Angleterre in Petrograd (St. Petersburg).
Paris, December 3: The Russian cabaret Shéhérazade, 3 Rue de Liège, opens its doors. (The establishment became world famous by Erich Maria Remarque's novel Arch of Triumph, and the film of the same name of 1948, with Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman in the leading parts.)
1928
January 31: Stalin has ordered Leo Trotsky
to leave Alma Ata. Trotsky is bannished to the isle of Prinkipo, in Turkey.
From the beginning of May to August 8
Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanoff lives in the house of her cousin, Grand Duchess
Xenia Grigorievna. On May 27, 1928 Xenia states in World magazine, `I am
convinced that she is the daughter of Nicholas II. I have often played
with Anastasia; she has my age. Mrs Chaikovsky has surprised me completely
by arousing the memories of what we did and said in our childhood. I'm
absolutely sure of her identity and I'm prepared to put my whole capital
at stake to prove that she is Anastasia.'
It is of no avail. 44 members of the
House of Romanoff are still alive. A family council is held, in which is
proposed to sign a statement against Anastasia. 32 members of the family
refuse to sign the statement; the 12 who sign it are coincidental the direct
heirs when it can be proven that none of the children of the tsar is still
alive: Xenia Alexandrovna and her husband Alexander, Olga Alexandrovna
and her second husband Nicholas Kulikovsky (1881-1958), the 6 sons of Alexander
and Xenia, their daughter Irina and Irina's husband Felix Yussupov. Several
million English pounds are at stake.
My informer `Feodor' Romanoff, `I can't
tell you too much about it without blowing my cover, but I have known her.
Sure, the money had a lot to do with it, but that wasn't all. Noblesse
oblige. She was eccentric, broken, mentally ill, and would have been the
most important Romanoff of all, once she was acknowledged. Many of my relatives
found this absolutely unacceptable. The families of Windsor and Von Hessen-Darmstadt
also had an important part in this decision. The lesser gods of the Romanoff
clan found the fuss around Anastasia rather amusing. Only one or two were
however prepared to support her at the cost of everything. Also important
was the role of the Russian-Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, which had
canonized the entire Imperial Family, and was in a tight corner when it
became clear that Anastasia was still alive and anything but a saint.'
Anastasia knew who she was, and that
was good enough for her. That, and her confabulations, filling the gap
of missing information in the own memory with common known facts or the
memories of others, have cooked her goose during the many lawsuits about
her identity, because during the years the `facts' changed, and if she
`lied' about one thing, she most likely didn't tell the truth about other
things.
October 14: Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich
Romanoff, who lived in Antibes until July 1923, after which he moved to
the Chƒteau de Choigny in Santeny, near Paris, returns to the Villa Thénard;
he is seriously ill, and he wants to be near his brother Peter.
Paris, October 24: Prince Felix Yussupov and his wife Irina found their fashion house Irfé (Irina-Felix), on the second floor of 19 Rue Duphot. (Are they expecting some money, perhaps?) Almost their entire staff consists of Russian refugees. Successively they open branches in Touquet, London and Berlin. The Yussupov's live in the Rue Pierre Guérin. (That house was demolished. Only a green garden door with a door bell and a sign `Chien mechant' is left of the old building.)
Paris, October 25: Maria Solovyov, a daughter of Rasputin, institutes legal proceedings against Prince Felix Yussupov and Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich Romanoff. She demands a compensation of 25 million francs, because the gentlemen have murdered her father. The French court however considers itself not cognizant to deal with this case.
London, October 26: Dima Ignatieff returns to England and takes his mother and his brothers Lionel and George with him to Canada. His father Paul stays in Paris.
New York, October 27: Igor Sikorsky becomes
an American citizen. His first real American success is the S-38 (Amphibian).
The S-38 is so successful, that Sikorsky has to move to Connecticut, where
his company is taken over by the United Aircraft Company, in which Sikorsky
becomes one of the managers.
Successively he works on the development
of long-range flying boats.
Copenhagen, November: Dowager Empress
Maria Feodorovna Romanoff (1847-1928) dies at the age of 72. In 1919 she
escaped from Russia with the British warship Marlborough, together with
her daughters Xenia and Olga and their families. She returned to Danmark
(she was born Princess Dagmar of Danmark), where she since then lived in
a wing of the palace of her cousin, the Danish King Christian X.
King George V of England granted her
a pension of 10,000 pounds per year.
Paris, November 18: Drama critic Lev (Dominique) Aronson opens a Russian restaurant on the address 19 Rue Bréa. The Russian writers who frequent the restaurant Dominique, call themselves `the Dominicans'.
November 19: Count Alexander Buxhoeveden is a real estate agent in Paris, and because his business is doing well he and his family move to Nice.
Alexander Kerensky is a professor in the
Hoover Institute of the Stanford University in California. That's where
his son Gleb Alexandrovich marries the English Mary Hudson. Gleb and Mary
moved to Rugby, England, where he at first works for English Electric and
successively for General Electric.
Alexander's other son, Oleg Alexandrovich
Kerensky, marries the Russian Nathalie Bely, who just like him studies
in London.
1929
January 5: Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich
Romanoff dies.
January 7: Vera Bunin writes in her diary, `The funeral ceremony lasted almost an hour. Ivan (Bunin) was very touched, especially when the Cossacks in uniform arrived to form the guard of honour - he did not hold back his tears. We felt that we were committing old Russia to the ground. Surely we realize that all this will pass, but our wounds are hardly healed, and Nicholas Nikolaevich' death teared them open again, and that hurts, that really hurts.' Paris, February 10: The Théƒtre Intime Russe, on the address 6bis Rue Campagne-Premi&egra- ve;re, opens with the play Wolves and Sheep, by Alexander Nikolaevich Ostrovsky (1823-1886). The small theatre is headed by D. Kirova, an artist of the former Small Theatre of St. Petersburg.
March 16: Tatiana Souchotin-Tolstoy, the
eldest daughter of Lev Tolstoy, opens a Russian art academy in the Rue
Jules-Chaplain, on number 11. However, due to a lack of pupils the school
has to close down.
(Nowadays the ballet school of the Russian
Irina Gryebina is resided there.)
May 22: Igor Sikorsky turns back to his
first love: the development of the helicopter.
June 5: The composer Serge Sergeevich Prokofyev (1891-1953) moves to the address 5 Rue Valentin- Haüy, Paris, where he will live until 1932. Serge is a child prodigy and already played the piano when he was only three years old. He was a pupil of Glière, Liadov and Rimsky-Korsakov, worked with Diaghilev in London and Paris since 1914, and since 1917 he gave numerous concerts all over Europe, America and Japan.
June 18: Marina Tsvetaeva publishes her
essay Natalia Goncharova in the paper Liberté de la Russie.
Tsvetaeva met the painters Larionov and
Goncharova in Café de Flore, Paris, where she offered to write a
story about them.
October 27: Grand Duke Michael Mikhaïlovich Romanoff (1861-1929), brother of Sandro, dies in London, where he used to live during the summers. He was a Colonel of the Caucasian tirailleurs. He lived for a long time in Cannes, in the Villa Kazbek, 18, Avenue du Roi-Albert. Michael Mikhaïlo- vich was married to Countess Sophie de Torby, a granddaughter of Pushkin.
November 2: Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov
and her husband Vladimir emigrate from Bulgaria to France. Shortly afterwards
the rest of her family joins her in Besan‡on, where Vladimir works at a
metallurgical factory. Tatiana Nikolaevna's father dies.
1930
January: General Kutiepov, who since
April 1928, after the death of General Vrangel, was the President of the
ROVS (Union of Russian Veterans in France), lives on the address 26 Rue
Rousselet, Paris. After Kutiepov left his house on January 26, 1930, nobody
has seen or heard anything of him.
His story, and the one of his successor
General De Miller, who was struck by the same unenviable lot, is told in
the book Le général meurt à minuit, by Marina Grey,
the daughter of General Denikin.
January 9: In London Oleg Olegovich Kerensky,
the son of Oleg Alexandrovich and Nathalie, is born.
Grandfather Alexander Kerensky comes
to visit the new born.
Paris, April 22: Grand Duke Kiril Vladimirovich Romanoff takes the salute of 2,000 former officers of the Imperial Army. The officers shout out Cossack war cries and, `The day of victory is near!'
September 3: Paul Poustochkine and his wife Nathalie have two children: Constantin (Toto), who was born in Crete on September 14, 1910, and Iwan, who was born on February 10, 1918 in The Hague, Holland. Paul Poustochkine knows the Dutch Queen Wilhelmina and her husband Prince Hendrik very well, and Queen Wilhelmina, who always has been proud of the fact that Anna Pavlovna's blood rushes through her vains, makes sure that Constantin and Iwan will be able to go to university. September 28: Gleb and Mary Kerensky, who still live in Rugby, have three children: Katherine, Elizabeth and Stephen.
1931
January 14: In France the Russian School
for Cadets `Nicholas II' is founded by Lieutenant-General Vladimir Rimsky-Korsakov,
the former director of the School for Cadets in Moscow. The school is resided
on the address 71 Rue Gambetta, Villiers-le-Bel (Val-d'Oise). Until his
death in 1934 Rimsky- Korsakov stays on as director of the school, after
which it is transferred to Versailles, and subsequently to Dieppe.
January 17: Grand Duke Peter Nikolaevich Romanoff (1864-1931), a brother of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich and uncle of Tsar Nicholas, dies in Cap d'Antibes, France. Peter Nikolaevich was married to Princess Militsa of Montenegro. He was a Lieutenant-General in the Cavalry and aide-de-camp to Nicholas II.
July 30: The British playwright George
Bernard Shaw (74) is an admirer of the Soviet system, like so many `progressive'
Western writers. While he visits Moscow, he says, `Tomorrow I leave the
land of hope, to return to the Western lands of despair.' Shaw talked for
more than two hours with Stalin.
The Soviet-Union is also glorified by
the famous Dutch writer Henriëtte Roland Holst-Van der Schalk, after
whom in Holland streets are named. In her book Foundations and problems
of the new culture in Soviet-Russia (1932) she writes, `One wants to create
a new, entirely on one principle imbued culture.
Such attempts can only succeed in a stage
of very strong rationalized thinking. Also it can only be exercised in
a society in which the main means of culture (school, press, publishers,
bookstores, theatre, film, radio) are controlled by a central authority.
(...) This systematically ruled society includes also that the new form
of living is much less than before to be found in friendly co-operation,
but in a system, cut and dried by the leaders, which is imposed on the
subordinates. In this respect the coming culture in Russia is aristocratical.
(...) When the children of the farmers now say, ``There is no God,'' then,
in a way, they speak the truth. The old Russian God, who was attached to
a perished world, a world of random and cruelty, of haughtiness and arrogance,
of humility and servility, that old God does no more exist. He was knocked
to the ground, together with his earthly representative, the tsar. And
with him perished a world of half-mouldered notions, of rigid morality,
which had gotten into a groove.'
One is tempted to think that Mrs Roland
Holst is misled, that she does not know what's she's talking about, but
that notion is not correct. When she commits her stalinistic propaganda
to paper, she is positively well informed about the abuses, but with her
it's the same as with a lot of other European and American armchair revolutionaries:
facts are neglected for the sake of ideals. On page 133 she writes, `The
health of the working youth is also undermined by night shifts, which is
reinstated for large groups of young workers. In the textiles area of Ivanovo-Vosnosensk
(in February 1930) out of 1,664 youthful workers 972 worked at night. In
lots of plants they have to do night shifts, inter alia in the glass-industry,
food-industry and shoe-factories. There's also child labour in branches
of industry which are injurious to health. The ``Youth Pravda'' of February
10, 1930, from which we took these data, stated in fact that the health
of the children is very bad. In Siberia 4,000 out of less than 6,000 youthful
workers had to be treated medically. Most likely the present conditions
are still not much improved.'
Finally a critical word? My God, no!
In page 135, nota bene less than two pages furtheron, she writes, `Almost
everyone who visited the Soviet-Union in the last couple of years, no matter
what they think of the new form of living, assured us that the Russian
youth is happy. We readily believe them.' And another two pages furtheron,
in page 137, ``The Russian youth,'' writes Hindus, ``is perhaps the happiest
on earth.'' In my opinion he should have left out the word ``perhaps''.
Where can a child be happy today, except in Russia?'
Impudent stalinist propagandists like Henriëtte Roland Holst-Van der Schalk make sure that homesick Russian refugees are persuaded into their return to the Soviet-Union, where many commit suicide, or are murdered by Stalin.
August 21: Alexandra (Alya) Rakhmanova's first book Love, Cheka and Death, is published. It becomes a best seller!
1932
April 6: After his sojourn of three years
in Paris the composer Serge Prokofyev returns to the Soviet- Union.
March: Famine, especially in the Ukrain, which in the times of the Tsar was the granary of Russia.
May 7: The Union of Russian Cab Drivers and Employees in the Car Industry (9 Rue St.-Charles, Paris) organizes its yearly `Day of the Russian Driver', to line the petty-cash of the union.
Nice, Southern France, June 2: Count Anatol (Alec) Buxhoeveden (1905-), the eldest son of Count Alexander Buxhoeveden, marries Vera Illarionov, daughter of Count Nicholas Illarionov and Countess Natalia Peresviat-Soltan.
June 18: Nobody is willing to donate any more money to the Russian Red Cross, and that's why Paul Ignatieff joins his wife and children in Toronto. However, Paul and Natasha are virtually grown apart.
1933
February 26: Grand Duke Alexander (Sandro)
Mikhaïlovich Romanoff (1866-1933), an old friend of Tsar Nicholas,
dies in his villa Sainte-Thérèse in Roquebrune, France.
March 21: Lincoln Kirstein brings the famous Russian choreographer George Balanchine from Paris to New York. A couple of months later Balanchine, who since 1928 worked with Igor Strawinsky, founds the New York City Ballet.
June 3: When Prince Alexis Alexeevich
Obolensky reaches New York, his mother, Princess Lyubova Obolensky, née
Troubetzkoy (1909-1980), who has a real head for business, opens the first
of her successful American enterprises, which boom on Park Avenue. As `Princess
Obolensky Incorporated' she retails quilts, bed covers and pillows. Later
she expands and exhibits her wares in all the social resorts.
Prince Alexis himself starts out as a
perfume salesman.
August: The archives of the prohibited Scouting Club Ruskii Skautizm were smuggled to Odessa. After the Whites were defeated some loyal scouts hid the archives, but last month they were caught and imprisoned. Nothing was heard of them since. To prevent that the names in the archives can be used to try (former) illegal scouts, the archives are stolen from the secret police and moved to Moscow, by some former scouts, who became officers in the Red Army. They hide the archives in the basements of the Ministry of Defense, of all places. (That's where they still are today, in remembrance of all the murdered scouts.)
August 11: Count Alexander Buxhoeveden and Countess Olga Buxhoeveden, née Olensky, are divorced in Sremsky-Karlovci, Yugoslavia, by the Synod of the Russian-Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.
September: Vladimir Smirnoff has financial difficulties and is forced to sell the Smirnoff brand and the secret vodka formula to the Russian refugee Rudolph Kunnett, who lives in the United States.
Paris, September 24: Count Alexander Buxhoeveden marries Rosine-Marie Vidal (1911-), daughter of engineer Paul Vidal and Germaine-Marie Delvoueuillerie de Costaire.
1934
Nice, Southern France, July 1: Count
Theodor Buxhoeveden (1934-1965), Count Alexander's first son out of his
marriage to Rosine-Marie Vidal, is born.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky publishes
his book The crucifixion of liberty.
September 12: After General Yuri Daniloff
dies in Paris, his wife Anna leaves for America, to see after her grandchildren.
Paris, November 21: At 8 p.m., a 25 year old Russian poet falls off the platform on the railway, in the subway-station Pasteur. He is run over and transported to the Necker Hospital, where he succumbs to his wounds at 10 p.m. On account of this accident Tsvetaeva writes a letter to her friend Anne Teskov, `On November 21 Nicholas Gronsky has been run over by a subway-train. When we saw each other for the first time, he fell in love with me instantly; it took some time before I fell in love with him. This love lasted a year, but because I found that my freedom was rather limited by it, and because our ways of life rather differed, we grew apart. In the spring of 1931 we said goodbye for good. In three years time I've only seen him one more time, in a subway-train. I called him, but he didn't come to me. And then I read in the newspapers what had happened on November 21... (...) This young man was a great poet.'
November 23: Igor Strawinsky becomes a
French citizen. Until now he lived in Brittany, Garches, Biarritz, Nice
and Voreppe, but from now on he will live in Paris, in the chique Faubourg
Saint-Honor&- eacute;.
Due to the fact that Russia didn't sign
the Bern Convention, Strawinsky can't claim royalties and copyrights. Had
he been German, French or American, then he would have been a rich man.
Leningrad, December 1: Serge Kirov, the secretary of the Communist Party in Leningrad, is killed in the Smolny Institute, by Leonid Nikolaev. This way Nikolaev, an embittered communist, wanted to draw attention to the deterioration and officialism of the party.
Moscow/Leningrad, December 6: In connection with the murder of Serge Kirov many people are executed in Moscow and Leningrad. Start of the Big Terror.
Paris, December 13: Countess Marianna
Buxhoeveden (1913-), daughter of Count Alexander, marries the Russian nobleman
Vladimir Vassiliev (1907-).
1935
January: Rudolph Kunnett tries to sell
his Smirnoff distillery for $ 25,000. John G. Martin pays $ 14,000 for
the distellery, the formula and the brand.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky and Paul Bulygin publish their book The murder of the Romanovs; the authentic account, which is translated from the Russian by Aleksandr's son Gleb.
October 17: In apartment 17bis, above
the large Citroën garage in the Rue Barrault, the poet Boris Poplavsky
dies of a drug-overdose, accompanied by his also drugged friend Serge Yarko,
who has promised to join him on his long trip to the hereafter.
Khodassevich puts the blame of Poplavsky's
suicide on the atmosphere of decay and doomwatch, which masters the young
Russian poets of Montparnasse. They have no more confidence in the world,
in themselves and in their work; they are discouraged by their endless
exile and the indifference of society.
Just before his tragical death Poplavsky wrote the poem Il neige sur la ville, and the agonizing words:
We leave for the land of sleep, where
perhaps another sun will rise,
or perhaps is no sun at all.
1936
March 8: The painter Ivan Yakovlevich
Bilibin, who escaped from Russia in 1920 and became a citizen of the Soviet-Union
in 1935, leaves Paris to live in Leningrad.
April 24: Grigori Yevseevich Zinovyev, who in 1919 ordered the execution of a large number of hostages in the Peter and Paul Fortress, among them the Grand Dukes Nicholas Mikhaïlovich Romanoff, George Mikhaïlovich Romanoff, Paul Alexandrovich Romanoff and Dmitri Constantinovich Romanoff, is executed by order of Stalin, by a shot in the neck.
