Sergei Parajanov Explained

Sergei Parajanov
Birth Name:Sergei Iosifovich Parajanov
Birth Date:9 January 1924
Birth Place:Tiflis, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union
Death Place:Yerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union
Restingplace:Komitas Pantheon, Yerevan, Armenia
Yearsactive:1951–1990
Children:1
Website:https://www.parajanov.com

Sergei Iosifovich Parajanov (January 9, 1924 – July 20, 1990) was a Soviet film director and screenwriter. He is regarded by film critics, film historians, and filmmakers to be one of the greatest filmmakers of all time.[1] [2]

Parajanov was born to ethnic Armenian parents in Georgia. He studied at Moscow's VGIK under the tutualge of filmmakers Igor Savchenko and Oleksandr Dovzhenko, and began his career as professional film director in 1954. Parjanov became increasingly disenchanted of his films as well as the state sanctioned art style of socialist realism, prominent throughout the Soviet Union. After moving to Ukraine and directing Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, his first major work which diverged from socialist realism and gave him international acclaim,[3] he would later disown and proclaim his films made before 1965 as "garbage." Parajanov subsequently directed The Color of Pomegranates, which was met with widespread acclaim among filmmakers, and is often considered one of the greatest films ever made.[4]

Parajanov was a bisexual, which exposed him to increase legal scrutiny from Soviet authorities over his personal life, his films, and political involvement surrounding Ukrainian nationalism.[5] [6] [7] Nearly all of his film projects from 1965 to 1973 were banned by the Soviet film administrations, both locally in Kyiv, Yerevan and federally in the Soviet Union, many without discussion.

Parajanov's films are ranked among the greatest films of all time by Sight & Sound. He won prizes at Mar del Plata Film Festival, Istanbul International Film Festival, Nika Awards, Rotterdam International Film Festival, Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival, São Paulo International Film Festival and others. A comprehensive retrospective in the UK took place in 2010 at BFI Southbank. The retrospective was curated by Layla Alexander-Garrett and Parajanov specialist Elisabetta Fabrizi who commissioned a Parajanov inspired new commission in the BFI Gallery by contemporary artist Matt Collishaw ('Retrospectre'). A symposium was dedicated to Parajanov's work bringing together experts to discuss and celebrate the director's contribution to cinema and art.[8]

Early life and films

Sergei Iosifovich Parajanov was born on January 9, 1924 to artistically inclined ethnic Armenian parents Iosif Parajanov and Siranush Bejanova in Tiflis, Georgia, then part of the Soviet Union. Iosif was a merchant who owned an antique shop, trading jewelry and valuables; he was in frequent trouble with authorities, who often raided his business and seized many of his valuables due to the Soviet Union's ban on financial speculation.[9] Because his father could not get his business legalised, Parajanov was often forced to swallow small jewelry pieces and defecate them once authorities withdrew from their search.[10]

Parajanov attended a local railway college before running away to attend the Tbilisi State Conservatoire. He was later transferred to the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied alongside soprano Nina Dorliak. Parajanov left the conservatory to enroll at the directing department at what was then the All-Union State Institute of Cinematography; he studied under the tutelage of directors Igor Savchenko and Alexander Dovzhenko.

Parajanov was bisexual.[11] [12] In 1948, he was charged with illegal homosexual acts with MGB officer Nikolai Mikava in Tbilisi. He was sentenced to five years in prison and released under an amnesty after three months.[13] In video interviews, friends and relatives contest the truthfulness of anything Parajanov was charged with; they believe his sentencing was procured through a kangaroo court due to his tendency for political retaliation and rebellious views. In 1950, Parajanov married Nigyar Kerimova, who came from a Muslim Tatar family, in Moscow. After converting to Eastern Orthodox Christianity, Nigyar was murdered by her relatives, who disapproved of the marriage. Parajanov subsequently moved to Kiev, Ukraine, where he produced a few Russian and Ukrainian language documentaries (Dumka, Golden Hands, Natalia Uzhvy) and a handful of narrative films: Andriesh, The Top Guy, Ukrainian Rhapsody, and Flower on the Stone. He became fluent in Ukrainian and, in 1956, married Svitlana Ivanivna Shcherbatiuk (1938–2020), with whom he had a son in 1958.[14] [15]

In a 1988 interview, he stated, "Everyone knows that I have three motherlands. I was born in Georgia, worked in Ukraine and I'm going to die in Armenia."

