Mikhail Romm
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Mikhail [Ilych] Romm (Михаил Ильич Ромм) (24 January 1901 [O.S. 11 January] — November 1, 1971) was a Russian film director.
He was born in Irkutsk. His father was a social democrat of Jewish descent who had been exiled there. He graduated from gymnasium in 1917 and entered the Moscow College for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. He fought in the Red Army during the Russian civil war. In 1925 he finished the sculptural department of the Highest Artistic-Technical Institute and worked as a sculptor and translator. In 1928-1930 he conducted research on the theory of cinema in the Institute for the methods of extra-scholastic work (Institut metodov vneshkol'noy raboty). Since 1931 he worked on the Mosfilm. In 1940-1943 he was an artistic leader for the Mosfilm films production. In 1942-1947 he was the director of a theater studio for movie actors. From 1938 he was a lecturer, from 1948 he was the leader of the actor's-producer department of the VGIK, professor (from 1962). Artistic leader of several films (including the prominent documentary Common Fascism 1965 and Nine Days of One Year (1962)). He is the author of many books and articles on the theory of cinematographic art and memoir works. He was an honorable corresponding member of the Academy of the skills of DDR (1967).