June 4: Paul Ignatieff and his wife become Canadian citizens. Their son George leaves for England, to study in the university of Oxford.
Nice, Southern France, June 29: Count Alexander Alexandrovich Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's second son out of his second marriage, is born.
Paris, November 10: After a trip to Russia
the French writer André Gide sharply criticizes the Soviet Union,
in his book Retour de l'URSS. The French communist newspaper L'Humanité
and the left wing friends of the writer attack him about his statements,
but Trotsky praises him for his `intellectual courage and honesty'.
Gide used to be an admirer of the Soviet
regime, but since his return in July his opinions are rather changed. In
his book he denounces the stranglehold of conformism and censorship in
the Soviet Union, the terror, the bad living conditions, and the lack of
food. `Stalin's personal rule is in flagrant contradiction to the communist
principles,' says Gide.
1937
March 2: in the Conservatoire Serge Rakhmaninov
in Paris Marina Tsvetaeva reads from her book My Pushkin, and also some
poetry of Pushkin, in remembrance of the fact that the poet died a hundred
years ago.
March 29: Alexander Kerensky, who from
August to November 1917 was Prime Minister of the Provisional Government,
lives in Paris, 9bis Rue Vineuse, while his wife and two sons settled down
in London. Just like the tsar, Kerensky loves to walk. A couple of days
ago, during his walk, he was watched by a Russian lady and her daughter.
The lady said, `Look, look, Tania, that's the man who wracked and ruined
Russia!' A friend of him says that Kerensky was completely cut up by this
incident, and has been depressed for days.
On February 26, March 7 and March 17
Kerensky held a lecture about the tragical fate of the Russian Imperial
family, in the Musée Social, 9 Rue Las-Cases.
April 14: Serge Efron, the husband of
the poet Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva, who from the beginning of the thirties
worked for the Union of Russian Repatriants, 12 Rue de Buci, Paris, escapes
to Spain and after that to the Soviet Union, before the French police can
arrest him. The legal investigation on the murder of the defected Soviet
agent Ignace Reiss shows that through this office agents for the soviets
have been recruted.
Marina's daughter Ariadna also leaves
for the Soviet Union.
Moscow, June 12: Eight high placed military
leaders are sentenced to death during a secret trial. All of them admit
they are guilty of treason.
June 13: The eight officers are executed,
just like the thousands other real and latent opponents of Stalin's regime,
who during their trials confess to crimes they never could have committed,
because they weren't even born then.
1938
Paris, February 16: Leon Sedov, the son
of Lev Trotsky, was struck by appendicitis on February 9, and brought to
the Mirabeau clinic in the Rue Narcisse-Diaz, because the management and
the staff of this hospital are Russian. He was operated on the same night,
and the following days his condition improved considerably, in such a way
that the doctors were planning to send him home. But during the night of
February 13 his condition deteriorated: once more he was operated on, but
he died the following day.
Although a legal investigation proves
that Sedov died from natural causes, Trotsky, who lives in Mexico, states
that the death of his son should be blamed on `Russian agents in a Russian
hospital in Paris'.
Leon Sedov is burried in the Cimetière
de Thiais, Val-de-Marne, France (22nd division, row 13, tomb 20). (Every
year at August 20 the Trotskyites come to visit this tomb of Lev Trotsky's
son, to commemorate the murder on Trotsky, and every year they sing the
International.)
Lake Baikal, near Mongolia, March 17: Rudolf Nureyev is born on a train.
André Alexeevich Amalrik is born in Moscow.
March 28: The Buxhoevedens move to Florence, Italy, where Count Alexander Alexandrovich is baptized.
Allassio, Italy, July 16: Countess Rosine-Marie Buxhoeveden (1938-), Count Alexander's first daughter out of his second marriage, is born. She will be called Marie-Rose.
Neuilly, France, October 13: Grand Duke
Kiril Vladimirovich Romanoff, who called himself `Tsar of all Russians',
dies. His son, Grand Duke Vladimir Kirilovich Romanoff (1917-1992) succeeds
him as chief of the Imperial House, but he wisely restricts to the title
of Grand Duke.
1939
April: In New York the Tolstoy Foundation
is founded by Countess Alexandra Tolstoy, the youngest daughter of the
great writer Lev Tolstoy (1828-1910).
June: The writer Marina Tsvetaeva returns
to Russia, to join her husband and daughter. However, she couldn't have
chosen a worse moment, because Stalin's witches' sabbath is at it's pinnacle.
(Stalin had ordered the execution of more than 1,500 talented Russian writers.)
She finds out that Efron already has been executed, and that her daughter
Ariadna is locked up in a hard labour camp, where she will have to stay
until 1956. Marina's work is not published. All her colleague's and friends,
also Boris Pasternak, let her down. Pasternak, `We were good friends.'
Hypocrite.
July: Nick and Dima Ignatieff enlist in the Canadian army, and are transported to England, where their brothers George and Alec live. Alec works as a manager of a gunpowder factory. Lionel stays in Toronto.
August: Igor Sikorsky presents the prototype of his V-300 helicopter to the American public. Sikorsky, who in the mean time is over fifty, is the test-pilot. After the V-300 he designs the XR-4, the XR-5, the S-55 (Whirlwind), the S-58 (Wessex and the Sikorsky Sea King.
September: Igor Strawinsky emigrates to the United States.
Merano, Italy, October 18: Countess Catherine Geneviève Buxhoeveden (1939-), Count Alexander's second daughter out of his second marriage, is born.
November 30: The Soviet-Union declares
war on Finland.
1940
Moscow, April: Stalin orders that 21,000
Polish soldiers, most of them officers, who are imprisoned in Katyn, near
Smolensk, are to be murdered and thrown into a mass grave.
The Germans occupy Paris. All Russian papers and magazines move abroad. Their editors escape to America. The nazi's now publish a new Russian newspaper - Paridzhki Vestnik (The Paris Guide).
Alexander Kerensky, who until now alternately lived in California, New York, Prague and Paris, leaves Paris forgood, to join his family in London. Some time later he moves to New York.
Paul Poustochkine is still recorded in
the Dutch state directory as, `Paul Poustochkine, charged with the liquidation
of the affairs of the former Russian legation'.
Paul keeps in touch with the Russian
refugees in Paris, and visits the meetings of the Diplomats of Imperial
Russia Outside of Russia.
June 20: The Soviet Union captures Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.
June 27: The Soviet Union captures Bessarabia and Bukovina (Romania).
Mexico, August 21: Lev Trotsky (64) is
murdered by the Spanish communist Ramon Mercader. There's no doubt that
Stalin ordered the execution.
1941
The writer Marina Tsvetaeva hangs herself,
in the doorway of a hut, in the Russian town of Elabu- ga.
Prince Alexis Alexeevich Obolensky becomes
a foreign intelligence agent for the U.S.
government in Palm Beach. `I have to
interrogate Latin Americans and sniff out German spies infiltrating from
the south.'
Alexander Isaevich Solzhenitsyn (1918-) leaves for the front as an officer in the Russian Red Army.
The Tolstoy Foundation in New York City buys a 70-acre farm in Spring Valley (Rockland County, New York), for the symbolical amount of one dollar.
Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich Romanoff (1891-1941) dies of tuberculosis in Davos, Switzerland.. Dmitri's father, Grand Duke Paul, was bannished from Russia because he, after his wife Alexandra, Princess of Russia, had died, started a relationship with Olga Karnovich (Princess Paley), the wife of Grand Duke Vladimir's adjutant. Paul was determined to marry his beloved Princess Paley, but the Dowager Empress was unrelenting and forced Paul's brothers Serge and Vladimir to choose her side. This was the first scandal in the Romanoff family in which Nicky had to be the arbitrator. Nicholas was forced to evict his uncle Paul from Russia. Paul's son Dmitri and daughter Maria Pavlovna Romanoff (1890-1958) were raised in Russia by Grand Duke Serge Alexandrovich and his wife Elisabeth Feodorovna. This couple was childless and loved Dmitri and his little sister Marie as if they were their own.
Later Dmitri was taken into the family of Nicholas II. He was in love with Olga Niko- laevna Romanoff, daughter of Nicholas II, and wanted to marry her, but the Tsar and the Tsaritsa did not agree to it. For a long time Dmitri was an intimate friend of Felix Yussupov. He, Yussupov and Vladimir Purishkevich killed Rasputin. Dmitri was bannished to Persia and in 1926 he married the American Audrey Emery, in Biarritz. For some years Dmitri Pavlovich made a living as a champagne salesman, in Florida. In 1928 their son, Prince Paul Ilyinsky, was born. (Prince Paul Ilyinsky married Mary Prince, but this marriage ended in a divorce. Subsequently he married Angelica Kauffman. Paul has two daughters and two sons, Dmitri Pavlovich Ilyinsky (1953-) and Michael Pavlovich Ilyinsky (1960-).)
Besancon, France: The factories close down, there's no more work. Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov, her husband, her mother and her brother decide to move to Germany and work there. Her two sisters marry and stay in France.
June 22: The Germans attack the Soviet Union. General Von Reeb is on his way to Leningrad; General Von Bock marches towards Minsk; General Von Rundstedt advances against Kiev; Operation Barbarossa has started.
1942
February: The painter Ivan Yakovlevich
Bilibin and thousands of others die of famine, as a result of the German
siege of his new domicile Leningrad.
Hamburg burns! After three bombing rugs
of the English the city is completely destroyed. Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov,
her husband, her mother and her brother move to Silesia, where Vladimir
and Tatiana Nikolaevna find a job at a metallurgical factory. It isn't
really work: they have to be there on time, and stay all day long, but
there's no work at all.
1943
November 12: Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich
Romanoff (1877-1943), a grandson of Alexander II, son of Vladimir Alexandrovich,
and brother of Kiril Vladimirovich and André Vladimirovich, dies
in Paris.
He is burried in Contrexeville, in the
Vosges, in the Russian-Orthodox chapel, where his mother, Grand Duchess
Maria Pavlovna Romanoff (1854-1920), found her last resting place. Grand
Duke Boris Vladimirovich Romanoff was married to Zinaida Raevsky.
December 17: Princess Vera (Vicky) Obolensky
(1911-1944), who works for the French resistance movement, is arrested
by the nazi's and taken to Berlin.
1944
The Soviet armies occupy Eastern Europe.
Many Russian emigrants are once more the victims of communism, and numerous
people are repatriated against their will. In Paris the communists found
pro- Soviet newspapers, like Sovietsky Patriot and Rusky Novosti (Russian
News).
The soprano Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya (1926-) is 18 years old when she marries a sailor, Grigori Vishnevsky, but this marriage doesn't last long. Successively she marries Mark Ilyich Rubin, the director of her operetta company. He is 40, she still is 18. Her father is arrested for `political' reasons, which makes her blackmailable.
Berlin, August 4: Princess Vera Obolensky is executed by the nazi's.
Vasili Vasilievich Kandinsky (Moscow 1866 - Neuilly-sur-Seine 1944) dies. He went to law school in Moscow. In 1901 he founded the artist union Phalanx, which mainly organized exhibitions. Successively he founded the Neue Künstlervereinigung and Der blaue Reiter, in Germany. Until 1909 his style reminded of expressionism, but nowadays he's reckoned among the pioneers of the abstract art. After the Revolution he returned to Russia, but because of the rigid system he left soon afterwards. In 1921 he became teacher in the Bauhaus, Germany, and in 1933 he settled down in France.
Nice, Southern France, December: Countess Elisabeth Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's first daughter out of his first marriage, marries the Russian nobleman Vladimir Panov (1880-1945).
Gleb Kerensky is in Holland with the Allied
Forces, fighting the nazi's. He's a Captain of the Royal Electrical and
Mechanical Engineers.
1945
Budapest, January 17: The Swedish diplomat
Raoul Wallenberg, who rescued thousands of Jews from the nazi's during
World War II, is arrested by the Soviets and brought to Moscow. Nobody
knows why.
February 1: Patriarch Serge (Serge Vladimirovich Simansky, 1877-1970) succeeds Patriarch Alexis I.
February 14: The Red Army enters Budapest.
February 14: Alexander Solzhenitsyn is arrested in Eastern Prussia because he has written critical words about comrade Stalin in his letters to a school friend.
The Chinese communists `repatriate' the
Russian refugees who left for the Caucasus in 1918 and 1919 - more than
200,000 people - and were routed by the Red Army for thousands of miles,
through Kazakhstan, Siberia and Mongolia, to the border of Manchuria. They
settled in Harbin and Shanghai.
Many of them end up in Soviet Russian
hard labour camps and prisons - after more than 25 years!
Eastern: Alexandra Rakhmanova's only son
Jurka-Alexander is killed outside Vienna, by the Red Army.
Alexandra and Arnulf move to Switzerland.
Her books are published in more than 20 languages, all over the world.
May 8: Germany is defeated. Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov and her husband are moved to a Displaced Persons Camp in Kempten (Allgäu, Germany). As more and more refugees are joining their DP Camp, they're transferred to a larger camp in Füssen (Bavaria), and successively to Camp Schleissheim, north of Munich, which is founded by the International Refugee Organization (IRO).
Paul Ignatieff dies. His wife Natasha died in 1944. They are burried in the cemetery of the Saint- Andrew's Church in Upper Melbourne, a town south of Montreal.
Their children Alec, Nick, Dima and George return to Canada.
John G. Martin and Jack Morgan invent
the `Moscow Mule', which makes Smirnoff vodka world famous.
The company is saved!
1946
Fulton, Missouri, March 6: Winston Churchill
warns the Western countries for the Iron Curtain and the colonization politics
of the Soviets. The Cold War has started.
Just like his grandfather Alexander, Oleg Kerensky's ambition is to go into politics. From Westminster School he goes straight to Christ Church, Oxford, where he becomes both treasurer and librarian of the Union. He is excused national service because of poor eyesight.
Berlin, April 21: Moscow forces the political parties in the Russian zone of Berlin to merge in one party, the SED, which submits itself to the CPSU in Moscow.
Eastern: Almost 30 years after the communists have seized to power, the church bells are allowed to sound in entire Russia. The communists also allow new churches being built. A Russian-Orthodox seminary is opened and the government approves of the election of Patriarch Serge. Patriarch Serge is even welcomed by Stalin. Nevertheless the relation between Church and State remains complicated.
Prague, May 26: The Czechoslowakian Communist Party wins the elections, with substantial financial help of Moscow.
Sofia, October 27: By murdering thousands of opponents and with the help of Moscow the Bulgarian Communists win the elections.
Alexander Alyechin (Moscow 1892 Ä Estoril 1946) dies. In his tomb are inscripted the following words, `Russian and French grand-master of chess. World-champion of chess from 1927 to 1935 and from 1937 until his death.' Alyechin escaped in 1920 and later became a French citizen. He lost the world- championship to Professor Max Euwe in 1935, but recovered it two years later. He felt that his `deep Russian soul' often was not understood in the West, but he didn't commit suicide, like the Soviet-Russian grand-master Kotov states in his biography of Alyechin.
The Synod of the Russian-Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia, which until now often gathered in Sremsky-Karlovci,
Yugoslavia, moves to Munich.
1947
Warsaw, January 19: With the help of
Moscow and by tampering with the election results, the Polish communists
seize the power in their country.
Budapest, June 2: By kidnapping his little son, the Soviet Secret Service forces Prime Minister Ferenc Nagy of Hungaria to resign his office.
July, 17: The Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg is executed in the gulag. Immediately after the prison physician A. Smoltsov has reported that Wallenberg `probably died of a heart attack', the body is cremated, before it can be properly examined.
Bucharest, July 28: By banning the Farmers Party, a large oppositional party, the Romanian communists now hold absolute sway.
Budapest, August 31: The communists seize to power in Hungaria.
Sofia, September 23: The Bulgarian politician Nikola Petkov is hanged. He was the most important opponent to the communists.
The Buxhoevedens emigrate from Italy to
the United States. On September 30 their son Count Daniel Paul Buxhoeveden
(1947-) is born in Great Neck, New York.
The Russian writer/journalist Peter Dmitrievich
Ouspensky dies in England.
George Ignatieff's son Michael is born.
1948
Serge Sergeevich Prokofyev's work is
criticized sharply by the Soviet regime, and he has to comply to the directives
of `socialist realism', which in fact is a Goebbelian realism. Prokofyev
wrote symphonies, opera's, ballets, as well as the music for two films.
New York, May 11: Count Alexander Buxhoeveden,
who worked as an engineer in Long Island, dies.
Countess Vera Buxhoeveden, the wife of
Count Anatol (Alec), his eldest son, takes charge of young Alexander, her
brother in law. She and father Anthony von Grabbe are instrumental in getting
Alexander into the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, New York. Countess
Vera organizes the annual ball of the Russian Nobility Association in America.
August 12: Vladimir Kirilovich Romanoff
marries Leonida Grigorievna, Princess Bagration-Mukhransky.
Vladimir Kirilovich, who in August 1917
saw the light of day in Borga (Finland), studied law and politics in London
and Paris. During World War II he was deported by the Germans. Although
he is holder of a passport of the Order of Malta, the French government
considers him a political refugee.
The title of Grand Duke, which was approriated
by Kiril Vladimirovich and Vladimir Kirilovich, are not recognized by other
members of the Imperial Family, who form The Romanoff Family Association.
The same applies to the titles which
Kiril and Vladimir granted certain relatives and friends (like Mathilde
Kshessinskaya).
Nice, Southern France, December 7: Countess
Elisabeth Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's eldest daughter, dies. Her husband
Vladimir Panov died on August 19, 1945, also in Nice. Their marriage didn't
even last one year.
This will be about a man who for a time was treated in a psychiatric hospital in Petrozavodsk, where I worked on staff from September 1946 to October 1949, after graduating from the Second Leningrad Medical Institute.
(...) our patient load consisted of both
civilians and prisoners, whom we were sent during those years for treatment
or for legal- psychiatric examination.
(...) In 1947 or 1948 in the wintertime
another prisoner came to us as a patient. He was suffering from severe
psychosis of the type we call hysterical psychogenic reaction. His mind
was not clear, he was disorientated, and had did not understand where he
was. (...) He waved his arms and tried to run off. (...) Amid incoherent
utterances in a mass of other expressive exclamations the name `Beloborodov'
flashed by two or three times. At first we paid no attention to it, since
the name didn't mean anything to us.