Break from Socialist Realism

Andrey Tarkovsky's first film, Ivan's Childhood, had an enormous impact on Parajanov's self-discovery as a filmmaker. Later the influence became mutual, and he and Tarkovsky became close friends. Another influence was Italian filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini, who Parajanov would later describe as "like a God" to him and a director of "majestic style".[16] In 1965 Parajanov abandoned socialist realism and directed the poetic Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, his first film over which he had complete creative control. It won numerous international awards well received by the Soviet authorities, who praised the film for "conveying the poetic quality and philosophical depth of Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky’s tale through the language of cinema," and called it "a brilliant creative success of the Dovzhenko film studio." Authorities allowed the release the film with its original Ukrainian soundtrack intact, rather than redub the dialogue into Russian for Soviet-wide release, in order to preserve its Ukrainian integrity.[17] (Russian dubbing was standard practice at that time for non-Russian Soviet films when they were distributed outside the republic of origin.)

In 1969, Parajanov briefly moved to Armenia, to work on his next film, Sayat Nova. It was shot under relatively poor conditions and had a very small budget.[18] Unlike Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, Sayat Nova was not well received by Soviet authorities, who were quick to intervene and ban the film for its allegedly inflammatory content and lack of Socialist realism, Parajanov re-edited the film and renamed it The Color of Pomegranates.

Imprisonment and later work

Since the early 1960's, Parajanov increasingly became the subject of attention by the KGB, for a variety of political activities related to his affinity towards Ukrainian nationalism. He was an active protester following the 1965–1966 Ukrainian purge. In 1969 a report by the Committee for State Security to the Central Committee of the Ukrainian Communist party indicated their belief that Parajanov is a negative influence on his younger colleagues, as well as a key purveyor of ideologically harmful opinion. He was also deemed as someone with a desire to defect if were to travel abroad. In December 1973, he was arrested in Kyiv, and was accused of homosexuality, sodomy, and propagation of pornography. He was sentenced to five years in a hard labour camp.[19] [20] Three days before Parajanov was due to be sentenced, Andrei Tarkovsky wrote a letter to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine, asserting that "In the last ten years Sergei Parajanov has made only two films: Shadows of Our Forgotten Ancestors and The Colour of Pomegranates. They have influenced cinema first in Ukraine, second in this country as a whole, and third in the world at large. Artistically, there are few people in the entire world who could replace Paradanov. He is guilty – guilty of his solitude. We are guilty of not thinking of him daily and of failing to discover the significance of a master." An eclectic group of artists, actors, filmmakers and activists protested on behalf of Parajanov, calling for his immediate release. Among them were Robert De Niro, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Leonid Gaidai, Eldar Ryazanov, Yves Saint Laurent, Marcello Mastroianni, Françoise Sagan, Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut, Luis Buñuel, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni, Mikhail Vartanov, and Andrei Tarkovsky himself.

Parajanov served four years out of his five-year sentence, and later credited his early release to the efforts of the French Surrealist poet and novelist Louis Aragon, the Russian poet Elsa Triolet (Aragon's wife), and the American writer John Updike. His early release was authorized by Leonid Brezhnev, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, presumably as a consequence of Brezhnev's chance meeting with Aragon and Triolet at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. When asked by Brezhnev if he could be of any assistance, Aragon requested the release of Parajanov, which was effected by December 1977.[19]

While he was incarcerated, Parajanov produced a large number of miniature doll-like sculptures (some of which were lost) and some 800 drawings and collages, many of which were later displayed in Yerevan, where the Sergei Parajanov Museum is now permanently located.[21] (The museum, opened in 1991, a year after Parajanov's death, hosts more than 200 works as well as furnishings from his home in Tbilisi.) His efforts in the camp were repeatedly compromised by prison guards, who deprived him of materials and called him mad, their cruelty only subsiding after a statement from Moscow admitted that "the director is very talented."

