Valeriu Gagiu Explained

Valeriu Gagiu
Honorific Suffix:OR
Birth Date:1938 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Chişinău, Romania
Death Place:Chişinău, Moldova
Years Active:1967–2010

Valeriu Gagiu (1 May 1938 – 21 December 2010) was a Soviet and Moldovan film director, producer and screenwriter.[1]

Biography

Valeriu Gagiu was born on 1 May 1938 in Chișinău. He started his creative activity as a poet and journalist. In 1958-1963, he attended the Scenarios Faculty at the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography, a film school in Moscow. Since 1962, he has been a member of the Writers' Union and a member of the Union of Cinematographers.

Since he was a student, he began to collaborate with the film studio "Moldova-film", and in 1961, he wrote the screenplay for the movie "Man goes after the sun". In 1960s his works were focused on poetic film proclamation, he wrote the screenplay for the such a movies like "When the Cocks Go" ("Când se duc cocorii") (1963), "The street is listening" ("Strada ascultă") (1964) and "The Taste of Bread" ("Gustul pâinii") (1966).

In 1966, he debuted as a movie director with the "Taste of Bread" ("Gustul pâinii") where the screenplay was written by him together with Vadim Lisenko. Then, directed the move "Ten winters for one summer" ("Zece ierni pe o vară"). In the 1970s, he directed the movie of historic and revolutionary character: "Delayed Explosion" ("Explozie întârziată") (1970), "The last Outlaw"("Ultimul haiduc") (1972), "After the beast" ("Pe urmele fiarei") (1976) etc. After making the musical - "Where is love" ("Unde ești dragoste") (1981), Valieriu Gagiu screened various works of classical literature: "The history of one golden coin" ("Istoria unui galben") (1983), "The Mysterious Prisoner" ("Deținutul Misterios") (1986), "The kites do not share the prey" ("Corbii prada n-o împart") (1988), "The street of lamps off" ("Strada felinarelor stinse") (1990), "After the footsepts of Miorița" ("Pe urmele Mioriței"), etc.

In the 1990s, Valeriu Gagiu's work focused on the genre of documentary film. During the Romanian Revolution of 1989, Valeriu Gagiu is one of the few Moldovan filmmakers to have captured the dramatic pages of the events of that time, making the documentary feature film "Bloody Christmas" (1989). In 1992, he was next to the first line Moldavian combatants and volunteers during the armed conflict on the Dniester river, and wrote the play "The Duet for two snipers" reflecting some images of this war (a fragment was published in "The Magic Lantern" 2-3 / 1996).

Since 2000, Valeriu Gagiu works as a professor at the Academy of Music, Theater and Fine Arts in Chișinău, teaching film and scripting courses. He was an artistic director of several projects at the Moldova-film studio.

Valeriu Gagiu died on 21 December 2010 in the city of Chișinău at the age of 72.[2]

Awards

Valeriu Gagiu has won different awards at several film festivals, namely:

He is best known for directing the Sofia Rotaru musical Where Has Love Gone?.

Filmography

Film director
Screenwriter

References

  1. Book: Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Peter Rollberg. Rowman & Littlefield. 2009. US. 978-0-8108-6072-8. 239–240.
  2. Web site: A decedat regizorul Valeriu Gagiu PUBLIKA .MD . 2019-02-18 . 2015-07-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150702143245/http://www.publika.md/a-decedat-regizorul-valeriu-gagiu_169511.html . dead .
  3. http://lex.justice.md/index.php?action=view&view=doc&lang=1&id=318811 Decret privind conferirea "Ordinului Republicii" domnului Valeriu GAGIU

External links