From his accompanying documents we found
out he had been in several camps for a long time and that his psychosis
had developed suddenly, when he had attempted to defend a woman (prisoner)
from being beaten by a guard. He was tied up and, naturally, `worked over',
although as far as I recall no visible bodily injuries were noted when
he entered the hospital. His file indicated his date of birth as 1904;
as for his first and last names I can't remember them exactly. The variations
I recall are the following: Semyon Grigorievich Filippov or Filip Grigorievich
Semyonov. After two or three days, as usually happens in these cases, the
manifestation of severe psychosis had disappeared completely. The patient
became calm, in full contact. Clear awareness and proper behaviour were
maintained from then on for his entire stay at the hospital. His appearance,
as far as I can say, was like this: a rather tall man, somewhat stout,
sloping shoulders, slightly round-shouldered, a long pale face, blue or
grey, slightly bulging eyes, a high forehead receding into a balding head,
the remaining hair chestnut with grey. (...)
So it became known to us that he was
the heir to the crown, that during the hasty execution in Ekaterinburg
his father had hugged him and pressed his face to him so that he wouldn't
see the rifle barrels aimed at him. In my opinion, he had not even realised
that something terrible was going on since the commands to fire were uttered
unexpectedly, and he didn't hear the sentence read. All he remembered was
the name Beloborodov. (...) Shots rang out, he was wounded in the buttocks,
he lost consciousness, and he collapsed on a common heap of bodies. When
he woke up he found he had been saved, someone had dragged him out of the
cellar, carried him out and ministered him for a long time. (...)
Gradually we began to look at him with
other eyes. The persistent haematuria he suffered from found an explanation:
the heir had had haemophilia. On the patient's buttock was an old cross-shaped
scar. (...) Finally we realised who the patient's appearance reminded us
of: the famous portraits of Nicholas I and II. (...)
At that time consultants used to come
to us from Leningrad for two or three months at a time. (...) Professor
S.I. Gendelevich, the best psychiatric practitioner I ever met, was consulting
with us then, and naturally we showed him our patient. (...) For two or
three hours he `pursued' him with questions we could not have asked, since
we were not conversant, but it turned out who he was.
So, for example, the consultant knew
the names and titles of all the members of the tsar's family, the branched
network of the dynasty, all the court positions, the layout and use of
every room in the Winter Palace and the country residences in the early
part of the century, and so on. He even knew the accepted protocol for
all the court ceremonies and rituals as well as the dates of the various
name days in the tsar's family and other ceremonies marked in the Romanoff
family circle. To all these questions the patient responded utterly accurately
and without the slightest thought. For him it was as elementary as a primer.
(...) From a few answers it was clear that he possessed wider knowledge
in this sphere. His behaviour was as always: calm and dignified. Then the
consultant asked the women to leave and he examined the patient below the
waist, front and back. When we walked in (the patient had been dismissed),
the consultant was blatantly dismayed. It turned out the patient had a
cryptorchidism (one testicle had not descended), which the consultant knew
had been noted in the dead heir Alexis. (...)
The consultant explained the situation
to us: there was a dilemma and we needed to make a joint decision Ä
either put a diagnosis of `paranoia' in a stage of good remission with
the possibility of employing the patient in his former occupations at his
place of confinement, or consider the case unresolved and in need of additional
observation in the hospital. In that case, however, we would be obliged
to motivate our decision carefully for the organs of produratorial oversight,
which would inevitably send a special investigator from Moscow. (...) Having
weighed these possibilities, we considered it to the patient's good to
give him a definite diagnosis of paranoia, of which we were not entirely
certain, and return him to camp. (...) The patient agreed with our decision
about returning to camp (naturally he was not told his diagnosis) and we
parted as friends.
Radzinsky wanted to hear more sides and approached the psychiatric hospital. A letter from the deputy chief physician, Dr V.J. Kiviniemi, verified Dr Kaufman's story:
In my hands is medical history no. 64
for F.G. Semyonov, born 1904, admitted to psychiatric hospital January
14, 1949. Noted in red pencil `prisoner'. (...) The patient was released
from the hospital April 22, 1949 to ITK (Corrective Labour Camp) No. 1.
Semyonov was admitted to the hospital
from the ITK clinic. The doctor's order describes the patient's acute psychotic
condition and indicates that Semyonov kept `cursing someone named Beloborodov'.
He entered the psychiatric hospital in a weakened physical condition, but
without acute signs of psychosis. (...) From the moment he entered he was
polite, sociable, behaved with dignity and modesty, neat. In his medical
file a doctor notes that in conversation he did not conceal his origins.
`His manners, tone and conviction speak to the fact that he was familiar
with the life of high society before 1917.' F.G. Semyonov told how he was
tutored at home, that he was the son of the former tsar, that he had been
rescued during the time when the family perished, was taken to Leningrad,
where he lived for a certain period, served in the Red Army as a cavalryman,
studied at an economics institute (evidently in Baku), after graduating
worked as an economist in Central Asia, was married, his wife's name was
Asya, and then said that Beloborodov knew his secret and was blackmailing
him. (...) In February 1949 he was examined by a psychiatrist from Leningrad,
Gendelevich, to whom Semyonov declared that he had nothing to gain from
approriating someone else's name, that he was not expecting any privileges,
since he understood that various anti-Soviet elements might gather around
his name and so as not to cause any trouble he was always prepared to leave
this life. In April 1949 Semyonov underwent a forensic psychiatric examination
and was declared emotionally ill and in need of placement in an Internal
Affairs Ministry psychiatric hospital. This last must be regarded as a
humanitarian act towards Semyonov for that time, since there is a difference
between a camp and a hospital. Semyonov himself regarded it positively.
A short while later Radzinsky received
a telephone call from an old man, a former prisoner, who knew the mysterious
`Semyonov'. He told that all the prisoners called him `the Tsar's son',
and they all believed it absolutely.
One thing is remarkable: the name of
Beloborodov. If this Alexis was just an imposter, who only had learned
all the facts by heart, then something doesn't quite fit. For a long time
it was common knowledge who took part in the murder of the Romanoffs: Yurovsky,
Medvedev, Nikulin, Ermakov and some lower Cheka agents. Until the end of
their lives they boasted about having executed the Romanoffs. But Beloborodov
wasn't one of them! When Semyonov was an imposter, he would have stuck
to the known `facts' of those days, and he would have mentioned Yurovsky,
Medvedev, Nikulin or Ermakov. But that's not what he did. Nobody knew why
he cursed Alexander Beloborodov when he was under severe pressure, because
in those years nobody could know that Beloborodov had been part of the
execution! It was a top secret.
Summers and Mangold have a statement
from Poul Ree, who in 1918 was the Danish vice-consul in the city of Perm.
After Ekaterinburg had fallen into the hands of the Whites, the Red commanders
withdrew to Perm. Ree stated that he spoke to `one of the men who sentenced
the tsar to death'. After this conversation Ree was convinced that the
tsar was shot after he got out of the car of the `regional commissionary'.
And that was Beloborodov. In July 1918 the Pravda wrote, `On the morning
of July 16 the ex-tsar was transferred from his prison to a parade ground
outside of the city of Ekaterinburg, where ten soldiers of the Red Guard
were waiting for him. The chairman of the Soviet read the death sentence,
after which the ex-tsar asked permission to say a few last words to his
wife and children before he was executed. This request was turned down.
Without any resistance and completely poised the tsar stood in front of
the firing squad; the execution was carried out. His body was taken away
by car.'
Is it possible that the Pravda told the
truth this time? If so, then the murder didn't take place in the House
of Ipatiev at all, and then the story of Poul Ree makes sence. Moreover
this explains why Alexis, who adored his father, screamed `Beloborodov!'
Was Filip Grigorievich Semyonov Tsarevich
Alexis Nikolaevich Romanoff? I am inclined to fully endorse this, but I
have to admit that I'm a hopeless romantic.
1949
Munich, Germany: The DP Camp Schleissheim
has become a real town. Thanks to donations out of America there are schools,
a hospital, a theatre, et cetera.
A friend of Vladimir Masalitinov, who has served with him in the White Army, and lives in Sao Paulo, sends them an affidavit and Tatiana Nikolaevna, her husband and her brother move to Brazil, where Vladimir is going to work in a large Brazilian company, binding books of the company's files.
The Synod of the Russian-Orthodox Church Outside of Russia moves from Munich to New York.
December 17: Princess Vera Meshchersky,
who founded the Russian House in Saint-Genevi&egra- ve;ve-des-Bois,
and wielded the sceptre there until she became ill a few weeks ago, dies.
1950
All Russian refugees want to leave Germany
as soon as possible. My uncle Alexander Ivanov and his wife decide to meet
the first consul who comes to `invite' emigrants to his country, and this
consul just happens to be the Brazilian one; they're accepted.
1951
Paris, February 8: I am born.
1952
Prince Serge Mikhaïlovich Obolensky
(1906-1952), my father, is murdered in a Moscow prison, because my mother,
Princess Marina Vladimirovna Obolensky, née Ivanova (1924-1952),
has managed to escape to France. A couple of months later she dies in a
car accident in the Champs élysées in Paris, in front of
the Café Fouquets. Her brother, Nikolai Ivanov, a Russian painter
who lives in Paris, takes care of me.
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya starts to worked with the Bolshoy-opera.
Oleg Alexandrovich Kerensky, Alexander's
son, has become a very meritorious motorway engineer, who is mentioned
in the Dictionary of National Biography. After Oxford Alexander's grandson,
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky, joins the BBC Worldservice, to combine his political
interests with his second love, journalism.
The need to conceal his homosexuality
makes his life miserable, and that's why he decides to abandon his political
ambitions. Journalism offers a happier life.
1953
January 15: The `Physicians' Conspiracy'.
Start of full-scale anti-Semitic purges in the Soviet Union.
Moscow, March 6: Josif Stalin dies.
Paris, November 3: The writer Ivan Bunin
dies in the arms of his wife Vera, in his apartment on the corner of Rue
Jacques-Offenbach (nr.1) and Rue des Bauches. He lived there since 1922.
1954
Anna Frolov-Davidoff, General Davidoff's
wife, dies in the United States. Her son Serge Davidoff has her urn added
in the columbarium of the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris, but he
forgets to renew the five-yearly contract, so in 1960 her ashes are scattered
into a nameless grave.
1955
Paris, February 2: Grand Duke Gavril
Constantinovich Romanoff (1887-1955) dies. He was a great- grandson of
Nicholas I and Major of the Imperial Guard Regiment of Hussars. In 1939
Grand Duke Vladimir Kirilovich granted him the title of `Grand Duke'. His
brothers Ivan, Constantin and George were murdered in a mine, together
with Elisabeth Feodorovna, while his brother Dmitri died a couple of months
later in the Peter and Paul Fortress. On the way from his cell to the place
of execution Dmitri kept saying, `Oche! Prosti jim, ibo nye znayut, chto
dyelayut.' (Father, forgive them, because they know not what they're doing.)
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya meets the
cellist Mstislav (Slava) Rostropovich. He is a friend of Prokofyev.
My uncle Alexander Ivanov and his wife
live in Brazil. Their daughter Irma Ivanova is born. Her godmother is Tatiana
Nikolaevna Masalitinov.
1956
Moscow, February 26: During the 20st
Congress of the CPSU Nikita Khrushchev criticizes Josif Stalin. He says
that Stalin deported entire peoples from their motherland, and that he
has the blood of millions of Soviet citizens on his hands. About 30 members
of the Congress faint; some even become a heart-attack. Khrushchev himself
weeps.
The cellist Mstislav (Slava) Rostropovich
goes for the first time on tour through England. His wife Galina Pavlova
Vishnevskaya stays at home because she is pregnant.
March 18: their daughter Olga is born,
in the Pirogov hospital in Moscow. Slava once more goes on tour, this time
to America, and when he comes back, he tells her all about cultural life
in the United States. Galina can't believe that almost every American family
has a car, and sometimes even two, and that there are TV sets with dozens
of channels in every hotel room.
Tokyo, September 1: Count Theodor Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's first son out of his second marriage, who is now working as an engineer for the UNO, marries Akiko Sasaoka.
New York, September 10: Dowager-Countess Rosine-Marie Buxhoeveden, née Vidal, Theodor's mother, marries the private teacher Hans Kessler (1899-).
New York, September 17: Count Anatol (Alec) Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's eldest son, divorces his wife, Countess Vera Buxhoeveden, née Illarionov.
November 4: Soviet troops occupy Budapest,
to crush the opposition against the communist regime.
1957
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky becomes a dance
critic at the Daily Mail.
1958
June 22: Slava and Galina have a second
daughter: Elena.
August: Nikolai Ivanov, my uncle, and I move from Paris to Amsterdam. Het Binnenhof of September 18, 1958:
Tomorrow morning at 11.30 the former chargé d'affaires of the Imperial Russia in The Hague, Mr. P. Poustochkine, who passed away last Tuesday in the age of 72 years, is burried in the General Cemetery `Westduin' in Loosduinen.
Mr. Poustochkine was born in Napels in 1886, where his father was Consul-General of the Russian Empire. Just like his father he went into diplomatic service. His first office was Vice-Consul on the isle of Crete, from 1910 to 1912. In 1913 he came to the Netherlands, as Secretary of the Russian Imperial legation in The Hague. After the Revolution in Russia, as the Dutch government still not recognized the Soviet regime, Mr Poustochkine became chargé d'affaires, charged with the liquidation of the affairs of the former Imperial legation. He held this office from about 1920, until the German occupation in May 1940 closed the legation down. Mr Poustochkine retired after World War II, when the Soviet government was recognized by our country.
Stockholm, October 25: The Soviet-Russian writer Boris L. Pasternak is nominated for the Nobel Literature prize.
Moscow, October 29: Pasternak refuses
the Nobel prize and writes a letter to Khrushchev, in which he begs him
not to ban him from the Soviet Union.
1959
New York, April 21: Count Anatol (Alec)
Buxhoeveden marries Miss Roberta (Bobby) Montague Rose (1907). Miss Rose
was born in London, as a daughter of the banker Archibald Adolph Rose and
Francis Lake Montague. She is the widow of publisher Thomas Leaman (1904-1951),
whom she married in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, on January 3, 1933.
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya goes to the
United States, on tour with the Russian State Symphony Orchestra. On December
31 she arrives in New York.
1960
Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna Romanoff
(1875-1960) dies. She was the daughter of Maria Feodorovna and the sister
of Nicholas II. In 1919 she escaped from Russia with the Marlborough. In
summer she and her husband Alexander (Sandro) Mikhaïlovich Romanoff
lived in a palace in Hampton Court, London, which belongs to the English
Royal Family, and in winter they lived in Southern France, in the village
of Roquebrune-Cap Martin, where both of them were burried.
Grand Duke Olga Alexandrovna Romanoff
(1882-1960) dies. She was the daughter of Maria Feodorovna and sister of
Nicholas II. First she married Prince Peter (Petia) Alexandrovich von Oldenburg
(1868- 1924), and later Nicholas Kulikovsky (1881-1958). Until 1948 she
led a secluded life in Danmark. After that she left for Canada, where she
lived for years in a small farmhouse near Toronto. Her neighbours were
rather surprised when she was invited for lunch with Queen Elisabeth and
Prince Philip in 1959, aboard the Royal yacht Britannia. A couple of months
ago, at the age of 78, she moved in with a Russian couple, who lived above
a hairdresser's shop in a poor quarter of Toronto. There she died.
Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov's husband Vladimir dies in Brazil. Her sister, who lives in the United States, sends an affidavit to Tatiana and her brother, and they join their sister in New York, where Tatiana finds work as a textile designer.
Mstislav Rostropovich is appointed professor
of violoncello in the conservatories of Leningrad and Moscow.
1961
The Russian Lyceum, which was founded
by the Society for Assistance to Children of Russian Emigrants, has closed
down. From 1921 till 1928 the lyceum resided on the address 7 Rue du Docteur-Blanche,
Paris. The rectress was Maria Maklakov, the Russian Ambassador's wife.
In 1926 the lyceum had 228 pupils, and in 1928 it moved to Boulogne-Bilancourt
(6 Boulevard d'Auteil), in which building also was put up the `Union of
Zemstvo Members Outside of Russia'.
Paris, Airport Le Bourget, June 16, 9
a.m.: The Kirov Ballet is waiting for the plane from London, which will
take them back to Moscow. Pierre Lacotte waits for the young dancer Rudolf
Nureyev, to say goodbye, but Nureyev hasn't arrived yet. The place is full
of KGB-agents and officials of the Russian Embassy in Paris. Clara Saint
enters the airport and walks directly towards Lacotte. She whispers in
his ear, `If you see Rudolf, tell him to throw himself into the arms of
the man behind me. He's a policeman.'
9.20 a.m.: Rudolf Nureyev enters the
airport, accompanied by KGB-agents. Lacotte walks towards him.
One of the agents says, `Sorry, we have
no time to loose,' but that doesn't stop Lacotte to take Rudolf in his
arms. He says, `Rudolf, it's time for us to say goodbye,' and whispers
Clara Saint's message in the dancer's ear. Then he says, `Don't forget
to say goodbye to Clara.' Without hesitating Rudolf runs towards the man
behind Clara, throws himself in his arms, and shouts, `I want to be free!'
Immediately the two men are surrounded by other policemen in civilian clothes.
Rudolf once more shouts, `I want to be free!' The policemen take him away,
Clara Saint and Pierre Lacotte follow them, leaving the KGB- agents behind
dumbfounded. Rudolf Nureyev has defected to the West.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky and Robert
Paul Browder publish their book The Russian Provisional Government, 1917:
documents.
1962
Noroton, Connecticut, September 29: Countess
Catherine Geneviève Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's second daughter
out of his second marriage, marries the author, composer and parapsychologist
Hans Holzer, from Vienna, Austria. Countess Catherine Geneviève
is a well known painter.
In 1961 Igor Strawinsky was officially
invited to the Soviet-Union, but he hesitates a long time before he accepts
the invitation. At the end of 1962 Strawinsky sets foot on native soil.
He is welcomed by Nikita Khrushchev and gives concerts in Leningrad and
Moscow. Dmitri Shostakovich, `Strawinsky looked quite foreign when he visited
us. (...) The invitation of Strawinsky had a highly political background.
The top had decided to make Strawinsky National Composer Number One, but
Strawinsky didn't want to play the game. He hadn't forgotten that they
had called him a ``lackey of American imperialism'' and ``bootlicker of
the Roman-Catholic Church''. He didn't make the same mistake as Prokofyev,
who ended like the chicken in the soup.'
1963
Mstislav Rostropovich signs a contract
as a solo performer with the English Chamber Orchestra. He keeps living
in the Soviet Union. Jack Brymer writes about him, `Rostropovich is a fantastic
cellist, who looks like an office clerk, but plays like an angel.'
André Alexeevich Amalrik is expelled from the university of Moscow, because of his `non-confor- mistic' thesis about Rurik in Kievian Russia.