After his return from prison to Tbilisi, the close watch of Soviet censors prevented Parajanov from continuing his cinematic pursuits and steered him towards the artistic outlets he had nurtured during his time in prison. He crafted extraordinarily intricate collages, created a large collection of abstract drawings and pursued numerous other avenues of non-cinematic art, sewing more dolls and some whimsical suits.

In February 1982 Parajanov was once again imprisoned, on charges of bribery, which happened to coincide with his return to Moscow for the premiere of a play commemorating Vladimir Vysotsky at the Taganka Theatre, and was effected with some degree of trickery. Despite another stiff sentence, he was freed in less than a year, with his health seriously weakened.[19]

In 1985, the slow thaw within the Soviet Union spurred Parajanov to resume his passion for cinema. With the encouragement of various Georgian intellectuals, he created the multi-award-winning film The Legend of Suram Fortress, based on a novella by Daniel Chonkadze, his first return to cinema since Sayat-Nova fifteen years earlier. In 1988, Parajanov made another multi-award-winning film, Ashik Kerib, based on a story by Mikhail Lermontov. It is the story of a wandering minstrel, set in the Azerbaijani culture. Parajanov dedicated the film to his close friend Andrei Tarkovsky and "to all the children of the world".

Death

Parajanov died of Lung cancer in Yerevan, Armenia on July 20, 1990, aged 66, leaving this final work, The Confession, unfinished. It survives in its original negative as Parajanov: The Last Spring, created by his close friend Mikhail Vartanov in 1992. Federico Fellini, Tonino Guerra, Francesco Rosi, Alberto Moravia, Giulietta Masina, Marcello Mastroianni and Bernardo Bertolucci were among those who publicly mourned his death.[22] They sent a telegram to Russia with the following statement: "The world of cinema has lost a magician. Parajanov’s fantasy will forever fascinate and bring joy to the people of the world…”.

Legacy

Despite having studied film at the VGIK, Parajanov discovered his artistic path only after seeing Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky's dreamlike first film Ivan's Childhood.

Parajanov was highly appreciated by Tarkovsky himself in the biographical film "Voyage in Time" ("Always with huge gratitude and pleasure I remember the films of Sergei Parajanov which I love very much. His way of thinking, his paradoxical, poetical... ability to love the beauty and the ability to be absolutely free within his own vision"). In the same film Tarkovsky stated that Parajanov is one of his favorite filmmakers.

Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni stated that “The Color of Pomegranates by Parajanov, in my opinion one of the best contemporary film directors, strikes with its perfection of beauty.” Parajanov was also admired by American filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola. French film director Jean-Luc Godard also stated that "In the temple of cinema, there are images, light, and reality. Sergei Parajanov was the master of that temple".

Despite having many admirers of his art, his vision did not attract many followers. "Whoever tries to imitate me is lost", he reportedly said.[23] However, directors such as Theo Angelopoulos, Béla Tarr and Mohsen Makhmalbaf share Parajanov's approach to film as a primarily visual medium rather than as a narrative tool.[24]

The Parajanov-Vartanov Institute was established in Hollywood in 2010 to study, preserve and promote the artistic legacies of Sergei Parajanov and Mikhail Vartanov.[25]

