Oleksandr Korniychuk | |
Native Name Lang: | uk |
Order: | Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR |
Term Start: | 1947 |
Term End: | 1953 |
Predecessor: | Vacant (previously Mykhailo Burmystenko) |
Successor: | Pavlo Tychyna |
Term Start1: | 1959 |
Term End1: | 1972 |
Predecessor1: | Pavlo Tychyna |
Successor1: | Mykhailo Bilyi |
Order2: | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR |
Term Start2: | 1944 |
Term End2: | 1944 |
Premier2: | Nikita Khrushchev |
Predecessor2: | vacant (previously by Christian Rakovsky) |
Successor2: | Dmytro Manuilsky |
Birth Date: | 25 May 1905 |
Birth Place: | Khrystynivka, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
Occupation: | playwright Soviet Party and State official |
Awards: | Stalin Prize (1941, 1942, 1943, 1949, 1951) |
Oleksandr Yevdokymovych Korniychuk[1] [2] (Russian: Алекса́ндр Евдоки́мович Корнейчу́к; Ukrainian: Олександр Євдокимович Корнійчук; – 14 May 1972) was a Soviet and Ukrainian playwright, literary critic and state official.
His plays include The Death of the Squadron (1933),[3] Platon Krechet (1934), Bohdan Khmelnytsky (1938), his pro-collectivization comedy In the Steppes of Ukraine (1940), and The Front (1942).[4] Korniychuk was a five-time Stalin Prize laureate (1941; 1942; 1943; 1949; 1951) and is regarded as a major proponent of Socialist Realism in Soviet drama.
Korniychuk served as the head of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR from 1943 to 1945.[5] He was also a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1952–1972), and the chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1947–1953; 1959–1972).[6] [7]
Oleksandr Yevdokymovych Korniychuk was born in Khrystynivka, Kiev Governorate, into a family of a railroad workers. At the age of 15, he started working at a railroad carriage repair works. In 1924 Korniychuk enrolled into the Kiev University (then known as the Kiev Institute of People's Education). After the graduation in 1929, he went to work in the Odessa and Kiev film studios, mainly as a script-writer. His debut play On the Edge (1929) examined the role of a man of arts in the new Socialist society. From the late 1920s to early 1930s, Korniychuk was an active propagator of internationalism, strictly opposing the local National Communist movement in the Ukrainian literature, led by Mykola Khvylovy.[7]
In 1933, the first significant play by Korniychuk, Death of the Squadron, came out, endorsing the heroic tale of a Bolshevik Black Sea Fleet unit who chose to sink their ships so as not to be taken by the Germans (later revealed to be nothing more than a romantic revolutionary myth). The play impressed Pavel Postyshev, who became the 'local prodigy's mentor. Platon Krechet followed in 1934, its central character representing the 'new Soviet intelligentsia', driven by "humanism and justice-seeking". The 1937 play Pravda is credited for being the first one to introduce the character of Lenin to the Soviet theatre stage.[7]
Both Nikita Khrushchev and Lazar Kaganovich recommended the young author to Stalin and in 1938, the Soviet leader met the playwright at the Kremlin. Soon Korniychuk's plays were translated into most of the Soviet republics' languages and started to be produced by theatres all over the country. In 1939 came out what in retrospect is regarded by Russian critics as Korniychuk's strongest work, the 5-act drama Bogdan Khmelnitsky, telling the story of the 17th-century national movement in the Ukraine which resulted in the country's unification with Russia. His 1941 pro-collectivisation farcical comedy In the Steppes of Ukraine became popular with both the general public and Stalin himself, who in a personal letter informed the author: "Comrade Korneychuk. Just read your play In the Steppes of Ukraine. Laughed heartily. I.Stalin". Korniychuk continued in the same vein with Please Come to Zvonkovoye (1946), The Kalinov Grove (1950) and Over Dnieper (1960).[7]
In 1934, at the First Congress of the Soviet Union of Writers Korniychuk was elected a member of its chairmanship board. The same year, he became the leader of the Ukrainian SSR Union of Writers (1934-1941, 1946-1953). As World War II broke out in 1941, Korniychuk went to the frontline, first as a war correspondent, then a politruk. His 1942 play Frontline, criticizing the 'old style' army generals caused outrage among the latter but was supported by Stalin ("Conduct the war in better ways and there won't be such plays," he reportedly told some of the disgruntled senior rank military men). For it the author received his third Stalin Prize, promptly donating the money to the needs of national defense.[7]
On 19 February 1943, the Ukrainian government newspaper Radyans'ka Ukraina in (briefly) liberated Kharkov published an article written by Korniychuk making it clear Stalin had no intention of giving up most of the territory gained by the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact after the war: it was promptly reprinted in Russian by Pravda the following day.[8] In 1944, Korniychuk became the first head (People's Comissar) of the Ukrainian SSR's newly formed Foreign Ministry (Narodny Comissariat, as it was then known). From 1943 to 1945, he was the first deputy of the Foreign Minister of the USSR. In the late 1940s, Korniychuk joined the higher ranks of the Ukrainian and Soviet political nomenclature. He was a member of the Communist Party’s Central committees (USSR - 1949-1972, UkrSSR - 1952-1972), a Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union deputy (1937-1972), the first deputy of the UkrSSR Prime Minister (1953-1954), the Chairman of the Ukrainian parliament (in 1947-1953, 1959-1972).
Korniychuk received his share of ideological chastising too. In 1951 the libretto for Konstantyn Dankevych's opera Bogdan Khmelnitsky he'd written with his wife Wanda Wasilewska met with harsh disapproval from Stalin, who demanded for a lot more of the Ukrainian people's fight against the "Polish oppression" to be shown. The pair added several scenes, making a point to emphasize the "historical roots of the Russian-Ukrainian friendship," and the opera was premiered in 1953. In 1954 Korniychuk's play Wings, satirizing the style of local party officials' leadership, outraged some members of the USSR CP Central Committee. Khrushchev had to intervene, allegedly saying: "The Tsar hadn't banned Gogol's Revizor, how can we then ban Korneychuk's Wings?"
Korniychuk's works of the 1960s showed less ideological fervour and more psychological depth, dealing with the Soviet people's moral dilemmas in the post-War Soviet Russia.
Olexandr Korniychuk died on 14 May 1972 in Kiev. He was buried at the Baikove Cemetery.[7]
There is a street in Moscow named after Korniychuk (1976).