Oleg Kerensky, Alexander's grandson, who works for the BBC Worldservice, becomes deputy editor of The Listener.
My uncle Nikolai and I attend the funeral
of Tristan Tzara, who used to visit us.
1964
Moscow, October 15: Nikita Khrushchev
has to resign his office. He is succeeded by Leonid Brezhnev.
1965
André Amalrik is bannished to
Siberia, where he will have to stay until 1968. There he writes his book
Undesired trip to Siberia and Will the Soviet-Union last till 1984?.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky publishes
his book Russia and history's turning point.
1967
Uncle Nikolai and I return to Paris to
attend the funeral of Ossip Zadkine. When I was a little kid and we were
living in Paris, Mr. Zadkine worked nearby, in Rue de la Grande Chaumière,
where he taught his students how to sculpture, and where I admired the
most beautiful girls in the world, who came to model for his class - naked!
His studio was in Rue Delambre, and it was a mess. Mr. Zadkine once told
me that he could use a guy like me. True, my uncle's studio was always
tidy. I loved it when the place was clean, when his six huge identical
easels were standing next to each other in line, ready for action, and
when the brushes were standing clean and dry in vegetable tins, cat's tongues
with cat's tongues, stipplers with stipplers, and pencils with pencils.
My uncle was proud of me.
1968
January: I move from Amsterdam to Paris,
to study in the école des Beaux Arts. My uncle Paul Obolensky invites
me to live with him and his wife Jacqueline.
May: Students organize demonstrations in the French capital. My girlfriend Marie-Claire, also a student, and I were there.
May 3: The students occupy the Sorbonne.
May 6: More than four hundred people are wounded in a struggle with the police.
May 11: Fierce fights between the students
and the police; we are in the middle of it, on Place St.
Michel. Daniel Cohn-Bendit and Jean-Paul
Sartre hold speeches in the Sorbonne. We want De Gaulle to step down.
May 13: We occupy the Odéon Theatre.
May 22: New fights. Daniel Cohn-Bendit isn't allowed to return to France, after his return from Germany. All over Europe students follow our example. June: The state of emergency was proclaimed in Berkeley, California. In France we are called `les enragés' (the wild ones). We protest against `bourgeois' society, the American actions in Vietnam, the military regime in Greece and General Franco's dictatorship in Spain. We, the students, demand more (sexual and personal) freedom and modern education, and we challenge the legitimacy of the authorities' power. The professors express their solidarity with us.
August 28: Marie-Claire's and my son is born. We call him Dimitri. I'm 17 and not at all ready for fatherhood. Marie-Claire understands and returns to her parents in Vichy. I leave for Hamburg, Germany, to stay with my uncle Theodore Ivanov.
Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov retires, and moves to Santa Barbara, California.
Czechoslowakia, August 21: The Red Army occupies Prague, to crush the so-called Prague Spring. The Czechoslowakian leaders of this progressive movement are arrested and deported to the Ukrain.
Maurice Ashley, the editor of the BBC
program The Listener, retires and Oleg Kerensky, the deputy editor, does
not get the editorship. He leaves the BBC to become a freelance with the
New Statesman.
The rest of his life he will write about
his chief interests, the performing arts: above all ballet, but also opera,
plays, musicals and concerts. As a dance critic Oleg works for several
newspapers. When his father leaves his mother, Nathalie Bely, Oleg remains
closer to her. Oleg's great virtue as a reviewer is his ability to communicate
his enthousiasm and enjoyment.
September: My friend Mike, a street artist
from Santa Barbara, and I are innocently locked up in a prison in Duesseldorf-Derendorf,
Germany. Three months later there's a trial, after which we are released
immediately. I'm going to live with my uncle Michael Obolensky and his
wife Vera, in their summer residence in Forio d'Ischia, Italy.
1969
April 28: President De Gaulle resigns
his post.
The Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who stayed in Russian hard labour camps for many years, has been thrown out of the Writers Union.
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya tours with the Bolshoy Theatre through Western Europe and the United States. It will be the last time she's permitted to perform in the United States.
December 12: Jack McPherson, one of my
uncle Alexis's `associates', takes me from the isle of Ischia to New York.
I can't do anything against it, because I'm still a minor and he is my
guardian. Moreover, this former intelligence officer he's made me an American
citizen, also against my will.
1970
Grand Duchess Irina Alexandrovna Romanoff
(1895-1970) dies. She was the daughter of Xenia Alexandrovna and Alexander
(Sandro) Mikhaïlovich Romanoff, and married to Prince Felix Yussupov.
They mainly lived in Paris, where their
generosity towards other Russian refugees became legendary.
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky publishes his lively and well informed book Ballet Scene, which is published in the United States under the title The world of ballet, supplemented by two new chapters and further references to American ballet.
The parents of my niece Irma Ivanova's pass away in Brazil. Irma emigrates to the United States, where she finds a job in New York as a bilingual executive secretary.
The Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn becomes the Nobel Literature prize.
The historian and writer André Alexeevich Amalrik is convicted once more, on account of the fact that he wrote two critical books about the Soviet Union, and once more he will have to spend three years in prison.
Jerusalem: Count Alexander Alexandrovich Buxhoeveden, Count Alexander's second son out of his second marriagewho was a lay brother in the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, New York, for seven years, before he last year went to Jerusalem with father Anthony von Grabbe, is forced to return to New York, due to a terrible accident.
Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky, former
Prime Minister of Russia, dies.
1971
April 6: Igor Strawinsky dies in New
York. His mortal remains are taken to Venice, Italy, where Strawinsky is
burried in the cemetery San Michele.
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky becomes the ballet
critic of the International Herald Tribune.
1972
October: Igor Sikorsky dies at the age
of 84, knowing that his invention, the helicopter, already has saved more
than a million people's lives. He is burried in Connecticut, near the spot
where his dream of vertical flying came through.
Igor Sikorsky retired in 1957, but he
kept designing helicopters. His aim was improving the lifting capacity
of the helicopter. He designed the S-60 and the S-64 (Skycrane). Until
1972 Sikorsky worked as an advisor for the United Aircraft Company, but
the Skycrane, with a lifting capacity of ten tons, was the last large project
that he worked on.
1973
Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya and her husband
Mstislav (Slava) Rostropovich aren't allowed to leave the Soviet-Union,
because of the fact that they openly supported their friend Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
They also aren't allowed to show their faces in Moscow and St. Petersburg.
Oleg Kerensky has published several books
about the ballet and the theatre. This year he publishes another biography:
Anna Pavlova, his most important book, which shows that he is capable of
patient research.
1974
February 13: Alexander Solzhenitsyn is
bannished from the Soviet Union, because of his book The Gulag Archipelago.
After arriving on the airport of Frankfurt, Germany, where he is welcomed
by the German writer Heinrich Boell, he leaves for Switzerland.
When the boycott of Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya
and Mstislav Rostropovich increases, Slava writes a letter to Brezhnev,
in which he asks permission for the whole family to go abroad for two years.
The state machinery works remarkably fast this time, but it would have
ended very badly, hadn't Senator Kennedy and Leonard Bernstein intervened.
After Brezhnev gives his permission, Slava leaves immediately. He isn't
allowed to take anything with him. Galina and the children leave some weeks
later, in July.
Galina, `We were in Sheremetyevo Airport.
Someone opened a bottle of champagne. ``Galina Pavlovna, one for the road!
Come back as soon as you can! We can't miss you!'' I see the sad faces
of my fans. Time to leave... Passport control. If they only let me go!
``Go on.''
Thank God! Faster! Faster!
We're in the aeroplane. O my God, why
doesn't it move? I know they're coming to get us. I can't stand it anymore.
I close my eyes and count the seconds, the minutes... Finally the doors
are closing. No, it is still to early to cheer, they can easely open the
doors and arrest us.
But now we're moving to the runway. My
heart beats wildly. The plane goes faster and finally we're in the air.
Tears come to my eyes.'
1976
July 15: The historian and writer André
Alexeevich Amalrik (37) `emigrates' to the West, together with his wife
Gyuzel, who is also bannished from the Soviet Union. They are welcomed
in Amsterdam by a crowd of sympathizers.
December 9: The Soviet-Russian scientist
André Sakharov becomes the Nobel Peace prize. The Soviet Union doesn't
allow him to leave the country, so Sakharov's wife Elena Bonner accepts
the prize in the name of her husband. The official Soviet press calls Sakharov
an `anti-patriot' and a `laboratory rat'.
1977
Mstislav Rostropovich is appointed artistic
director of the English Aldeburgh Festival.
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky publishes his
The New British Drama; fourteen playwrights since Osborne and Pinter, a
study of postwar British playwrights. He also contributes to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
1978
Rotterdam, Holland, January 3: Gynaecologist
Iwan Poustochkine, who rocked the cradle of jazz music in Holland, together
with his brother Toto, dies. From Jazz/Press no. 48 of February 1, 1978:
In memoriam: Iwan Poustochkine. Iwan Poustochkine was one of the pioneers of Dutch jazz music. In the thirties, when Holland was introduced to the new music of the Northern American negroes, many people found it barbarian and thought it would blow over. Iwan Poustochkine, at the time a medical student and stimulated by his brother Toto Poustochkine, formed an orchestra called `Swing Papa's'. That was the beginning of a jazz tradition in The Hague, the city which until long afterwards remained the Dutch center of many jazz activities.'
Alexander Solzhenitsyn settles down in the United States.
Oleg Kerensky's parents have passed away in London. Oleg moves to an apartment in Greenwich Village, New York, where he finds the life both congenial and economical. He keeps his British nationality and supplements his income with writing for British papers and magazines, including The Times and The Stage.
The Izvestia of March 16 states that Galina Pavlova Vishnevskaya and Mstislav Rostropovich lost their citizenship of the Soviet-Union by an ukase of the Supreme Soviet.
Moscow, July 13:
The Soviet authorities send three Russian dissidents to jail. Anatoli Shtsharan-
sky: 13 years; Alexander Ginsburg: 8 years; Viktoras Piatkus: 15 years.
All they want is that the Soviet Union complies with the Helsinki Agreement.
By these punishments
the Soviet regime hopes to discourage the dissenters movement.
1979
Countess Alexandra
Tolstoy, the founder of the Tolstoy Foundation in New York, dies, and is
burried in the Russian cemetery of Spring Valley, New York.
Sonia Delaunay,
née Terk (Gorodishche 1885 - Paris 1979) dies in Paris. She was
a painter and decorator, who graduated from the academy of arts of St.
Petersburg in 1905, and settled down in France in 1910. At first Sonia
was influenced by Gauguin. She designed textile fabrics, décors
and costumes for Diaghilev, illustrated work of Apollinaire, and has contributed
much to the development of the abstract art after 1945. She was married
to the painter Robert Delaunay (1885-1941), who became famous by his development
of a new, abstracting cubist style, which was characterized by the turnover
of colors and iridescence, as a result of which depth and movement were
created (orphism).
1980
Moscow, July 19:
Boycott of the 22nd Olympic Summer Games in Moscow, due to the Soviet-Russian
occupation of Afghanistan.
Tatiana Metternich (1914-), a daughter of Prince Ilarion (Lari) Vasilchikov and Princess Lydia (Dinka) Viatzemsky, publishes the diaries of her mother.
Thursday, August 21: a message in the society column of The Paris Post-Intelligencer, a Paris, Tennessee newspaper:
Miss Porter Weds
In New York City. Announcement has been received here of the marriage in
New York City of Miss Emy Louise Porter and Alexander Buxhoeveden at the
Russian-Orthodox Cathedral of the Protection of the Holy Virgin on Aug.
12, Saint Alexander Nevsky Day. The Rev. Benedict DeSocio officiated with
the exchange of rings and the traditional double crown wedding ceremony
of the Orthodox Church. Bible reading and prayers were in both English
and Russian. A full a capella Russian choir accompanied the service, the
cathedral being filled with lighted candles, vigil lamps and icons in accordance
with the Eastern rites.
Miss Porter chose
a 96-year-old wedding ring from Paris inscribed with the initials M.B.
and the year 1884, which had belonged to Myrtle Beattles, mother of the
late Mary Farabough Blakemore of Paris and San Francisco.
The bride is the
daughter of the late Will Burgess Porter and Beulah Dumas Porter, and the
granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Don Dumas Sr. and Dr. and Mrs. Felix
F. Porter, pioneer families of Henry County.
Mr. Buxhoeveden,
a native of Nice, France, is the son of the late Count Alexander Buxhoeveden
of St. Petersburg (Leningrad) Russia.
After her marriage
to Alexander Emy-Louise is baptized a Russian-Orthodox, after which her
saint's name is Maria. Like most descendants of Russian refugees Alexander
doesn't have any pictures, documents or objects of the Russian period of
his ancestors. The only things Count Alexander and Countess Maria have
of the Buxhoeveden heirlooms are a plate on their wall, one of a set that
Catharina the Great gave to an ancestor, and a tiny icon of Alexander Nevsky.
They live near Washington Square Park, New York City, in a neighborhood
which especially in summer has a Parisian atmosphere.
I am proud to be
able to say that the Count and Countess Buxhoeveden belong to my best and
dearest friends.
1981
Tsar Nicholas II,
Tsaritsa Alexandra Feodorovna, their five children and the Tsaritsa's sister
Elisabeth Feodorovna are canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia. The Moscow patriarchate utters sharp protests.
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky
publishes The Guinness Guide to Ballet, a popular exposition of the dance
world.
1982
Moscow, November
10: Leonid Brezhnev dies. He is succeeded by Yuri Andropov (68), who headed
the KGB for fifteen years.
1983
Tuesday, May 3:
George Balanchine, who wrote 149 ballets, of which 27 to the music of Igor
Strawinsky, died on Saturday April 30, at 4 p.m.. Today a memorial service
was held in the Russian-Orthodox Cathedral `Our Lady of the Sign' in New
York, on the corner of Park Avenue and East 93rd Street.
George Balanchine
is burried in Sag Harbor, Long Island. His widow and all his ex-wives were
present to throw white roses into the grave: Tamara Geva, Alexandra Danilova,
Maria Tallchief, Tanaquil Le Clerq, Allgra Kent, Suzanne Farrell, Karin
von Aroldingen and Natalie Molostwoff. Balanchine's friends, the piano
players Robert Fizdale and Arthur Gold, who live near the cemetery, prepared
a traditional `Balanchine-lunch' for the mourning, with caviar, vodka,
smoked ham and toast.
Oleg Olegovich Kerensky
is delighted to play the role of his grandfather Alexander in the film
Reds, next to Jerzy Kosinski, Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty, who also
directed and produced the film.
1984
Moscow, February
9: Yuri Andropov dies. He is succeeded by Constantin Chernenko (72).
Charlottesville,
February 12: Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanoff dies. (I own three
encyclopaedias. All three of them say, `Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova,
1901-1984.' After having read James Blair Lovell's beautiful book Anastasia,
the lost daughter of the Tsar I am absolutely convinced: Anna Anderson
(1901-1984) was Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova (1901-1984).)
1985
March: Chernenko
dies and is succeeded by Michael Gorbachev. Start of the perestroyka.
1986
February 8: My
uncle Prince Alexis Alexeevich Obolensky (1914-1986), also known as `Mr.
Backgam- mon', dies. He was married three times. In 1939 he married Jane
Wheeler (1914-) from New Orleans, in 1952 Catherine Pearce (1919-) from
Memphis Tennessee and in 1966 Jaqueline Stedman (1939-) from New York,
whom he divorced in 1971. Since then he was looking for a fourth spouse.
Tall, gallant and gaunt `Obi' was the last of the great Russian raconteurs
and a dashing sportsman. His life style made him the enfant terrible of
the Russian high-society in Manhattan. In the society columns of the New
York press he was called a playboy, a professional gambler and a professed
woman chaser, and the last years of his life he was living in a bachelor
flat off Fifth Avenue. He didn't make a secret of the fact that he was
an adventurer. `My father, Alexis Obolensky, was a fine basso profundo,
who sang with Nelly Melba all over the world. Right after our escape from
St. Petersburg in 1917 my father earned money by giving concerts in Constantinopel
and other places in Turkey, where a lot of White Russians were waiting
for the revolution to blow over. Our Turkish gardener has taught me how
to play backgammon. The backgammon developed by itself. There had always
been a certain number of people who played in small tournaments, for one
dollar a point, but when gambling started in the Bahamas in 1964 a friend
with a new hotel offered me $ 10,000 to gather a jet-set backgammon crowd,
and fly them down for the opening. I lined up a tournament, and though
the rest of the people in the hotel looked at us as if we were from Mars
with all those checkerboards, that is how big backgammon in the Western
hemisphere was born. The whole thing snowballed from there. We organized
a backgammon association, we put out a newspaper, and I wrote a book teaching
the five-thousand-year-old game; it sold 800,000 copies, with royalties
still coming in.'
The children from
his first marriage are: Anna (1939-), who runs a public relations-firm
in Palm Beach, Florida, and divorced from her first husband, Antonio Piedrabuena,
in 1970, after which she married the concert piano player Christopher Czaya
Sager (1941-); Alexis (1944-), real estate broker in Aspen, Colorado; Maria
(1946-1986), who was married to the London hotel-owner Anthony Underwood.
Although Serge and Michael Daniloff settled down in the United States and even became American citizens, they never thought of themselves as Americans. Michael Daniloff dies in 1986. His ashes are scattered by Nicholas Daniloff, Serge's son.
August 30: Nicholas Daniloff, since 1981 correspondent of the U.S. News and World Report in Moscow, is arrested by the KGB, on suspicion of espionage.
September 13: After
two weeks of imprisonment and interrogation in the Lefortovo prison, Nicholas
Daniloff is deported from the country, because the KGB can't prove anything.
The misery started when a KGB agent asked him, `Are you a relative of General
Yuri Daniloff?' and Nicholas answered, `I am his grandson.'
Michael Sergeevich
Gorbachev has been General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet-
Union for more than a year, and the Soviet-Union already is considered
a civilized country.
After been married
for 10 years Grand Duchess and claimant to the throne Maria Vladimirovna
Romanoff (23-12-1953 -), the daughter of Vladimir Kirilovich, divorces
Prince Franz-Wilhelm of Prussia (1943-), who was converted to Russian-Orthodoxy
and adopted the name of Michael Pavlovich. An ukase of Vladimir Kirilovich
granted his son in law and his descendants the title of Grand Duke and
the last name of Romanoff. Maria Vladimirovna grew up in Madrid and studied
for three years Russian, French and Spanish in the university of Oxford.
The ecclesiastical
marriage was celebrated in the Russian-Orthodox church in Madrid, and attended
by King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophie of Spain. Juan Carlos is a first cousin
of Maria Vladimirovna, while Queen Sophie is a first cousin of Michael
Pavlovich.
