Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 2 de ago. de 2021 · Her husband, meanwhile, provided her with children: Ariadna, born 1912, Irina, born 1917, and Georgy, born 1925. In 1914, with the outbreak of WWI, Efron volunteered for the front, and by 1917 he was stationed in Moscow as an officer. With the arrival of the Revolution in 1917, he joined the White Army, and Tsvetaeva went to Moscow in hopes of ...

  2. 9 de jun. de 2022 · Sergei Efron conserverà sempre quel viso commosso, di creatura fuori posto, fatua, dalla scaltrezza scombinata, gli occhi alieni, autentico pasto del caos. Il padre, Jakob Konstantinovič, ebreo, lavorava per un’agenzia di assicurazioni, era morto di cancro nel 1909.

  3. Sergei Yakovlevich Efron (em russo : Сергей Яковлевич Эфрон), nascido em 29 de setembro de 1893 (11 de outubro de 1893 no calendário gregoriano) em Moscou, morto a tiros em 16 de outubro de 1941, é um jornalista russo, marido de Marina Tsvetaïeva e pai de Ariadna Efron.

  4. 1 de ene. de 2004 · In 1937, at the height of her creative powers and living in exile in Paris, where rumours of Stalin's purges had been circulating in the emigre community, Marina Tsvetaeva made the fateful decision to follow her husband Sergei Efron, who had been forced to flee from French authorities, back to Moscow. She had been living in exile for more than ...

  5. О сложной судьбе бывшего офицера белой армии снято две киноленты — сериал «Очарование зла» и полнометражный фильм «Зеркала». В первой картине роль возлюбленного Цветаевой исполнил Карэн ...

  6. Sergei Yakovlevich Efron (en ruso : Серге́й Я́ковлевич Эфро́н; 8 de octubre de 1893 - 11 de septiembre de 1941) fue un poeta del Imperio Ruso, oficial del Ejército Blanco y esposo de Marina Tsvetaeva . Mientras emigraba, fue reclutado por la NKVD soviética . [1] Después de regresar a la URSS desde Francia, fue ejecutado.

  7. 16 de ene. de 2022 · Efron was shot in 1940, her daughter was sentenced to eight years in prison, and she never saw either of them again. Hingley observes, “She was no longer writing poetry, and she was more convinced than ever that she had lost her attractiveness as a woman, she was desperately poor and found Stalin’s Russia utterly alien.”