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You are here: Home Vol. 01 News of the Profession / Хроника
Vol. 1 (1998): News of the Profession / Хроника
The Pushkin Club in London Print E-mail
Volume 01 (1998) - Vol. 1: News of the Profession / Хроника
Written by Sutton, Jonathan   

The Pushkin Club in London


The Pushkin Club was established in 1953 by Maria Kullman and her brother and sister-in-law, Nicholas and Militsa Zernov, at 24 Kensington Park Gardes as a non-profiti-making house for students and academics of all nationalities.  In addition to providing lodgings, the house ran a program of recitals and lectures.  In 1958 the Club moved to its present location at 46 Ladbroke Grove.

The list of speakers the Club attracted over the years includes many brilliant names.  The Very Reverend Metropolitan Anthony Bloom, Sir Isaiah Berlin, and Dame Elizabeth Hill are among those who have always had a connection with the Club and have spoken on many occasions.  In 1955 Tamara Karsavina spoke of her linfe in the ballet; the following year Edward Crankshaw talked of the Soviet Union in the aftermath of the 20th Party Congress.  Talks were given by Dame Marie Rambert, Dr. Aaron Steinberg, Dr. Georgi Adamovich, Professor Konovalov, Alexandra Wexler, and Dr. Nikolai Andreev.

Katerina Kornakova, once a favorite pupil of Stanislavsky, gave a breath-taking performance of “Netochka Nezvanova” only months before her death.  Oda Slobodskaia used to give song recitals.  Mstislav Dobujinsky, one of the last surviving members of Mir Iskusstva, held more than one exhibition in the Club.  Among other exhibitions was one of paintings and lithographs by Leonid Pasternak.

In 1960 Konstantin Fedin and Alexander Tvardovsky spoke at the Pushkin Club; among the audience was Baron Alexander Meyendorff, aged over 90.  Perhaps only at the Pushkin Club was it possible for three such different figures to engage in public discussion.  Twenty-seven years later the entire ground floor of the Pushkin House was again filled to capacity for an evening of poetry reading; amongst the readers was Irina Ratushinskaia, who had arrived in London only a few days previously.

Now the Pushkin Club maintains its program of lectures, recitals, and poetry readings, and, in various ways, responds to the new situation of the 1990s.

 

Reported by Dr. Jonathan Sutton, University of Leeds

 


 

Citation:
Sutton, Jonathan.  "The Pushkin Club in London."  Pushkin Review / Pushkinskii vestnik 1 (1998): 179.  <http://www.pushkiniana.org>.

 

 
Pushkin Project in Omaha, Nebraska Print E-mail
Volume 01 (1998) - Vol. 1: News of the Profession / Хроника
Written by Sconce, Mark C.   


Pushkin project in Omaha, Nebraska

 

During a visit to Russia, Mark Sconce and his wife Nancy Bounds heard so much about Pushkin’s life and were so impressed by performances of is works that on their return home they decided to arrange a program commemorating the 160th anniversary of the poet’s death.  The event, held at Nancy Bounds Studios in Omaha on February 2, 1997, was attended by 32 guests.  Mark Sconce opened the program by outlining Pushkin’s life; and he was joined by Joan Hennecke and Jamie Lewis in reciting some of his works.  The performance aimed at presenting “the whole man,” including excerpts from Pushkin’s lyric poetry, Eugene Onegin, The Bronze Horseman, and The Gypsies.

The success of the anniversary program has prompted the organizers to launch a “Pushkin Project” that aims at giving a North American Pushkin Prize to a promising poet between the ages of 15 and 21.  The prize will be awarded in 1999, the 200th anniversary of Pushkin’s birth.  The organizers are hoping to raise $10,000 for the project and are soliciting donations, to be sent to Mark Sconce, Mgr., Nancy Bounds Studios, 11915 Pierce Plaza, Omaha, NE 68144 USA (402-697-9292; fax 402-697-9272).

 

Reported by Mark C. Sconce



Citation:
Sconce, Mark C.  "Pushkin Project in Omaha, Nebraska."  Pushkin Review / Pushkinskii vestnik 1 (1998): 180.  <http://www.pushkiniana.org>.

 

 


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