In 1981 their son
(at present Tsarevich) Grigori Mikhaïlovich Romanoff was born.
Film director André Tarkovsky (Zavroe 1932 - Paris 1986) dies in Paris. Tarkovsky studied under Michael Romm in the film academy of Moscow, and made his first appearance in 1962, with the feature film Ivan's Youth, for which he was awarded the Golden Lion on the Venice film festival. Abroad he became especially famous by his film Solaris (1971). In Russia he wasn't appreciated, in view of his social and political criticism on the Soviet system. During the shooting of his last film, Le sacrifice, Tarkovsky already suffered from an uncurable type of cancer. His father, the poet Arseni Tarkovsky, said, `Don't be afraid, my boy, death doesn't exist. Fear for death does exist though, and that fear is horrifying. (...) but everything changes, and one fine day we will even be extricated from fear for death.'
Chernobyl, April 26, 01.23 a.m.: The reactor of the nuclear plant explodes.
Moscow, May 15:
President Michael Gorbachev informs his people and the rest of the world
about the nuclear explosion in Chernobyl.
1987
At first Count
Alexander and Countess Maria Buxhoeveden mingled with other Russian aristocrats
in New York, but since some years this relationship is watered down. I
very well understand the reasons for this; the modesty, the unpretentiousness,
the helpfulness and the cordiality of the Buxhoevedens is very un-American.
Most Russian aristocrats in New York belong to the jetset of Manhattan
- millionairs and real snobs, who think that Noblesse Oblige means, `Nobility
is obligatory to be hoity-toity'. It's obvious that the Buxhoevedens don't
belong in this category. I like style and class, but most people don't
seem to realize that you can't judge style, class or the absence of it
by ones looks, clothes or possessions. Class and style are inner things,
and have nothing to do with heredity, status or ostentation.
1988
Oleg Kerensky learns
that he is HIV positive and knows from now on that he will have his life
cut short.
1989
Princess Ekaterina
Meshcherskaya (she and her mother stayed in Russia) celebrates her 85th
birthday in Moscow. (I don't know if she's still alive; all my letters
to Russia and the Ukrain seem to disappear in thin air.)
Michael Ignatieff, who describes himself as `a displaced Canadian writer, married to an Englishwoman, with a house near a park in Northern London, overlooking a cluster of plane-trees,' receives the Royal Society of Literature Award for his beautiful book, The Russia Album, in which he tells about his search for his Russian origin. Michael Ignatieff is the compère and compiler of the BBC-program The Late Show.
In Russia freedom of religion is regulated by law. Russia witnesses a religious revival.
Moscow, May: The
Russian weekly Ogonyok (weekly 3,200,000 copies) organizes the `Week of
the Conscience', to commemorate the 98 million victims of the Stalin administration,
a genocide unique in human history.
1991
Moscow, August
19: The Soviet press agency TASS announces that president Michael Gorbachev
is replaced by vice president Gennadi Yanaev.
Washington, August 20: The American president George Bush refuses to recognize the new government.
Moscow, August 21: The coup d'état is over. Michael Gorbachev returns from his datcha in the Crimea.
Grand Duke Vladimir
Kirilovich Romanoff, who lived many years in Madrid and later in the United
States, visits Russia for the first and last time. He talks to Boris Yeltsin
and Anatoli Sobchak, the mayor of St. Petersburg.
In Germany he presents
his book Das Zarenreich, a such-and-such book about the rise and fall of
the Russian Empire.
In Moscow a statue is put up to Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna Romanoff, who was murdered by the bolsheviks in 1918.
Moscow, December
8: The USSR ceases to exist. Michael Gorbachev is no longer president of
the Soviet Union. The leading figure is now Boris Yeltsin, president of
the Russian Federation.
1992
April: Grand Duke
Vladimir Kirilovich Romanoff dies in Miami of a heart attack. He is interred
in a crypt in the Peter and Paul Fortress in St. Petersburg, where other
Romanoffs found their last resting places. His daughter, Grand Duchess
Maria Vladimirovna, succeeds him as a claimant to the throne, while her
son Grigori Mikhaïlovich is the new Tsarevich. The Romanoff Family
Association however doesn't share this point of view.
April 4: The Moscow Patriarchate canonizes Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna Romanoff.
May 10: The Sunday Times publishes a story which says that a thorough examination shows that the remains of all five children of Tsar Nicholas II and Tsaritsa Alexandra were found, and that Anna Anderson was a phoney.
September: Oleg Kerensky begins to lose his appetite. His doctor put him on AZT and his appetite problem improves. He has a melanoma skin cancer surgically removed.
November: The Saint-Nicholas
Cathedral, 15 East 97th Street, New York, celebrates its 90th anniversary.
1993
Paris, January
6: Rudolf Nureyev dies of AIDS. I attend his funeral.
May: Oleg Kerensky feels ill and a second melanoma skin cancer is removed; he never recovers from this operation, as the cancer has metasticized and is all through his body. Oleg knows death is imminent.
London, July 7:
In Aldermaston scientists of the Home Office state that the bones which
were found in a grave near Ekaterinburg, belong to Tsar Nicholas II, the
Tsaritsa and three of their four daughters. The scientists compared the
DNA of the bones to the DNA of Prince Philip. His grandmother was Princess
Alice Von Hessen, one of the Tsaritsa's sisters. The remains of the Tsarevich
and Anastasia were not identified.
One of the scientists,
Dr Thompson, says that the Aldermaston laboratory possesses hairs of Anna
Anderson, so her DNA can also be compared to that of Prince Philip, to
make sure if she was Anastasia or not, but that he's not permitted to perform
these tests. How strange...
Moscow, September 21: President Yeltsin sends the Supreme Soviet home and announces parliamentary elections on December 11 and December 12.
Moscow, September 22: The dissolved Supreme Soviet proclaims Alexander Ruchkoy president of Russia.
Moscow, October 3: Ruchkoy orders the people to capture the Moscow city hall and the Ostakino television tower.
Moscow, October 4: President Yeltsin restores the peace with the help of the army. Khasbulatov and Ruchkoy are brought to the Lefortovo prison.
New York, October
6, 3 a.m.: Oleg Olegovich Kerensky, aged 63, dies of AIDS. He is fully
awake when he dies. He is cremated and his ashes are returned to his cousins
in England, for internment in the family plot in Putney Vale. A memorial
service is held in London. The Times publishes a three column obituary
on Oleg. He loved to travel, yet he never managed to visit Russia, the
homeland of his grandfather.
When I met him
for the first time, he didn't know anything about my Russian and aristocratic
origin, and he highly blamed me for reminding him of his Russian origin.
`I spent most of my life trying to escape my Russian inheritance,' he said
to my astonishment.
`Why?'
`I'm just not interested
in mixing with Russians. Never had the urge to do so.'
`Can you explain
what's the reason for that?'
`No, I haven't
got the time for it, and moreover I'm absolutely not in the mood for it.'
Some weeks later
we met again. I discovered that since our last meeting a strange thing
had happened, which I since witnessed with many other descendants of Russian
refugees: a sudden interest in their Russian origin, as if I had awoken
something in them. This time Oleg was very accessible, but he still didn't
want to go into my question why he always had avoided other Russians abroad.
He did however tell me everything he knew about his family, and years later
he helped me with my search for the `last of the Mohicans'.
Some weeks before
he died we met once more. `If democracy survives there, I am thinking of
making my first visit to Russia before too long,' my friend said hesitating,
as if he should be ashamed of this sudden interest in the country of his
ancestors. In the mean time my informer `Feodor' Romanoff, who has the
same age as Oleg, had told me why the Kerensky's and lots of other Russian
refugees were at daggers drawn. `By many Russian refugees, particularly
by the Russian nobility, Alexander Kerensky was considered the man who
bartered away Russia to the bolsheviki. Of course this was absolutely unjustified,
because if Lenin had not been helped by Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, Kerensky's
Provisional Government would have founded a democratic Russia, and nobody
would have had to flight. Alexander Kerensky, Oleg's grandfather, was often
denigrated, particularly by Nina Berberova and her likes, and unfortunately
today someone with the name of Kerensky still wouldn't be welcome in certain
Russian circles. I can imagine very well why Oleg doesn't feel like justifying
the fancied misbehaviour of his grandfather, and why he doesn't feel like
socializing with a group of the population so ignorant and intolerant.'
There was another
reason, though. Oleg's cousin Stephen Kerensky told me, `We had very little
contact with other Russians; my mother is English and I do not speak or
read Russian with any fluency, although I'm learning. Both Oleg and a family
friend, daughter of one of my father Gleb's colleagues, spoke Russian until
they dropped it within weeks of going to English schools, so no serious
attempt was made to teach me or my elder sister Katherine. We did celebrate
our saint's days as lesser birthdays when we were children and we continue
to make kulich and pashka at Easter. Oleg's parents were both Russian,
and the actually resented all things Russian very much when he was a child.
He wanted to be English and, even more than me, became so at Westminster,
Christ Church and the BBC. However, he developed a great affection for
Russia through his love of ballet and always refused to stand for the Soviet
anthem at performances by their ballet companies. He also came to knowledge
that much of his character stemmed from a Slavic warmth and sociability.
I also felt a certain alienation from what I saw as the strangeness of
Russian relations. Society in all countries demands a degree of conformity,
and being called `Russian spy' at school was not exactly fun, even if it
didn't last very long as a nickname.
After 30 years
when I considered myself to be completely English, my most direct feelings
of being Russian come from my style of argument and my attitudes to friendship.
We always had terrific political arguments at home, conducted with a vehemence
that the English find intimidating. My father Gleb fought all his life
against the prejudiced ideas of pre-revolutionary Russia, the distorted
histories of 1917 that are still current and I have taken op the cudgels
to some extent, because I believe quite strongly that a many ills of the
20th century derive from Lenin. However, not a few also stem from the commercialism
of the USA, and that country's bizarre notions of religion, truth, decency
and freedom, as ridiculed by Mark Twain, Tom Lehrer, Lenny Bruce and Frank
Zappa.'
Oleg considered
to return to London forgood. His uncle Gleb had passed away, but his aunt
Mary still lived in Rugby, just like her son Stephen. Daughter Katherine
Walker lived in Farnham, Surrey. Her eldest daughter studied Russian in
the university of Durham, and called herself Tanya Kerensky Walker.
Daughter Elizabeth
Hudson lived in Titley, Herefordshire. Knowing he was dying Oleg wanted
to send me photographs of him and his grandfather, he wanted to visit Russia,
and he wanted to leave New York to join his relatives in England. He didn't
make it. In the last seven years he lost a large portion of his closest
friends, some quite young, to AIDS, the disease that eventually struck
him down as well. Before he died he completed his autobiography, but Oleg's
friend, Arthur G. Lambert Jr., thinks it's unlikely that it will ever be
published. That would be a pity. Oleg, I raise a glass of vodka to you,
my friend, and I hope that you'll be happier up there than you ever were
down here.
Moscow, October 9: Michael Gorbachev announces in the Komsomolskaya Pravda that he is willing to `set everything aside to save Russia.'
Washington, October 14: Michael Gorbachev announces in the Washington Post that he considers to be a candidate in the Russian presidential elections next year.
December 13, Black
Monday: The fascist Vladimir Zhirinovsky has won the elections. Zhirinovsky
is an anti-Semite, a Pugachov, a man who solves international problems
with bombs and national problems with cheap vodka. If Zhirinovsky really
comes to power, I foresee a second Russian diaspora, because if Yeltsin
can change the constitution, so can Zhirinovsky. Alexei Triumfov of Novosti
Publishers in Moscow calls me: `Your Excellency, we think you're a bit
pessimistic. After the collapse of communism Russia indeed has been going
through a difficult time trying to find its feet again. We are sure it
will pull through in the end.' I don't know. In 1917 Ekaterina Meshtsherskaya
was also very assured that everything would be just fine...
New York, February:
The ninety-five years old Evgenia Demidova, another last of the Mohicans,
has to go to the hospital. I fear for her life, but ten days later I'm
glad to hear that she's allowed to go home.
Her daughter, Nathalie
Vorhaus, takes care of her. She's fine now, but daughter Nathalie is also
in her seventies, and every time I hear from her my heart is heavy. Evgenia,
`We belong to the hundreds of thousands of nameless refugees. No nobility,
no capitals, no popularity - just working and learning hard, in Russia,
in France and afterwards in the United States. We would have liked to stay
in Russia, but the repressive administration made this impossible. We have
always lived our life abroad in exile; never have we become Americans;
we have always longed for our native country.'
Count Alexander
Buxhoeveden found a job at the World Trade Center in New York. He likes
his job and doesn't see any other Russian aristocrats. Countess Maria is
now recuperating at home, but in August it looked as though she was going
to make a trip to see Saint Peter. I'm happy that she's feeling well again.
The countess asked me, `What exactly is the feeling of the Russian spirit?'
I answered, `That's a difficult question, my dear Louise, but I'll try
to answer it. Perhaps the Russian spirit is a web, in which one can be
caught. One thing's for sure: the Russian spirit is a cultural thing, and
it cannot be inherited by blood alone. A Russian who is born in an African
jungle and raised like any other African, will never know what the Russian
spirit is, unless he will search for it, experience it. Michael Ignatieff's
grandfather was the last Minister of Education under the Tsar. Michael
was born in Canada. Count Pavel, his grandfather, died there. Michael grew
up as a Canadian kid, a non-believer. Recently he came to the Ukrain, to
visit the Orthodox church his great-grandfather built. At the grave of
his great-grandfather, in church, (during the famine the grave was used
as a butcher's block), Michael said, `Your home is where your graves are.'
A few hours later he was completely overwhelmed by the beautiful Orthodox
singing in the church, and that was the first time in all his life he experienced
the Russian spirit. He was caught in the web, in the endless catacombs
of what we call the `Russian spirit'. Mind you, I love to be there, but
you have to realize you can never leave. Most important: entering the Russian
spirit is a quest for the inner man or woman. You may not like what you
will find there, but once confronted with it, you have to deal with it.
The Russian spirit knows high mountains and deep valleys, higher and deeper
than any European or American spirit. Sure, melancholy is a part of the
Russian spirit, but so is joy and laughter; they keep each other in balance,
like yin and yang. A Russian is inclined to let himself being dragged down
by his emotions, and so am I, but what is wrong with that, if those emotions
are pure and straight from the heart? In our society one can only hear
too often, `Control yourself, don't get carried away.' Why not? Because
this way the outer world will see the inner man? What's wrong with that?
So once more: what
is the Russian spirit? For you it's Alexander's photo in front of the Novodichi
Convent in Moscow, but it probably wouldn't be if you hadn't been there
yourself to experience it. For Michael Ignatieff it was his visit to the
church of his great-grandfather in the Ukrain. For me it's my $ 1,95 icon
of the Mother of God of Kazan, combined with the sound of Orthodox hymns.
Whatever it is, it's a quest for the inner man. Keep searching, and you
will find it.'
Olga Alexandrovna Davidoff Dax (1928-), a descendant of Vasili Lvovich Davidoff, the Decembrist, came into possession of beautiful drawings and diaries of her great-aunt Mariamna, which she turned into a beautiful book: On the Estate: Memoirs of Russia before the Revolution, London 1986.
One of the great-granddaughters
of Princess Hélène Obolensky, who was brutally murdered by
her own godson in 1918, is my niece Princess Nina Anna Obolensky (1961-).
Nina married the American James Prudden, and is very busy, because she
is writing a doctoral dissertation for her degree in Clinical Psychology.
She knows very little about the history of her ancestors and regrets this.
Her only direct connection to Russia was her paternal grandfather. She
also knows that Prince Felix Yussupov was a cousin, but that's about all.
Nina, `Just like
you I know very little about my ancestors, which is sad, unfortunate, but
true. The only Russian I knew was my grandfather, Prince Michael Alexeevich
Obolensky, who died shortly after my birth. My father did not keep up his
Russian heritage, as he did not have the opportunity to know his own father
because his parents were divorced when he was a child. Everything I know,
I read in history books. In really am a very American woman and grew up
as a typical American girl. Perhaps the only unusual thing about me is
that I have often been involved in animal rescue operations.'
Alexis Czetwertinsky, the son of Peter Czetwertinsky and the grandson of Alexis Czetwertinsky and Princess Tatiana Dolgorouky, lives and works in Paris. He's a computer expert.
Igor Sikorsky was succeeded by his son, who still is a director of the United Aircraft Company.
Nicholas Daniloff is alive and healthy. He and his wife Ruth live in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Paul Ivanovich Poustochkine,
the grandson of the last representative of Imperial Russia in Holland,
was born in 1951. He went to law school in Rotterdam, worked as a jurist
for the Dutch State Council and nowadays is a judge in The Hague. Paul
may consider himself lucky, because his grandfather retained all photographs,
invitations, letters and other documents, which contain a treasure of information.
I'm very sure that almost every descendant of Russian emigré's is
jealous of this sympathetic companion in adversity, because most refugees
couldn't take anything with them, and if this was possible at all, then
the large, heavy photo albums didn't have highest priority. But Paul Constantinovich
Poustochkine came to Holland in 1913; the World War would only break a
year later, and it would still take more than four years before the October
Revolution took place. He was able to move his personal property out of
Russia in peace and quiet.
The Poustochkines
very soon integrated in Dutch society, most likely because there wasn't
a large Russian community in Holland, unlike Paris, Berlin and New York.
Michael Ignatieff, the grandson of Paul Ignatieff, the last Minister of Education under the Tsar, just finished a documentary series called `Blood and Belonging', about rising nationalism in Europe, for BBC- Wales, and he wrote a book about it.
Even today the patriarchate
of Moscow refuses to recognize the Synod of the Russian-Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia, while the Synod in turn does not wish to recognize the
election of Patriarch Serge and his successors, nor takes any notice of
the interdicts which are published by Moscow.
Patriarch, Alexis
II, tries to arbitrate in the dispute between Boris Jeltsin and his opponents
Ruchkoy and Khasbulatov, with no effect whatsoever.
There are more
than 9,000 registered religious organizations in Russia, of which only
a small part are Orthodox. The Russian-Orthodox Church of Russia claims
the rights it had in 1917, to be able to dominate the Russian religious
market as before.
Moscow, Russia, 1 February 1994
Dear Prince Valerian!
I received your letter and book in the middle of January. So as you I was very glad to receive your letter and to know of your existence, and I hope you are in good health. I am very thankful Mr. Triumfov (head of foreign rights Novosti Publishers Moscow, VSO) for his help.
For an irony of
fate you don't speak Russian and I don't speak English. So excuse me for
my English: my wife translated your letter and now she is translating your
manuscript; we acquaint with several parts of it.
