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  1. Anatoly Vasilievich Efros (Russian: Анатолий Васильевич Эфрос; July 3, 1925, Kharkiv – January 13, 1987, Moscow) was a Soviet theatre and film director. He was a leading interpreter of Russian classics during the Era of Stagnation and "received numerous awards for creative excellence".

  2. Overview. Anatoly Efros. (1925—1987) Quick Reference. (1925–87) Soviet/Russian director. In 1963 Efros led the Theatre of the Lenin Komsomol, where he created a repertoire largely based on contemporary drama, provoking political controversy with a number of ... From: Efros, Anatoly in The Oxford Companion to Theatre and Performance »

  3. 17 de ene. de 1987 · Anatoly Efros, director at the avant-garde Taganka Theater in Moscow, died Tuesday, the official news agency Tass reported. Efros was 61 and had fallen from favor in the 1960s but became head...

  4. Anatoly Efros (1925–1987) belongs to that special group of Russian artists and intellectuals who contributed to the era between the early 1950s and early 1960s known as ‘The Thaw’. The name came from Ilya Ehrenberg’s eponymous novel of 1954, comparing the atmosphere of the era to climatic change.

    • James Thomas
    • 2019
  5. 14 de ene. de 1987 · Anatoly V. Efros, the director of Moscow's Taganka Theater and a leading Soviet director for the last 20 years, died of a heart attack today, the official news agency Tass announced. He was 61...

  6. In The Joy of Rehearsal, his best-known work, Efros illuminates the dynamics of the director's creative work. He discusses the process of considering future plays, rehearsing them, and...

  7. This book is an insiders’ account of the groundbreaking Moscow production of Chekhov's The Seagull directed by Anatoly Efros in 1966, which heralded a paradigm shift in the interpretation and staging of Chekhov’s plays.