Agniya Barto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Agniya Lvovna Barto, Russian: Агния Львовна Барто, (February 17 [O.S. February 4] 1906 - April 1, 1981), was a Soviet Russian poet and children's writer.

Agniya was born to the family of a Moscow veterinarian Lev Nikolaevich Volov. She studied at a ballet school. She liked poetry very much and soon started to write her own, trying to imitate Anna Akhmatova and Vladimir Mayakovsky. At her graduation ceremony from the ballet school she read her poetry, among the guests was the Minister for Education Anatoly Lunacharsky, who pronounced that instead of the career of a ballerina she should be a professional poet. According to the legend despite all of Agniya's poetry to that time was about Love and Revolution, Lunacharsky predicted that she will be a famous children poet.

Agniya married an Italian-Russian Electrical Engineer and poet Pavel Barto. Actually quite a few of her children verses were signed by two names Agniya Barto and Pavel Barto. In 1925 she published her first books Chinese boy Wan-Lin (Китайчонок Ван-Линь) and Mishka -the-petty- thief (Мишка-Воришка). Then there were First of the May (Первое мая), 1926 and Brothers (Братишки), 1928 that got a positive review from Korney Chukovsky. After publishing a book of poetic miniatures for toddlers Toys (Игрушки) 1936, she suddenly became one of the most popular children authors with her books published in millions of copies.

Book cover of Toys, 1936.
Book cover of Toys, 1936.

During the World War II she wrote patriotic anti-Nazi poetry, often directly addressed to the leader of all the Soviet people, Joseph Stalin. She also worked as a correspondent for the newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda for the Western Front. In 1949 she got a Stalin Prize for her book Poetry for the children.

During 1960ies Barto worked in an orphanage that inspired her to write poem Zvenigorod (Звенигород, written in 1947 first published in 1966). During nine years Agniya was the anchor of radio programme Find a person (Найти человека), that helped to find the family members lost during the World War II. During that time she helped to reunite no less than a thousand families. She wrote a book about it 1966. In 1977 she published book Translations from the Children language (Переводы с детского) composed of her translations of poetry written by children of different countries.

She was the author of the script for the children movies Foundling (Подкидыш, 1940), Elephant and a Rope (Слон и верёвочка) 1945, Alyosha Ptitsyn trains his character (Алёша Птицын вырабатывает характер), 1953, 10 000 boys (10 000 мальчиков), 1962, Find a person (Найти человека), 1973.

In 1972 she was awarded the Lenin Prize and in 1976 the Hans Christian Andersen Award. Barto crater on Venus was named after her in 1985. A minor planet 2279 Barto discovered in 1968 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Ivanovna Chernykh was also named in her honor.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, 5th, New York: Springer Verlag, p. 186. ISBN 3540002383. 

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Barto, Agniya
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Volov, Agniya (maiden name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION writer
DATE OF BIRTH February 17, 1906
PLACE OF BIRTH
DATE OF DEATH April 1, 1981
PLACE OF DEATH