Your fate was very
hard and cruel, and so was mine. Of course it must have been horrible for
you to become an orphan at the age of one. I became an orphan when I was
twelve. You are right believing that the communists killed many Obolensky's
and other aristocrats. They physically murdered millions of Russians. But
you underestimate the unique lineage of Obolensky; the family consists
of innumerable people, who have many talents and a strong background. In
emigration you can easily calculate and restore all blanks and all Obolensky's
names, because they were not killed there. It's more difficult to do it
in Russia, sometimes one spends all his life searching for parents and
greatparents, and even then there are people who cannot find their relatives.
Many of our people
chose other family names to save themselves and their children from shooting
and concentration camps. It was a terrible and bloody experience.
Before I will tell
you about myself, I'd like to inform you: today I live in Moscow. I have
organized and I am head of the Council of Noble Societies `Crown'. In Moscow
and the rest of Russia are many organizations of nobles, unfortunately
they live and associate with each other worse than before 1917, that is
frequently not friendly and even hostile. Mainly they are nobles' descendants
with deformed lives and sovietic habits. But there are many good men among
them. There are agents of the KGB among them too, so our life is hard and
not simple.
My main profession is writer (playwright, critic) and journalist. I am a member of the editorial board of the newspaper The press of Russia. I am author of the books Russia once more in the mist and The death of Cornet Obolensky, which are published in Russia, and of many plays and a few tv films and telecasts. I am a leader of the broadcast `Russian's estates' on Radio Ostankino I. I have graduated from Moscow University and literary seminar (studio). Thank you for your efforts in searching of my background.
Presumably version number 2 written by you (2. You're a son of Prince Nikolai Alexandro- vich Obolensky. Your father was born in 1916 and died in the war, between 1941 and 1945. In that case your father had two brothers (Yuri and Michael) and one sister (Olga), and in that case your grandfather Alexander and my grandfather Michael were brothers. VSO) may be right, because some documents I received after many years, from archives of the KGB, after August 1991, and also from the Prosecutor's Office of the USSR indicate this.
My grandfather Alexander
Feodorovich Obolensky was shot in 1937 on sentence of the `troika' (three
members) of an extraordinary committee of the former KGB. I was told that
he was a prince, that he had innumerous relatives, that his sons were Nikolai
and Mikhail, and his great-grandfather was the Decembrist Evgeni Petrovich
Obolensky, and his mother was called Teplova, a granddaughter of the Decembrist
Annenkov.
I was born in 1939.
My mother, Princess Zinaida Nikolaevna Obolensky, died in 1951 during the
last Stalin repressions. As she told me in her family there were Princes
Obolensky and they lived in Moscow near the Polytechnical Museum, near
Maroseika Street. She knew three foreign languages.
In 1951, when I
became an orphan, I was put in a special boarding school for children of
`the people's enemies', where I stayed until 1955. It was in fact a children's
concentration camp. Thanks to Nikita Khrushchev I survived and came back
to Moscow.
Rehabilitation
of political prisoners began. But I had to start my life all over again,
without family and relatives, without dwelling and a profession. I got
over many difficulties and came through many circles of communist hell,
before I became what I am now, having some `status' and respect in society.
We live however very modestly.
My only daughter
Kristina Obolensky is 14 years old. She is studying flute in the Central
Musical School of the conservatoire.
She is the daughter
from my first marriage; I love her very much. We were in Paris twice on
a festival of gifted children. I believe that God has kept us alive.
Peter Obolensky from Princeton is now in Moscow. He found me and soon we'll meet. He is 18 years old and is learning Russian in Moscow.
Our life today is
a constant struggle! Russia is now going through a tragedy not less than
in 1917!
As for your book
Russians in Exile, I think it is very interesting, especially your style.
Of course I'll show your book to publishing houses; I have already spoken
with one publisher. But take into consideration the fact that many publishing
houses in Russia are bankrupt.
You can see the friend in me. I know all Princes Obolensky are from one progenitor - Rurik - and Saint Michael Chernigovsky.
Write me on my home address, it's on the envelope.
With sympathy, sincerely yours,
Vladimir Obolensky
Not everyone with
the name of Romanoff is a relative of the former Russian Imperial family,
and not every Romanoff stems from a noble family. The name of Romanoff
is quite common in Russia, and in the Manhattan telephone directory are
several Romanoffs enlisted.
However, the real
relatives of the last tsar have an ex-directory telephone number, to protect
their privacy. Some of them have taken up their residence in a large apartment
house in East 96th Street, which they call `Nevsky Prospect'. In East 95th
Street is the `House of Rurik', where many Princes and Princesses Obolensky,
Troubetzkoy, Wolkonsky and Shcherbatov clannishly cluster together. In
the 1920s the apartments in the East Nineties were very inexpensive, thus
one family called another every time a vacancy appeared, and soon the building
was filled with Russians. Today the East Nineties and Carnegie Hill section
of upper Manhattan are very fashionable, and the prices went through the
roof.
Count Nicholas Bobrinskoy
is a great-great-great-grandson of Catherina the Great; the founder of
the Bobrinskoy line, her son by Prince Grigori Orlov, was half-brother
to her son Tsar Paul I. His father, Count Alexei Alexandrovich Bobrinskoy,
was born in 1852 and was forced to leave everything behind when he and
his wife fled. The estate of his family in the Ukrain was equal in size
to the state of New Hampshire, and the Bobrinskoys were extremely rich.
Count Nicholas was born in 1921, in Nice, France.
He went to Paris
to live the starving artist life for a while, and in 1954 he came to New
York, where he found a job in a factory. His wife, Countess Tatiana Nikolaevna
Bobrinskoy, née Timashev, was born in Berlin. They married in the
1950s in New York, where her father, Professor Timashev, taught sociology.
They started Zina
Studios, a small fabric design and production firm of wallpaper and draperies,
and still own and operate it in Mt. Vernon, north of the Bronx.
One day the German
magazine Geo wanted photos of the exiled nobility in New York. They asked
the Countess to wear her jeweled tiara for the occasion, but she told them
she didn't have one. Okay then, they replied, just wear your diamand necklace.
She didn't have that either. Well, at least wear some of your jeweled eardrops,
they insisted. She didn't have those either, so she went to Woolworth's
and purchased a pair of plastic pearl eardrops for a few dollars. The photographer
assumed they were real, because she was, after all, a countess.
Count Bobrinskoy
is chairman and founder of the Orthodox Order of St. John (or Knights of
Malta), which came to being in New York in 1973 and received the sanction
and blessing of Patriarch Alexis II in November 1992, at the Orthodox cathedral
in Garfield, New Jersey. The Knights (about 300 of them) help mankind suffering
from any type of cataclysm no matter where in the world, regardless of
their faith. They helped with the tremendous earthquake in Friuli, Italy,
in 1976, and they do similar charity work, on a modest scale, for victims
of natural catastrophes in Southern Italy, Armenia, Mexico and elsewhere.
The Countess: `Russians
are constantly writing us to ask us to write down our memories. We are
already the second generation in exile. They are trying to reconstruct
the historical threads that in 1917 were cut off.' What about her offspring?
`We have a son and a daughter. Our daughter is married and our son is a
struggling actor, off-off-off-Broadway. He's 27, and all he wants to do
right now is act. He doesn't seem to have the time for the Russian renaissance.
Both our children have told us, ``I am a first class American. I can become
the president of the United States, and you can't.'' They are Americanized
and not really interested. The Russians better hurry up, because the second
generation is getting older, and the third generation knows much less.
Already we don't know a lot. And there's almost nobody left after 75 years.
Those that are left are so old.'
Prince Vladimir
Galitzine is a banker. He was born in Belgrade, where the Yugoslavian Royal
Family offered protection to Russian aristocrats who had settled there
after the October Revolution. In 1945 the Galitzine's wound up in the American
zone in Germany, and successively they travelled to America, on a troop
ship, as part of the Displaced Persons Program. They started in a cold-water
flat in Brooklyn.
Prince Galitzine,
`My parents were divorced, and I owe everything to my mother. She bought
an old sowing machine and took in sewing. Besides that she scrubbed and
did odd jobs, so I could go to Hartford, a small boarding school, where
I got rid of my Brooklyn accent and won scholarships to college.'
The old struggle
between the Petersburg and Moscow nobility continues in New York, with
unflagging fierceness. The Petersburg aristocrats compare themselves to
champagne, while they consider the Moscovite nobility home-brewed vodka.
`Feodor' Romanoff, `I can tell you things about today's Russian nobility,
which would make your hair stand on end.'
`Like what?'
`Two Russian Princesses
grew up together in New York. They were school-friends. When the both of
them were married for years, one of them read in a history book that there
once had been a quarrel of long standing between their families. The friendship
was determined instantly, and the quarrel was resumed. Finally one of them,
the one who resumed the quarrel, used the almighty gossip circuit to make
sure that the husband of her former friend was fired from his job. And
what about the fine Russian nobleman, with high religious and social standards,
who has been reviled by the Russian nobility abroad, all his life, because
he didn't care for their pomp and circumstance, and who's been neglected
ever since he married a woman 20 years older, in stead of 20 years younger
than he?'
There is no real Russian community. Prince Galitzine, `That's impossible. We are not organized the way other countries are, like Italy or Holland. Russia isn't a country, but a continent. When you say Russia, you mean Moslems, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Orthodox, Catholics and Protestants, you mean Georgians, Russians, Eskimo's, Tatars, Armenians et cetera. Not to mention political conflicts and differences.'
Prince Constantin
Sidamon-Eristoff, a Princeton graduate, is a leading New York lawyer with
a hand in politics. In 1978 he founded the law firm `Sidamon-Eristoff,
Morrison, Warren & Ecker'. Prince Eristoff is married to Anne Phipps,
and tries hard to live up to the expectations of Russian nobility in a
new geographical setting. `But a count without a bank account is of no
account, and it's useless being a penniless prince.'
When Constantin's
father and his cousins Pierre and Dmitri escaped to America, neither of
them spoke a word of English. However the Georgian network had already
spread in the U.S. and Norman Whitehouse, who was married to Princess Tamara
Bagration-Moukhransky, had placed each. Prince Eristoff's father was sent
to the Huntington Tracy place to be a chauffeur, which was unfortunate,
because he could only ride a horse. He was met at the station by Miss Ann
Huntington Tracy, who eventually became his wife.
Prince Eristoff,
`When I entried into New York politics, I found out that a name like Constantin
Sidamon-Eristoff was an advantage. The Jews thought I was Jewish, the Italians
thought I was Italian.
Being half Protestant
and half Orthodox simply means I tend to move about peacefully and unobtrusively.
In any case I'm I Georgian, and nobody dislikes Georgians!'
Princess Janet Romanoff
is proud of the achievements of Russians in the United States. `Russian
nobility always, that is: since the end of the 19th century, walked hand
in hand with intellectuals, scientists and artists. Today, over three hundred
American colleges and universities offer courses in Russian studies.
More than twelve
important Russian periodicals are published in the United States, and there
are numerous Russian organizations across the nation. World-famous Russian
composers Serge Rakhmaninov, Serge Prokofyev and Igor Strawinsky became
U.S. citizens, as did dancers George Balanchine, Igor Youskevich, Michael
Fokine and Alexandra Danilova. And who can forget the genius of Vladimir
Zworykin in electronics, of Igor Sikorsky in aeronautics, of Vladimir Nabokov
in literature, of Pitrim Sorokin in sociology, of Vasili Leontief in economics,
and Serge Semenenko, the innovative financier from Odessa, who became president
of the First National Bank of Boston.'
In April 1939 the
Tolstoy Foundation was founded by Countess Alexandra Tolstoy, the youngest
daughter of the great writer Lev Tolstoy (1828-1910). With her friend Tatiana
Schaufuss, she gathered a group of concerned Americans and prominent Russian
expatriates.
In 1941 the Tolstoy
Foundation `bought' a seventy-acre farm in Spring Valley (Rockland County,
New York), for the symbolical amount of one dollar. From that moment the
Tolstoy Foundation made history in the field of refugee assistance. Alexandra
Tolstoy died in 1979 and is burried in the Russian cemetery of Spring Valley,
New York.
The headquarters of the Tolstoy Foundation are resided in New York City, in Park Avenue, from which a world wide program of aid to refugees and exiles, regardless of race, religion, ethnic background or country of origin, is coordinated. Chairman is Prince Alexis S. Troubetzkoy, who is related to the Obolenskys.
Countess Sophia
Galinitchev-Koutouzov, nowadays Mrs Sophia Koutouzov Winkelhorn, was born
in St.
Petersburg. She
can remember the first years of her exile well, `After the Revolution many
of our men and women had to fend for themselves in the hardest possible
way. Grand Duchesses were scrubbing floors; Grand Dukes were digging roads.
Other European aristocrats were better off than we. In France was a restoration
and the French still have a claimant to the throne, living peacefully on
native soil. The German and Austrian aristocrats continued to have their
castles and estates. The Italian King just went away, and the Italian nobility
have much of the land they had for centuries. The Russian aristocrats who
survived the Revolution had nothing but their own will to continue. I am
desperately proud of the White Russian colony in New York, because we stuck
together and we shared our bread, because our children and grandchildren
maintain our heritage. At least among ourselves, we will never be the forgotten
Russian Four Hundred.'
The first Russian emigrants wave of this century was in the early 1920s. After the October Revolution of 1917 more than a million people escaped from Russia. Many of them did not go to America directly, but stayed some years in Europe first, particularly in France. This first wave brought the Russian culture to New York. Some remains of this community can still be found between East 60th and East 96th Street, but probably not for long.
The second Russian
emigrants wave arrived in the United States towards the end of the 1940s,
mainly from Germany, where many of them had been in Displaced Persons camps.
Especially for elderly people it was very hard to start their lives in
a new country, with a completely different language. Most of them worked
as maids, cleaning women and mill hands, in other words: where there was
no need to speak good English. The younger generation went to school and
later they worked in offices, or, if their parents could afford it, continued
studying in universities, pursuing higher education. The computer field
is very popular among this generation. Some Russians were welcomed with
open arms by the American government, in view of certain knowledge they
had of communist society, and others worked for the anti-communist radio
station `The Voice of America', which broadcasted in Eastern Europe, but
many had to take odd jobs.
The second Russian
emigrants wave mainly settled down in and Glen Cove, Long Island, which
since has developed as a real Russian enclave. Besides the Cathedral of
the Ascension, in Old Tappan Road, there are some smaller Russian-Orthodox
churches, which have been build by the emigrants themselves.
On the streets
almost everyone speaks Russian, and everywhere around you can see Russian
stores, people reading Russian newspapers, et cetera. Nearby, in Roslyn,
is a Russian cemetery.
Recently, after everywhere in Europe the walls of the communist prison had been demolished, a lot of Russians came to the States, mainly to New York. This third Russian emigrants wave, which consists of many Russian Jews and in the mean time has grown to over 60,000 people, settled in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, where they are very active. Since the third Russian emigrants wave many Russian restaurants and Russian cabarets were opened, not only in Brighton Beach, but everywhere in New York.
In the 1940s the
most famous Russian restaurant of New York was The Russian Bear, but this
establishment closed down some years ago. Nowadays it is the Russian Tea
Room, 150 West 57th Street, beside Carnegie Hall, which is very fashionable.
I don't understand why, because there's nothing Russian about the place.
The prices are sky-high and the only reason to visit it, is to gaze at
celebrities, if that's what you like.
Another well known
Russian restaurant is the Samovar, 256 West 52nd Street, which has a pleasant
atmosphere, with two or three nights per week nice music and singing. Russian
is the new trend and means money, because no week passes by without a new
Russian restaurant being opened in Manhattan.
Russian books, magazines
and newspapers are bought at Victor Kamkin's, 149 Fifth Avenue, and Russian
House Ltd., 253 Fifth Avenue.
On the corner of
86th Street and Riverside Drive is the House of Free Russia, in which several
social organizations are accommodated.
`Why do you want
me to call you ``Feodor''?'
`I'm a looser,
a traitor, a layabout...' As he speaks, he leans back, while he smiles
nervously.
`Why?'
`If only because
I'm talking to you?'
`Thank you very
much for this compliment.'
`You're welcome.'
`I don't get it;
you travel around the world, so you can't be a complete failure.'
`Businesslike perhaps
not, but personally...'
`What do you mean?
As a Romanoff, as a Russian, as a husband, as a father?'
`I am not an ideal
husband and not at all an ideal father.'
I hesitate to ask
more questions. `Do you like retsina? I don't.'
`We could share
a bottle of Monte Nero.'
`Right. Red wine
with mutton, no problem.'
`It's a disease
that runs in the family.'
`What is?'
`My aberration.'
`Which aberration?'
`I love boys.'
`Ah...'
I study the menu.
Perhaps I take icecream for dessert. Shit! I wasn't waiting for this! Should
I continue the interview? Obviously he's dying to get it off his chest,
but do I need this?
I say, `Just like
Felix Yussupov and Tchaikovsky.' I can't think of a less stupid reaction
on such a short notice.
`Yes, and just
like Dmitri Pavlovich, Serge Alexandrovich, Constantin Constantinovich,
Dmitri Constantinovich, Oleg Constantinovich and so on.'
`All homosexual?'
`Yes, and all decently
married.'
`Gee...'
`Why don't you
write this down?'
`Because I already
knew, who doesn't? Moreover I don't think it's important; it has little
news value.
We live in 1993,
what's so special about being gay?'
`Are you married?'
`Yes, and I have
also children, just like you.'
`What would your
son think if he saw his father in a New York faggot's bar?'
`Why? Did that
happen to you?'
`Feodor' nods his
head and takes a sip of wine.
`So it's a family
disease after all,' I blurt out, and I burst out laughing.
`Feodor' nearly
chokes and I'm afraid I messed things up for good. But I'm wrong. As soon
as he's recovered he also starts laughing; the ice is broken, thank God
the subject's off.
We talk about dead
and living Romanoffs, that is: he talks while I take notes. I ask him why
so little about the present Romanoffs is published.
`Despite the impression
I have given you, most of my relatives lead an absolutely normal life;
they have worked their way up in business. Now and then something is published
in the gutter press, but the truth calibre of these stories is usually
very low. Only few Romanoffs are keen on publicity.'
My search for other
Romanoffs didn't lead to much. `Feodor' preferred not to talk about it,
which I could understand. I contacted the editor of the Echos de Russie,
who would try to get me in touch with `la Grande Duchesse de Russie', that
is: Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna Romanoff, the present claimant to
the throne. The Grand Duchess promised the editor to contact me, and after
nine months she responded. I was surprised that she spoke Russian so well.
She told me about her visits Russia, in English and Spanish, and we seemed
to have a mutual friend, Anatoli Sobchak, the mayor of St.
Petersburg. I don't
know if the Grand Duchess is imperial material, but she's certainly a nice
lady.
