Fyodor Kumanin

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fyodor_Kumanin an entity of type: Thing

Фёдор Александрович Куманин (Феодор Александрович Куманин; 21 января [6 февраля] 1855, Москва — 24 апреля [6 мая] 1896, там же) — русский театральный критик, издатель и драматург-переводчик. rdf:langString
Fyodor Alexandrovich Kumanin (Russian: Фёдор Александрович Куманин, 6 February 1855, Moscow, Imperial Russia, — 6 May 1896, Moscow) was a Russian publisher, theatre critic and translator. He is best remembered as the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of The Artist magazine (1889—1894) as well as the supplement to it, called Dnevnik Artista (Artist's Diary, 1891—1893). He launched three more journals, Teatral (Theatre-goer, 1895), Teatralnaya Biblioteka (Theatre Library, 1891—1895) and Chitatel (Reader, 1896), which he also edited and regularly published his own critical essays and reviews in. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Fyodor Kumanin
rdf:langString Куманин, Фёдор Александрович
rdf:langString Fyodor Kumanin
rdf:langString Fyodor Kumanin
rdf:langString Moscow
xsd:date 1896-05-06
xsd:date 1855-02-06
xsd:integer 55942045
xsd:integer 1113792401
xsd:date 1855-02-06
rdf:langString Fyodor Alexandrovich Kumanin
rdf:langString (Фёдор Александрович Куманин)
rdf:langString Kumanin c. 1890
xsd:date 1896-05-06
rdf:langString publisher, editor, translator, critic
rdf:langString Fyodor Alexandrovich Kumanin (Russian: Фёдор Александрович Куманин, 6 February 1855, Moscow, Imperial Russia, — 6 May 1896, Moscow) was a Russian publisher, theatre critic and translator. He is best remembered as the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of The Artist magazine (1889—1894) as well as the supplement to it, called Dnevnik Artista (Artist's Diary, 1891—1893). He launched three more journals, Teatral (Theatre-goer, 1895), Teatralnaya Biblioteka (Theatre Library, 1891—1895) and Chitatel (Reader, 1896), which he also edited and regularly published his own critical essays and reviews in. Kumanin translated numerous foreign language plays. Four of them, by Hermann Sudermann (Sodoms Ende, Die Ehre Honour, Die Schmetterlingsschlacht and Das Gluck im Winkel) enjoyed long-lasting success on stage the Imperial as well as provincial Russian theatres. He co-authored, with the poet Olga Chyumina, one original play, a comedy called Zhorzhinka (Жоржинка). According to the modern literary historian Irina Mustafina, Kumanin was "a rare type of a passionate zealot of culture" who's managed to launch a host of publications on theatre in the years when art journalism in Russia was in deep crisis. Ivan Shcheglov, though, had 'difficult' relationship with Kumanin, as well as Anton Chekhov. In January 1894 The Artist published Chekhov's novella The Black Monk, the occasion which resulted in a raw between Kumanin and the author. What exactly caused it remained unknown, although some evidence points at Chekhov's having accused the editor in violating his copyright, which outraged the latter. When Chekhov asked for galley proofs of the story, Kumanin refused to comply, in a rude manner. Later he made several attempts at restoring the relation with the Chekhov, who ignored his approaches.
rdf:langString Фёдор Александрович Куманин (Феодор Александрович Куманин; 21 января [6 февраля] 1855, Москва — 24 апреля [6 мая] 1896, там же) — русский театральный критик, издатель и драматург-переводчик.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3608
rdf:langString Fyodor Alexandrovich Kumanin
rdf:langString (Фёдор Александрович Куманин)
xsd:gYear 1855
xsd:gYear 1896

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