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Tchaikovsky |
Aleksandr FedotovRussian dramatic writer and actor (b. 1841; d. 1895 in Moscow), born Aleksandr Filippovich Fedotov (Александр Филиппович Федотов, Aleksandr Filippovič Fedotov, Alexander Filippovich Fedotov). After studying at the medical department of Moscow University, he was forced to leave as a result of his participation in student unrest. He made his stage debut at the Malyi Theatre in Moscow in 1862, and was adopted as a member of the theatre company, where he met his future wife, Glikeriia. He was subsequently involved in various theatrical enterprises, and founded lessons in stage craft in Moscow. Among his students were the famous actor and theatre director Konstantin Stanislavskii (1863-1938). In 1893 Fedotov moved to Saint Petersburg to join the Aleksandriinskii Theatre's troupe, with which he performed until his death two years later [1]. Fedotov was the author of a number of stage works which were performed with some success at the Moscow Malyi Theatre. His drama In the Castle of Chillon, inspired by Byron's famous poem The Prisoner of Chillon, was on that theatre's repertoire during the 1888/89 season and featured Mariia Ermolova in one of the principal roles. Fedotov wrote to Tchaikovsky in early/mid February 1892 to propose In the Castle of Chillon as the basis for an opera, but Tchaikovsky declined, arguing that the play's medieval, foreign characters could not awaken his full sympathy (see letter 4626). Tchaikovsky's correspondence with Aleksandr Fedotov:
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This page was last updated on 14 November 2010