Filmography

YearEnglish titleOriginal titleRomanizationNotes
1951Moldavian TaleIn Russian: Молдавская сказка
In Ukrainian: Moлдавська байка
Moldavskaya skazka
Moldavska baika
Graduate short film; lost
1954AndrieshIn Russian: АндриешAndrieshCo-directed with Yakov Bazelyan; feature-length remake of Moldavian Tale
1958DumkaIn Ukrainian: ДумкаDumkaDocumentary
1958The First Lad (aka The Top Guy)In Russian: Первый парень
In Ukrainian: Перший пapyбок
Pervyj paren
Pershyi parubok
1959Natalya UshvijIn Russian: Наталия УжвийNatalia UzhvijDocumentary
1960Golden HandsIn Russian: Золотые рукиZolotye rukiDocumentary
1961Ukrainian RhapsodyIn Russian: Украинская рапсодия
In Ukrainian: Укpaїнськa рaпсодія
Ukrainskaya rapsodiya
Ukrainska rapsodiya
1962Flower on the StoneIn Russian: Цветок на камне
In Ukrainian: Квітка на камені
Tsvetok na kamne
Kvitka na kameni
1965Shadows of Forgotten AncestorsIn Ukrainian: Тіні забутих предків Tini zabutykh predkiv
1965In Ukrainian: Київські фрески
In Russian: Киевские фрески
Ukrainian: Kyivski fresky
Russian: Kievskie freski
Banned during pre-production; 15 minutes of auditions survive
1967Hakob HovnatanianIn Armenian: Հակոբ ՀովնաթանյանHakob HovnatanyanShort film portrait of the 19th century Armenian artist
1968Children to KomitasIn Armenian: Երեխաներ ԿոմիտասինYerekhaner KomitasinDocumentary for UNICEF; lost[26]
1969The Color of Pomegranates In Armenian: Նռան գույնըNran guyneOriginally titled at Sayat-Nova
1985The Legend of Suram FortressIn Georgian: ამბავი სურამის ციხისაAmbavi Suramis tsikhisa
1985Arabesques on the Pirosmani ThemeIn Georgian: არაბესკები ფიროსმანის თემაზე
In Russian: Арабески на тему Пиросмани
Georgian: Arabeskebi Pirosmanis temaze
Russian: Arabeski na temu Pirosmani
Short film portrait of the Georgian painter Niko Pirosmani
1988Ashik KeribIn Georgian: აშიკი ქერიბი
In Azerbaijani: Aşıq Qərib
Ashiki Keribi
1989–1990The ConfessionIn Armenian: ԽոստովանանքKhostovanankUnfinished; original negative survives in Mikhail Vartanov's [27] [28]

Screenplays

Partially produced screenplays

Unproduced screenplays

Among his projects, there also were plans for adapting Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha, Shakespeare's Hamlet, Goethe's Faust, the Old East Slavic poem The Tale of Igor's Campaign, but film scripts for these were never completed.