Princess Vera Romanoff, daughter of Grand Duke Constantin Constantinovich Romanoff, great- granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I, died in the Russian nursery home in Spring Valley, New York.
After 1918 many Romanoffs settled down in New York. Many of them still live in a large appartement building in East 96th Street, which they call `Nevsky Prospect'.
The eldest living
great-nephew of Tsar Nicholas II is Nikita Romanoff and lives in Upper
East Side, New York. He is a great-grandson of Alexander III and was born
in London. Prince Nikita grew up in England and in 1949 he emigrated to
the United States. He was a student in the University of California in
Berkeley, became a historian, and wrote biographies, like Ivan the Terrible's.
He went to the Soviet Union, for research purposes, and to his surprise
the Soviet government didn't put the slightest obstacle in his way, although
they knew exactly who he was.
Nikita's uncle,
His Highness Prince Vasili Alexandrovich Romanoff, lives in California
and is chairman of The Romanoff Family Association, the organization which
was founded to look after the interests of the former Russian Imperial
House.
Princess Marina
Romanoff, a second cousin of the Tsar, also lives in New York and married
the well known art collector William L. Beadleston. Her niece, Ekaterina
Ivanovna Romanova, whistles her way through as the Marquise Farace di Villa
Foresta.
I visited Romanoffs
in Paris, Berlin, London, New York, Chicago, and even in Woodside, California,
but I promised not to publish anything about them. I want to keep that
promise. I can only say that most of them don't speak Russian at all, and
that they all are nice, hard working people.
Obolensky's Prince
Serge Obolensky-Neledinsky-Meletzky (1890-1978) preferred to be called
`Colonel Obolensky', a title he earned as a parachutist in the U.S. Army
during World War II. In 1916 he married Princess Catharina Yuryevsky (1878-1959),
a concert singer, in Yalta. In 1924 he married Alice Astor (1902-1956),
and although they divorced in 1932, he remained a close friend of her brother
Vincent, who put Colonel Serge in charge of public relations for his famous
St. Regis Sheraton Hotel on Fifth Avenue. Later the Colonel went to the
Sherry Netherland Hotel, also on Fifth Avenue, where he founded the famous
Russian nightclub downstairs. Nowadays the Doubles Club is resided there.
On June 3, 1976 the Colonel married Marylin Fraser-Wall (1929-).
Prince Ivan Obolensky-Neledinsky-Meletzky
(1925-), the son of Colonel Serge from his second marriage, is a banker
and was vice-president of Sterling Grace & Co. Inc., in New York and
New Jersey.
He also married
several times. His youngest son David (1953-) is a stock broker in Nashville,
Tennessee.
Prince Alexander Petrovich Obolensky (1915-) was a prominent multilingual Ph.D., professor of Slavonic languages in the university of Albany, New York and president of the Association of Russian American Scholars in the U.S.A. His wife, Helene Reza-Bek (1919-), daughter of the Russian khan Ali Heidar Reza-Bek, has been a fashion editor. Their son Michael (1944-) also is a Ph. D. In 1974 he married the teacher Hetty Huising (1945-), daughter of Willem Cornelis Huising and Erika Maria Strompfe. Michael and Hetty live in New Bedford, Massachusetts and have three children: Dmitri (1976-), Nicholas (1979-) and Natalia (1982-).
The Obolenskys who
stayed in Paris had a different evolution. The American Obolenskys find
their Russian aristocratic origin rather interesting, but don't pay much
attention to it in daily life. The Parisian Obolenskys - of which I stem
from - find their history less important than their present aristocratic
status and appearance.
Prince Serge Sergeevich
Obolensky (1918-) is an engineer and a retired major in the French National
Reserve. He was born in Essentuki, in the Caucasus, on February 9, 1918.
On April 28, 1946 he married the Russian emigré Elisabeth Voytechovich
(1923-), in Grenoble. She was born in Bulgaria. The couple had six children.
Olga (1947-) is a translator and married Jean de Lantivy. Michael (1948-)
is a physician and married Elena Gliniasti. Elisabeth (1951-) married Prince
Leonid Nikolaevich Obolensky. H&eacu- te;lène (1953-) is an
executive secretary and married Alexis Mikhaïlovich Ivangin (1951-),
professor in the Paris Conservatory. Tatiana (1955-) is a biologist and
married the engineer Nicholas Yurievich Sokolov. The youngest, Catharina
(1963), married a Frenchman called Marc Lureault.
Prince Serge is
the president of Soyuz Dvoryan, l'Union de la Noblesse Russe. He signs
his letters with, `Le Président, Pr. S. Obolensky.' He keeps calling
me `Monsieur le Prince', and deals with my interest in his and my ancestors
as follows, `No Sir, I don't have a family tree and I don't feel like investigating
it.
The Obolensky's
you mention I don't know. Moreover, most people you mention are already
dead for a long time. Why are you interested in them?' (I myself don't
like to be called `Prince'. I am a Prince because my father was one; I
didn't have to do anything to become one.)
Before I approached
this Prince Serge Obolensky, my relationship with the Russian nobility
in Paris was rather good, as long as I didn't forget addressing everyone
as `Your Royal Highness'. That was difficult for me, because I'm used to
call my American Russian princes and princesses, counts and countesses
`Nina', `Christian', `Alexander', `Paul' or `Maria'. When I gave Prince
Serge Obolensky the inkling that this sky-wide cultural difference astonished
me, he became inhibited. Suddenly he didn't remember where and when he
was born, who his parents were and if he ever had any brothers or sisters.
One day later the
doors of the Russian nobility in Paris stayed closed for me, and three
days later an initial good contact with the Russian Nobility Association
in America was terminated without a single reason.
Fortunately most
Russian aristocrats in America ignored the boycott, so I could continue
my investigation as if nothing had happened.
`Feodor' Romanoff,
`On the one hand you must not forget that the Russian nobility is reviled
by the whole world. People like Prince Serge Obolensky have no doubt been
double-crossed by journalists numerous times. Perhaps their suspicion is
not justified, but it's imaginable. On the other hand it is a well known
fact that the Visky-Nikolskoe-branch, to which Prince Serge belongs, is
one of the least spectacular branches of the lineage of Obolensky. Serge
Petrovich, the progenitor of this branch, was nothing but a captain in
the cavalry. Prince Serge Sergeevich' grandfather, Alexander, was a small
government official. Serge Alexandrovich, Prince Serge's father, was a
lieutenant in the Imperial Guard, the lowest officer's rank. Because he
was quite a nice chap, they made him the marshall of nobility of the Bronnitza
district, but this branch has really gone to pot, and the Prince may call
himself ``prési- dent'' of the Union de la Noblesse Russe, but when
it comes to his origin, he has nothing to be proud of, and I think it's
rather logical that he prefers not to bragg about his ancestors. By the
way, the same applies to almost all Russian aristocrats in France: they
don't like really critical investigators, for the same reasons as Prince
Serge, because they are afraid that their personal esteem might be damaged
by certain facts out of a distant past. Pitiful, isn't it?' Yes it is.
And I also find it a bit disturbing that a stranger like `Feodor' Romanoff
knows much more about my relatives than I do.
The only branch
of the lineage of Obolensky which culturally and politically is more insignificant
than the Visky-Nikolskoe-branch, is the Yeskino-branch of progenitor Prince
Nicholas Petrovich Obolensky (1775-1820). Although Prince Nicholas produced
five sons and two daughters, this line ran out inglorious during the Red
Terror. The offshoots of the Yeskino-branch never seemed to be interested
in other cultures abroad, and while most Obolenskys after the October Revolution
seeked safety in their flight to the West, the Yeskino's stayed behind,
hoping that communism would blow over. After the revolution nothing was
heard from them; the Soviet government has always refused to show birth-
and death certificates of these Obolenskys. But even today every official
in Moscow, Kiev and Novgorod refuses to reveal anything, no matter what
I try. The worst may be feared.
After the umpteenth
flight of Soviet Russian ballet dancers, people in Moscow used to say,
`Do you know what the Malyj (small) Theatre is? That's the Bolshoy (grand)
Theatre after a foreign tour.'
Many celebrities
in the theatre, the music and the ballet, escaped and built a new existence
in the free world.
Léon Nikolaevich
Bakst was the pseudonym of Léon Nikolaevich Rosenberg (1866-1924).
He was a Russian painter and a famous costume- and stage designer, who
worked particularly for the Ballets Russes. Bakst was burried in Paris,
in the Cimetière des Batignolles.
Michael (Misha) Baryshnikov (1948-) is a Russian dancer. From 1969 to 1974 Baryshnikov danced in the Kirov Ballet (the later Mariinsky Ballet) in Leningrad. He's a classical dancer, but also did modern dances. Because of his virtuosity he is widely considered Nureyev's successor. Michael Baryshnikov works since 1974 at the American Ballet Theatre, since 1980 as artistic director.
Olga Khoklova (1891-1955) was a dancer of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. She married Pablo Picasso on July 12, 1918, and was burried in Cannes.
Serge Diaghilev
(1872-1929) was leader of the Ballets Russes for twenty years, without
ever having been a dancer or choreographer himself. He also organized exhibitions
of paintings and concerts in St.
Petersburg and
Paris. Together with his compatriots Léon Bakst and Alexandre Benois
he founded The world of the art (Mir Iskustva), a trend-setting magazine
for plastic art, which was published from 1899 to 1904.
In 1895 he wrote
to his foster mother, `First of all I'm a charlatan, but a rather brilliant
one; second I'm a great charmer; third I'm not afraid of anything; fourth
I'm a man with logical insight and few scruples; fifth I seem to have no
real talents. Yet I think I have found my destiny; to be a maecenas. I
have everything one needs for that, except money, but that will come in
time.'
As leader of the
Ballets Russes Diaghilev gathered the top people of the Imperial Russian
Ballet of Moscow and St. Petersburg, like Fokine, Nijinsky, Karsavina and
Pavlova. Diaghilev was called `Nijinsky's lover, father and teacher'. His
first great musical success in the West was the performance of Mussorgsky's
opera Boris Godunov, with the famous bass singer Feodor Chaliapine in the
title role.
Diaghilev's death
meant the end of the Ballets Russes. Diaghilev died of diabetes and is
burried in Venice, in the cemetery San Michele, where he rests besides
Igor Strawinsky.
Michael Fokine (1880-1942) was a Russian balletdancer and choreographer. For Anna Pavlova he created The Dying Swan (1907), in which he was inspired by Isadora Duncan, who he saw dancing in 1905 in St. Petersburg. As house choreographer of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes he wrote famous ballets: Les sylphides (1909), The Firebird (1910), Le spectre de la rose (1911) and of course Petrushka (1911), the artistic success of the duo Fokine-Strawinsky. Petrushka is considered the antipole of Goncharov's Oblomov, a symbol of the Russians who refuse to be anyone's slave. Fokine developed to be the first great renewer of the classical ballet tradition and counts as the father of the ballet expressionism of the 20th century. Since 1923 he worked in New York. When he died 17 ballet groups all over the world performed Les sylphides, as an homage to the choreographer.
Vladimir Horowitz (1904-1989) was a famous Russian-American piano player. Horowitz studied in the conservatory of Kiev, but the Russian Revolution forced him to interrupt his study. His American debut was in 1928, after which he decided to stay. In 1933 he married Toscanini's daughter. Horowitz had unparalleled successes in Paris, Berlin and the United States, particularly with his interpretation of the music of Chopin, Liszt, Brahms and his idol Rakhmaninov. At the age of 80 he still gave a series of remarkable recitals, one of them in Moscow.
Tamara Karsavina
(1885-1978) was Diaghilev's most famous ballet dancer, the first modern
ballerina.
She often danced
with Nijinsky and worked at the same time for the Ballets Russes in Paris
and the Mariinsky Ballet in St. Petersburg. In 1918 she escaped to London,
after which she only did guest performances with the Ballets Russes. In
the 1960s Karsavina was a member of the board of the British Royal Dance
Academy, and as a teacher of mime she played an important role in the development
of British ballet.
André Kostelanetz (1901-1980) was a Russian-American conductor. In 1922 he escaped to the United States. In 1930 he became conductor of the radio-orchestra of CBS. Kostelanetz made his name in light music, and was married to the soprano Lily Pons.
Mathilde Kshessinskaya (1872-1971) was a brilliant ballet dancer. She was the last ballerina of the Imperial Ballet who became the title of prima-ballerina. Moreover, she and Galina Ulanova were the only ballet dancers who ever became the rank of prima ballerina assoluta. At first Mathilde Kshessinskaya was the mistress of Tsarevich Nicholas, subsequently of Grand Duke Serge Mikha&i- uml;lovich Romanoff and from 1890 of Grand Duke André Vladimirovich Romanoff (1879-1956), whom she married in Paris. From 1929 she headed her own ballet school in Paris. One of her pupils was Tatiana Riabushinska, who later married David Lichine. Her brother in law, Grand Duke Kiril Vladimirovich Romanoff, entitled her in 1935 the right to call herself Princess Maria Feliksovna Romanovsky- Krassinsky. The Princess is burried in that capacity in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
David Lichine was the pseudonym of David Liechtenstein (1910-1972), a Russian-American dancer and choreographer. Since 1956 Lichine was an American citizen. He was trained in Paris, where he married the dancer Tatiana Riabushinska (1917-), a pupil of Mathilde Kshessinskaya. From 1932 to 1941 they danced with the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo, after which she opened a ballet studio in Los Angeles, where they trained generations of dancers until the late 1980s.
Serge Lifar (1905-1986),
a famous Russian dancer and choreographer, was discovered by George Balanchine.
He studied in Kiev with Bronislava Nijinsky. Lifar came in 1923 to Paris
and was from 1925 solo performer at Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. From 1929
to 1945 and from 1947 to 1958 he was director of the Paris Opera Ballet.
Serge Lifar has carried through important reforms, like renewing the repertoire,
and had a great influence on the development of modern French ballet. This
admired dancer and choreographer founded the Choreographical Institute
in 1947, and in 1957 the University of Dance.
Serge Lifar de
Kiev was burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
Leonid Feodorovich Massine (1896-1979) was a Russian-American dancer and choreographer. While dancing with the Moscow Bolshoy Ballet he was discovered by Serge Diaghilev, and he joined the Ballets Russes in 1913. Very much against Diaghilev's will he married the British dancer Vera Savina in 1921, but he and Diaghilev reconciled in 1925. After 1960 he organized great plays in revue style. His son Lorca used to work for Balanchine as a choreographer.
Bronislava Fominichna Nijinska (1891-1972) was a Russian dancer and the first influential choreographer in the history of the academical ballet. She was the sister of Viachlav Nijinsky. Until 1925 she danced for Diaghilev in Paris, after which she worked as a choreographer for Diaghilev, Ida Rubinstein, De Basil and the Markova-Dolin Ballet. In 1938 she did guest performances with different American ballet groups, after which she became a ballet teacher.
Viachlav Nijinsky
(1890-1950) was a Russian dancer and choreographer, from Polish parents.
He was called Le dieu de la dance, and if I don't count Rudolf Nureyev
he was the greatest male ballet solo performer of all times. Nijinsky worked
for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes since 1909, and became world famous in Carnaval,
Le spectre de la rose, Shéhérazade, Swan Lake, Giselle and
Petrushka. As an interpreter of the romantic repertoire he was the favourite
dance partner of prima-ballerina's like Mathilde Kshessinskaya, Anna Pavlova
and Olga Preobrazhenskaya. Thanks to Diaghilev, who was in love with him,
he made the choreography of L'après midi d'un faune (1912), Jeux
(1913) and Le sacre du printemps (1913). Since 1919 he was often admissioned
in a mental institution. His wife, the dancer Romola de Pulszky, published
his diary in 1953. This Journal de Nijinsky was translated into English
in 1963, and can be summarized as `ten years of growth, ten years of training,
ten years of bloom and thirty years of darkness'. Nijinsky: `Diaghilev
does not like to be called an impresario, as all impresarios are supposed
to be thieves. Diaghilev wants to be called ``a patron of art'', he wants
to get into history.
Diaghilev cheats
people and thinks that no one sees through him. He dyes his hair in order
to look young. Diaghilev's hair is white. He buys black dyes and rubs them
in. I have seen this dye on Diaghilev's cushions - his pillowcase is blackened
by it. I hate dirty linen and therefore was disgusted by this sight.
Diaghilev has two
false front teeth. When he is nervous he passes his tongue over them. Diaghilev
reminds me of an angry old woman, when he moves with his false teeth. His
front lock is dyed white. He wants it to be noticed. Lately this lock had
grown yellow, because he has bought bad dye. In Russia it looked better.'
Viachlav Nijinsky
died in London and was burried in the Cimetière Montmartre in Paris.
He concluded his diary with the following words, `God is in me. I am in
God. I want Him, I seek Him. I want my manuscripts to be published so that
everybody can read them. I hope to improve myself. I do not know how to,
but I feel that God will help all those who seek Him. I am a seeker, for
I can feel God. God seeks me and therefore we will find each other. GOD
AND NIJINSKY, Sankt Moritz (Dorf), Villa Guardamunt, February 27th, 1919.'
Rudolf Hametovich
Nureyev (1938-1993), the most famous Russian dancer and choreographer,
was born on March 17, 1938 in a train, as the son of a Siberian military
man. In 1961 he asked and became political asylum in Paris, after he left
the Kirov Ballet and the Soviets tried to force him to return to the Soviet-Union.
He was solo performer with the Grand Ballet du Marquis de Cuévas
and from 1962 he danced as a guest performer with the British Royal Ballet,
often being the dance partner of Margot Fonteyn. Nureyev was a classical
dancer with a virtuous technique, who's jumps and pirouettes were breathtaking.
Besides that he had a rare magnetic personality. In 1965 he made his debut
as a choreographer with the Vienna State Opera, with an own version of
Swan Lake. Also famous were his versions of The Sleeping Beauty (1966)
and Nutcracker (1967). He danced Giselle over a thousand times.
He also appeared
in some films, like as Rudolph Valentino in Ken Russell's Valentino (1977).
In 1979 he made the choreography of Manfred, and in 1982 of The Storm,
both ballets to the music of P.I.
Chaikovsky. Film
roles: Exposed (1982). In 1982 Nureyev became the Austrian nationality
and in 1983 he became a director of the Paris Opéra Ballet. In 1987
he visited his homeland for the first time in 26 years. He went to see
his mother. When journalists asked him about this trip, he said that his
heart was in Paris and New York. `That's where you can be well known, notorious
and anonymous, all at the same time,' he said.
On Wednesday January
6, 1993 Rudolf Nureyev died, at the age of 54, of AIDS. He was unique,
charming, aristocratic and captivating, but also boyish, inconstant, arrogant
and rude. My good friend Christian Orlov has known Nureyev well.
