- Pyotr Pavlovich Yershov
Pyotr Pavlovich Yershov ( _ru. Пётр Павлович Ершов, OldStyleDate|March 6|1815|February 22 - OldStyleDate|August 30|1869|August 18) was a
Russia n poet, the author of the famous fairy-tale poem "The Humpbacked Horse (konyok-gorbunok)".Biography
Pyotr Yershov was born in the village Bezrukovo, near the town of
Ishim ,Tobolsk gubernia (currentlyTyumen oblast ). During his childhood he lived in the town of Beryozov. From 1827-1831 he studied in Tobolsk gymnasium, where he reportedly created a society for the Ethnographic study ofSiberia - and even planned to publish their own scientific journal. From 1831-1836 he studiedphilosophy at Saint Petersburg University, which was where he wrote his masterpiece, the fairy tale "The Humpbacked Horse". A large extract from it was published in 1834 and brought Yershov instant fame.Alexander Pushkin wrote that Yershov was as fully in command of his verses as a landowner is in command of his serfs. Pushkin also announced that he would stop writing fairy tales as Yershov did it much better (he wrote the "The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish " one year after this announcement anyway).In 1836 Yershov returned back to Tobolsk, where he worked as a teacher and from 1858 as the principal of Tobolsk gymnasium. He died in 1869 in Tobolsk. Biographers of Yershov note that disasters frequented his life. In 1834, just after the triumph of "The Humpbacked Horse" both Pyotr's father and brother died within a few days. In 1838 his mother died; in 1845 his wife died; in 1847 he married again, but his second wife died in 1852. Out of his 15 children only six survived.
Yershov published many lyrical verses, a
drama ("Suvorov and a Station Master") and short stories, but none of them had the same success as "The Humpbacked Horse". He also reportedly wrote a large fairy tale poem, "Ilya Muromets ", and a huge poem called "Ivan Tsarevitch" (in ten volumes and one hundred songs) but destroyed them. Only a short extract from "Ivan Tsarevitch" survived.The Humpbacked Horse
"The Humpbacked Horse" (konyok-gorbunok), sometimes known in English as "The Magic Horse" or "The Little Magic Horse", is a version of a common fairy-tale character "Golden-Maned Steed", although a large part of the plot of this story is based on
Tsarevitch Ivan, the Fire Bird and the Gray Wolf . The little horse helps Ivan, a peasant’s son, carry out many unreasonable demands of thetsar . During his adventures Ivan gets the beautiful magic firebird for the tsar, keeps his magic horse and finds his love (princess Yelena the Beautiful). At the end the princess and the peasant’s son live happily for many years after.Censors banned the complete story for over 20 years in the mid-19th century because it made the tsar appear foolish. Until 1856 the tale was published with dots instead of many verses and even songs. It is meant to be a satire on the absurdities of Russian feudal and bureaucratic life at the time. Now it is considered just a classical children fairy tale.
Ballet adaptation
Arthur Saint-Léon created a ballet from the book to the music ofCesare Pugni for theImperial Ballet (today the Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet). The work premiered in December 13, 1864 at theImperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia. The resounding premeiere was attended by Emperor Alexander II.The ballet lived on for many years in the repertory of the Imperial Ballet and the Kirov Ballet, and of the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow in a version by
Alexander Gorsky (1901).Marius Petipa revived the ballet in 1895 as "The Tsar Maiden" for the BallerinaPierina Legnani .Alexander Radunsky choreographed his own version to a score by
Rodion Shchedrin for the Bolshoi Ballet in 1960, a version which was filmed in 1961 withMaya Plisetskaya as the Tsar Maiden andVladimir Vasiliev as Ivanushka.A version of Saint-Léon's original was filmed in 1989 for Russian television with graduates from the
Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet in the lead roles. The film included narrated sections and illustration from a popular 1964 Russian version of Yershov's book.Trivia
* After "The Humpbacked Horse" was published, many people did not believe that Pyotr Yershov was a real person; they were sure it was a Pushkin poem. Indeed Pushkin wrote the first four lines of the final version of the poem and helped with its editing.
External links
*en icon [http://www.artrusse.ca/FairyTales/firebird.htm Full text of "Prince Ivan, Firebird, and the Grey Wolf"]
*en icon [http://www.aanet.org/tula/humpbackedhorse.html Plot of "The Humpbacked Horse (konek-gorbunok)"]
*ru icon [http://az.lib.ru/e/ershow_p_p/text_0020.shtml Poem "The Humpbacked Horse (konek-gorbunok)" text and illustrations of 1964]
*ru icon [http://belsoch.exe.by/bio2/06_04.shtml Biography]
*ru icon [http://az.lib.ru/e/ershow_p_p/text_0040.shtml Alexander Zvereev "He wrote more than only The Humpbacked Horse]
*ru icon [http://www.peoples.ru/art/literature/prose/fairytale/peter_ershov/ Biography]Persondata
NAME=Yershov, Pyotr Pavlovich
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Ershov, Pyotr
SHORT DESCRIPTION=poet, writer, teacher
DATE OF BIRTH=March 6 ,1815
PLACE OF BIRTH=Bezrukovo ,Russia
DATE OF DEATH=August 30 ,1869
PLACE OF DEATH=
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.