References in popular culture

Awards and recognition

See also

References

  1. Web site: Where to begin with Sergei Parajanov. 2021-04-24. BFI. en.
  2. Book: Peter Rollberg . Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema . Rowman & Littlefield . 2009 . 978-0-8108-6072-8 . US . 517–521.
  3. Book: Steffen, James . The cinema of Sergei Parajanov . 2013 . The University of Wisconsin Press . 978-0-299-29654-4 . Wisconsin film studies . Madison, Wis.
  4. Web site: 2016-02-07 . Critics’ top 100 BFI . 2024-06-04 . web.archive.org.
  5. Web site: Out of the shadows: Sergei Parajanov . 2024-06-04 . BFI . en.
  6. Web site: Arminfo: Ukraine exonerates Sergei Parajanov . 2024-06-04 . arminfo.info . en.
  7. Web site: 2024-02-13 . Celebrating 100 Years of Soviet Filmmaker Sergei Parajanov . 2024-06-04 . International Relations Review . en-US.
  8. Fabrizi, Elisabetta, 'The BFI Gallery Book', BFI, London, 2011.
  9. Kepley . Vance . 2015 . The Cinema of Sergei Parajanov. By James Steffen. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2013. xix, 306 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Filmography. Chronology. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. $29.95, paper. . Slavic Review . 74 . 4 . 952–953 . 10.5612/slavicreview.74.4.952 . 0037-6779.
  10. Web site: 2024-01-09 . SERGEI PARAJANOV — one of the fathers of Ukrainian national cinematography . 2024-07-11 . Huxley . en-US.
  11. Web site: Where to begin with Sergei Parajanov . Carmen . Gray . . 2019-12-02 . 2024-03-25 .
  12. News: Parajanov's Influence Still Spreading on 90th Anniversary . D. Garrison . Golubock . . 2014-02-28 . 2024-03-25 .
  13. News: ru:Вся правда о судимостях Сергея Параджанова . Vsya pravda o sudimostyakh Sergeya Paradzhanova . The whole truth about Sergei Parajanov's criminal records . 2021-04-24 . . ru .
  14. Web site: 2017-01-02. surenparadjanov. 2021-04-24. Parajanov-Vartanov Institute. en.
  15. The wife of the legendary director Sergei Parajanov has died, Glavcom (6 June 2020)
  16. 1994 . Paradjanov: A Requiem . Documentary . KINO Productions .
  17. RGALI (Russian State Archive of Art and Literature), Goskino production and censorship files: f. 2944, op. 4, d. 280.
  18. http://www.kinema.uwaterloo.ca/hollo961.htm Sergei Parajanov – Interview with Ron Holloway, 1988
  19. Web site: Осужден за изнасилование члена КПСС (in Russian), Moskovskiy Komsomolets, 2004. https://archive.today/20070810210559/http://www.mig.com.ua/events.php?act=1&cat=1057&eventID=10849. dead. August 10, 2007.
  20. Pisu . Stefano . 2021-09-01 . New perspectives on the Parajanov affair: The role of Italian activism in the transnational campaign for his release . Cahiers du monde russe. Russie - Empire russe - Union soviétique et États indépendants . en . 62 . 2-3 . 443–472 . 10.4000/monderusse.12499 . 1252-6576.
  21. Web site: Frieze Magazine, Paradjanov the Magnificent. https://web.archive.org/web/20080416142206/http://www.frieze.com/issue/review/paradjanov_the_magnificent/. dead. April 16, 2008.
  22. Web site: 2017-02-09 . main . 2021-04-24 . Parajanov-Vartanov Institute . en.
  23. Web site: Parajanov's Influence Still Spreading on 90th Anniversary | News | the Moscow Times . 2015-05-17 . 2016-03-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160309175737/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/sitemap/free/2014/2/article/parajanovs-influence-still-spreading-on-90th-anniversary/495366.html . live .
  24. Web site: 2017-01-02. Influences. 2021-04-24. Parajanov-Vartanov Institute. en.
  25. Web site: Parajanov-Vartanov Institute. https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20141022052353/http://www.parajanov.com/institute.html. dead. October 22, 2014. Parajanov-Vartanov Institute.
  26. Web site: Maestro Sergei Parajanov. February 9, 2017.
  27. Web site: Parajanov: The Last Spring. December 28, 2016.
  28. Schneider, Steven. "501 Movie Directors" London: Cassell, 2007,
  29. Web site: fugue state press - experimental fiction - Stet, by James Chapman. 2021-04-24. www.fuguestatepress.com.
  30. Kaufman. Gil. "Watch Lady Gaga Flown Like a Kite By Shirtless Muscle Men In '911' Video". Billboard. September 18, 2020. September 18, 2020.
  31. Web site: Lady Gaga Drops 'Very Personal' '911' Video About Her Mental Health: 'It's the Poetry of Pain'. Mier. Tomás. September 18, 2020. People. September 19, 2020. https://archive.today/20200919143028/https://people.com/music/lady-gaga-dark-place-depression-making-chromatica/. September 19, 2020. live.
  32. Book: Steffen, James. The Cinema of Sergei Parajanov. 2013. University of Wisconsin Press. 9780299296537. 251.
  33. Web site: Minsker. Evan. Nicolas Jaar Releases Free Album Pomegranates. 2021-04-24. Pitchfork. 24 June 2015. en-US.
  34. Web site: Golubock. D. Garrison. 2014-02-27. Parajanov's Influence Still Spreading on 90th Anniversary. 2021-04-24. The Moscow Times. en.
  35. News: Tbilisi,Georgia. Kote Meskhi street located in Mtatsminda district will be named after acclaimed film director Serge Parajanov. Agenda.ge . 10 Sep 2021.

Bibliography

Selected bibliography of books and scholarly articles about Sergei Parajanov.

English language sources

Foreign language sources

External links