Christian, `He
was very particular when it came to photographs of himself. One day I sat
next to him, when he after a performance auditioned in his dressing-room
in the Metropolitan. While he took off his make-up, he received his fans,
who were waiting for their turn in a long file in the corridor. An elderly
man, who did not conceive that he admired Rudolf, showed him a series of
photographs of Rudolf, which he had taken from the auditorium. Nervous,
like an insecure child before his school teacher, he showed the photographs
one by one, and Rudolf tore them to little pieces, one photo after another
- which he threw into the waist-basket. The man was very disappointed.
Sure, it was Nureyev's second performance that evening, and later, at a
reception in a nightclub, there would be a third and a fourth performance,
but I thought it was rather cruel.'
Rudolf Nureyev's
death covered almost every front page. Newsweek, `Aids and the arts Ä
a lost generation. Rudolf Nureyev 1938-1993.' Paris Match, `NOUREEV POUR
L'ETERNITE - Le prince charmant du Kirov refugié a l'ouest etait
devenue le Tsar mondiale de la dance.' Le Point, `Noureev: une étoile
s'éteint.' USA Today, `GIANT OF THE ARTS - Rudolf Nureyev 1938-1993.
He brought grace to the stage and glitz to the world of ballet.'
The funeral procession
left from the Opéra Garnier, on January 12, 1993, and attracted
a great deal of attention. Among the interested were Prince Aga Khan, Jack
Lang, Rudi van Dantzig, Flemming Flindt, John Taras, Carla Fraci, Hugues
Gall, Bob Wilson, Jane Hermann, Yoko Morishita, Lynn Seymour, Zizi Jeanmaire,
Pierre Lacotte, Nina Vyrubova, Marika Bersobrassova, Serge Golovine, Dominique
Khalfouni, Cyril Atanasoff, Stavros and Victoria Niarkos, Baron and Baroness
Guy de Rotschild, Count and Countess Guy and Marina de Brantes, Baron Alexis
de Redé, Pier Luigi Pizzi, Briony Brind and Ivan Nagy.
Rudolf Nureyev
was burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois, tomb 8328, plan III, about
a hundred feet from his artistic predecessor Serge Lifar de Kiev.
Anna Pavlova (1881-1931) was the legendary prima-ballerina of the Imperial Russian Mariinsky Ballet (1906), who later danced with the Ballets Russes of Diaghilev. Pavlova resigned with Diaghilev because she thought he was too progressive. In 1910 she left for the United States, where she performed in the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. In 1912 she married the Englishman Victor Sandré and went to live in London, and in 1913 she left the Mariinsky Ballet. In 1914 she founded her own company and did many international tours. The legendary Anna Pavlova was without any doubt the greatest dancer of her time. In 1973 Oleg Kerensky wrote her biography. She died of pneumonia on January 23, 1931 in Hotel des Indes in The Hague, Holland, and was cremated in London. The urn with her ashes was added in the gardens of the Golders Green Crematorium, not far from her beloved Ivy House, where she lived from 1912 and kept many animals, including swans.
Gregor Piatigorsky (1903-1976) was a Russian-American cellist. He and Horowitz gave concerts all over the world. Prokofyev and others wrote cello concerts for him.
Georges Pitoëff (1884-1939) was a Russian-French actor and director. He was one of the most influential French actors after World War I, who in 1919 founded his own company. In 1922 the `Compagnie Pitoëff' moved into the theatre Comédie des Champs-Elysées. He played renewing works of playwriters like Anouilh, Claudel, Cocteau and introduced the French public to the work of Russian playwriters like Chekhov.
Ludmilla Pitoëff,
née Smanov (1895-1951) was a Russian-French actress and the spouse
of Georges.
They married on
July 14, 1915 in the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Paris. After his death
she took charge of the company.
Olga Preobrazhenskaya (1871-1962) was a famous ballet dancer and dance teacher. In 1900 she was promoted prima-ballerina in the Mariinsky Ballet. From 1914 she taught in the ballet school of the Mariinsky Theatre and in 1923 she opened her ballet studio in Paris, where she trained numerous dancers until 1960. Two of her pupils, Irina Baranova and Tamara Tumanova, were discovered by George Balanchine. Olga Preobrazhenskaya was burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
Serge Rakhmaninov (1873-1943) was a famous Russian composer, piano player and conductor. He was opera conductor in Moscow for a while. Rakhmaninov left Russia in 1917, lived in Switzerland and the United States since 1919, and became an American citizen shortly before he died. He composed symphonies, opera's, chamber music and piano pieces, and was one of the greatest piano virtuoso's of his time.
Ida Rubinstein (1885-1960)
was a Russian dancer who danced leading parts with Diaghilev's Ballets
Russes from 1909 to 1911, but she became especially famous by her performance
in Ravel's Bol&eacu- te;ro and Rimsky-Korsakov's Sheherazade, in which
she danced with Nijinsky. She was the protégé of Léon
Bakst.
Fokine wrote for
her the choreography of Salomé's dance with the seven veils (1908)
and The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian (1911). Ida Rubinstein was burried in
Vence, near Monaco.
Tamara Tumanova (1919-) is a Russian ballerina who was trained by Olga Preobrazhenskaya. She worked with the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo for years and danced numerous guest performances in America and Europe. She worked with directors like Gene Kelly, Alfred Hitchcock and Billy Wilder.
Nicholas Nikolaevich
Cherepnin (1873-1945) was a Russian composer and conductor. He accompanied
the Ballets Russes of Diaghilev on their tours and from 1925 to 1929 and
from 1938 to 1945 he was director of the Russian conservatory Rakhmaninov
in Paris. Work: opera's, ballets, orchestra- and choirwork, which at first
were inspired by Rimsky-Korsakov. Father of Alexander Nikolaevich Cherepnin
(1899-1977), American composer and piano player, professor of music in
Paris and Chicago.
André Alexeevich
Amalrik (1938-1980) was a Russian writer and historian. In university he
had the guts to write a thesis about Rurik's Vikings in Kievian Russia,
and from that moment on he was a dissident.
Due to his criticizing
the regime he was bannished to Siberia 1965. Two years after he was convicted
once more. In 1976 he went to the West. André Amalrik died in the
neighborhood of Guadalaya- ra, Spain, and is burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
A. Anatol was the
pseudonym of Anatoli Vasilievich Kuznetsov (1929-1979), a Russian writer
who `emigrated' to England in 1969.
Constantin Dmitrievich Balmont (1867-1943) was a poet of the first generation of Russian symbolists, who in the beginning of this century were very popular with the Russian youth. He escaped to Paris after the October Revolution.
Yurgis Kazimirovich Baltrushaytis (1873-1944) was a lithuanian poet, who also wrote in Russian and belonged to the Russian symbolists. He wrote in the style of Alexander Blok. After the October Revolution he was the Ambassador of Lithuania to Russia, until 1939. When Lithuania was annexed by the Soviet-Union he escaped to Paris.
Nicholas Alexandrovich Berdiaev (1874-1948) was a Russian philosopher. Initially he was a marxist, but gradually he developed in the direction of an idealistic, religious philosophy. In 1922 Berdiaev was bannished from Russia, after which he settled down in Paris.
Vladimir Constantinovich Bukovsky (1942-) is Russian poet, who since 1963 was imprisoned several times due to his opposition against the Soviet regime. In 1976 he `emigrated' to Western Europe.
Ivan Alexeevich Bunin (1870-1953) was a Russian writer and prosaist. He belonged to Maxim Gorki's writers' group Znanie (Knowledge), and escaped to Paris in 1920. In 1922 he married Vera Muromtsev, with whom he lived together since 1907. His poetry is of a high standard, but he became famous by his prose, which had a somewhat conservative character. In 1933 he became the Nobel Literature prize, very much against the will of the Soviet Russian critics, who considered Bunin an aristocratical, non-realistic poet.
Vladislav Felitsianovich Khodassevich (1886-1939) was a Russian poet and literature critic of Polish origin. In 1922 he escaped via Berlin to Paris. Ilya Grigorievich Ehrenburg (1891-1967). At first he rejected communism, and that's why I mention him, but later he bowed to it, and in 1924 he returned to Russia, where he called himself a `Soviet citizen with the Jewish nationality'. For years his work had a strong propagandistic character, and he was widely considered a camp follower. Only after Stalin's death he carefully tried to stimulate a liberalization of the Soviet literature. Most of his works are translated into English.
Boris Andreevich Filippov (1905-) is the pseudonym of Boris Andreevich Filistinsky, a Russian poet and literature critic. As immigrants in the United States he and Gleb Stroeve published books of Russian writers whose work wasn't allowed to be published in Russia.
Zinaida Hippius was the pseudonym of Anton Krayni (1869-1945), a Russian poet and writer. She was the spouse of Dmitri Merezhkovsky (1865-1941). Her Petersburg salon was the center of a literary circle of friends. In 1919 she escaped via Warsaw to Paris. She was the most important poet of Russian symbolism. Zinaida Hippius was a passionate, impulsive woman. Trotsky called her a `witch'.
My great-uncle Grigori
Vladimirovich Ivanov (1894-1958) was a Russian poet. After the October
Revolution he escaped to Paris. He is considered the best poet of the Russian
emigration. Every time great-uncle George came from Hyères, where
he lived in poverty in an old folks home, to Paris, he visited us, and
the next morning when he was gone I had to tidy up far more bottles than
usual. One day my uncle Nikolai received a letter from the old folks home
in Hyères, where great-uncle George was `imprisoned', like he used
to say. The letter said that Monsieur Georges Ivanov had died. I have never
seen uncle Nikolai cry like that. We didn't attend the funeral though,
and neither did great-uncle George's `best friend', Nina Berberova. Some
years later, when uncle Nikolai had sold one of his paintings, he had great-uncle
George's mortal remains reburried in Paris.
Dmitri Sergeevich
Merezhkovsky (1865-1941) was a Russian philosopher and writer. He was the
husband of Zinaida Hippius, and is considered the father of Russian symbolism.
In human history he saw a continuing struggle between the flesh and the
mind, which he worked out in the novel trilogy The Antichrist, consisting
of: Yulyanus Apostata (1893), Leonardo da Vinci (1896) and Peter and Alexis
(1902).
The Merezhkovsky's
are burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov (1899-1977) was a Russian-American writer. His father was a member of the first Duma and escaped in 1919. From 1919 to 1922 Vladimir studied zoology and French literature in the university of Cambridge. He married a Jewess and lived in Berlin until 1937. In that year he emigrated to Paris and in 1940 he and his wife managed to reach the United States. In 1945 he became an American citizen. Vladimir Nabokov translated Pushkin's Evgeni Onegin into English.
André Donatovich
Siniavsky (1925-) is a Soviet Russian writer who used the pseudonym `Abram
Terts'.
He married Maria
Rosanova. Because of his book What is socialist realism? (1959) he was
put in a hard labour camp from 1966 to 1971. In 1973 he escaped to Paris,
where he founded the literary paper Syntaxis in 1978.
Alexander Isaevich Solzhenitsyn (1918-) is a Russian writer who in 1970 became the Nobel Literature prize. Solzhenitsyn grew up in Rostov on the Don, where he started studying mathematics in 1936. In 1941 he left to the front as an officer. Early 1945 he was arrested in Eastern Prussia because in his letters to a school friend he had written critical words about comrade Stalin. He stayed many years in Russian hard labour camps. In 1969 Solzhenitsyn was thrown out of the Writers Union, and in 1974 he left for Switzerland. In 1976 he settled down in the United States, and in 1994 he returned to Russia, setting himself up as the Messiah.
Gleb Petrovich Stroeve (1898-) is a Russian historian of literature. He escaped to the United States, where he and Boris Filippov published books of writers like Achmatova, Gumilyov, Mandelstam and Pasternak. Stroeve wrote the standard work History of Soviet Literature.
Alexis Nikolaevich
Tolstoy (1882-1945) was a Russian novelist, poet, playwriter and journalist.
During the Civil War he worked for Denikin's `White propaganda'. Escaped
to Paris in 1919, where he wrote fierce pamphlets against communism. Later
he returned to the Soviet-Union, where the `Red Count' was welcomed with
open arms. He became one of the most obedient Stalinist writers.
Alexandre Benois (1870-1960) was the pseudonym of Alexander Nikolaevich Benua, a Russian painter and art historian, who since the 19th century contributed much to the development of Russian art. Benois settled down in Paris, where he worked for years with people like Serge Diaghilev, Strawinsky and Léon Bakst.
Marc Chagall (1887-1985) was a Russian-French painter, sculptor, stained-glass artist, lithograp- her, etcher and ceramic artist. From 1910 to 1914 he lived and worked in Paris. After the Revolution he was director of the Academy of Arts in Vitebsk and a theatrical designer in Moscow. From 1922 he lived permanently in Paris, except during World War II, when he stayed in the United States, in view of his Jewish background. His wife died in New York. Chagall became famous with his bible illustrations, his fantastic colours, and his intuitive feeling for rhythm and harmony. He made stained-glass windows for a synagogue in Jerusalem, the ceiling paintings of the Opéra in Paris and a glass plate for the secretariate of the United Nations in Paris. He illustrated Gogol's Dead Souls and even made wall hangings. His symbolism is based on Jewish folklore and he developed a characteristic mixture of Christian and traditional Jewish iconography. Since 1973 the work of this versatile artist is exhibitioned in the Chagall Museum in Cimiez (Nice). He died in 1985 and is burried in Saint-Paul-de-Vence.
Naum Gabo was the pseudonym of Naum Pevsner (1890-1977), a Russian-American sculptor. He was a brother of Antoine Pevsner, and one of the most important representatives of constructivism. After the publication of the Realistic Manifesto, which he wrote with Antoine, he was forced to leave Russia. He had a preference for abstract-geometrical constructions of metal, glass, synthetics, gold wire and nylon yarn.
My uncle Nikolai Ivanov (1920-1984), who took care of me after my mother died, was a well known painter in the Parisian artists scene. Our house was frequented by famous painters and sculptors like Tristan Tzara and Ossip Zadkine. In 1958 we moved from Paris to Amsterdam, where he found a job as a restorer. He worked for several European museums.
Vassily Vasilievich Kandinsky (1866-1944) was a Russian painter and graphic artist. Since 1896 he worked in Munich. In 1901 Kandinsky founded the artists' union `Phalanx' and in 1909 the Neue Künstlervereinigung. From 1922 to 1933 he was a teacher at the Bauhaus in Weimar, after which he went to France. Since 1939 Kandinsky was a French citizen. Because of his Erstes abstraktes Aquarell (1910) he is considered one of the founders of the abstract art of painting. He and Franz Marc founded Der Blaue Reiter in 1911. His work belongs to the most important artworks of the first half of this century. In 1911 he wrote the book über das Geistige in der Kunst.
Antoine Pevsner (1884-1962) was a Russian-French sculptor. He and Naum Gabo were brothers. Antoine studied in the Academy of Arts in Kiev and St. Petersburg. He left for Paris in 1911, where he and his brother were influenced by cubism. In 1917 they returned to Russia, but in 1923 Antoine once more showed up in Paris. He worked a lot with plastic materials, but also with copper and bronze. He was burried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
Ossip Zadkine (1890-1967)
was a famous Russian-French sculptor, who was born in Smolensk. His first
work is characterized by cubistic constructions, in which he respects the
singularity of his materials (tree- trunks, blocks of stone). After 1940
his work became more loose, because since then he abandoned his closed
forms. Zadkine also made gouaches and watercolours, and was a teacher of
art in Paris. Much of his work is in the United States and France. He was
burried in Paris, in the cimetière du Montparnasse.
In 1909 and 1910
Zadkine worked in the studio d'Injalbert, of the école des Beaux-Arts,
14 Rue de Bonaparte, after which he left for La Ruche. Until his death
he lived in France, except for the period of 1941-1945, when he, in view
of the war, lived in the United States. For a long time he worked and taught
in the Académie de la Grande Chaumière, 14 Rue de la Grande
Chaumière. From André Maurois' Women of Paris (1956), `Every
Monday morning, Rue de la Grande Chaumière, market of models. In
the world of art Montparnasse remains the seat of the école de Paris,
and the studio's of la Grande Chaumière are the vivid center of
Montparnasse. From the outside la Grande Chaumière only looks a
small building, however on the inside one finds numerous holes and corners,
skillfully used, so that there is room for several studio's of painters,
sculptors and draughtsmen. Othon Friesz teaches there, and also Picart
le Doux, Aujame, Auricoste, McAvoy and Zadkine.'
Nicholas Alexandrovich Berdiaev (1874-1948) was a Russian philosopher, who during the October Revolution was appointed professor of philosophy in the university of Moscow. He was the founder of the Religionsphilosofische Akademie in Berlin (1922) and Paris (1924).
Efim Dmitrievich
Bogolyubov (1889-1952) was a Russian-German chess grand-master, who worked
out several theoretical systems. For several times he was chess champion
of Germany. From 1925 to 1929 he was the world champion. One day a press
photographer made a picture of Bogolyubov and some of his less famous opponents.
The next day a beautiful picture was published in the newspapers, only...
Bogolyubov, the
principal person, wasn't in it! It seemed to be a misunderstanding, `The
stout gentleman in the corner with a glass of milk in his hand? I cut him
off. I thought he wasn't one of them.' George Gamow (1904-1968) was a famous
Russian-American nuclear physicist, who also wrote and illustrated non-specialist
literature.
Georges Gurvich (1894-1965) was a Russian-French sociologist and philosopher, who worked as a professor in Paris. Gurvich tried to create a depth sociology and engaged with the philosophical problems of sociology. In 1946 he founded the Cahères internationaux de sociologie.
Vladimir Yabotinsky (1880-1940) was a Russian-Jewish writer, journalist and politician. He was the founder and leader of the Hagana, the corps of Jewish volunteers which in World War I fought at the Palestinian front against the Turks. In 1925 he founded the Revisionist Party, and in 1935 the New Zionist Organization.
Wassily Leontief (1906-) is a Russian-American economist, who worked as a professor in Harvard University. He became world famous with his input-output analysis (specification of the relation between production and production factors) and in 1973 he received the Nobel Economy Prize.
Michael Rostovzeff (1870-1952) was a Russian-American historian and archeologist. After the Russian Revolution he escaped to the United States. Rostovzeff was a professor in St. Petersburg, Madison and New Haven, and published a lot of specialist literature.
Paul Vinogradov
(1854-1925) was a Russian-English legal historian and professor in Moscow
and Oxford.
He was an authority
in the field of English feudal law.
Serge Voronoff (1866-1957)
was a Russian-French surgeon who tried to reach rejuvenation by transplanting
glandular tissue of apes into the human body. Although the theory didn't
work, it opened new perspectives for surgical science.
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