Alexander green short biography presentation. Presentation on the topic "Alexander Green: life and work"

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Green was born on August 23 (old style - August 11), 1880 in Slobodskoy, a district town in the Vyatka province, in the family of an "eternal settler" - an exiled rebel Pole. Mother, a Russian woman, died when Green was 13 years old. Soon after the birth of their son, the Grinevsky family moved to Vyatka. "I did not know a normal childhood," Green wrote in his "Autobiographical Tale", "in moments of irritation, for willfulness and unsuccessful teaching, they called me" swineherd "," gold-dropper, "they predicted a life for me, full of groveling from people who were successful and successful. ...

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Explaining the origin of his literary pseudonym, Green said that "Green!" - so shortly the guys called Grinevsky at school, and "Green Pancake" was one of his children's nicknames. In the summer of 1896, after graduating from the four-year Vyatka city school, Green left for Odessa, taking with him only a willow basket with a change of linen and watercolors. He got to Odessa with six rubles in his pocket.

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Hungry, ragged, in search of a "vacancy", he went around all the schooners in the harbor. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks. Then in Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile. After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks.

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Four months later, "Private Alexander Stepanovich Grinevsky" escapes from the battalion, hides in the woods for several days, but he is caught and sentenced to a three-week strict arrest "on bread and water." The Penza Social Revolutionaries help him to escape from the battalion a second time, supplying him with a fake passport and send him to Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile.

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After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. After arriving there in a "stage order" Green flees exile and reaches Vyatka. The father gets him the passport of the "personal honorary citizen" AA who recently died in the hospital. Malginova and Green returned to St. Petersburg, so that a few years later, in 1910, they again went into exile, this time to the Arkhangelsk province. Prisons, exile, eternal need ... It was not for nothing that Green said that his life path was strewn not with roses, but with nails ...

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Having joined the Petersburg literary circles, he collaborated in many magazines. In 1916 in Petrograd he began to write the "fairy tale" "Scarlet Sails". From the end of 1916 he was forced to hide in Finland, but, having learned of the February Revolution, he returned to Petrograd. In 1919, from Petrograd he was drafted into the Red Army, where he served as a signalman. In 1920, the seriously ill Green, who fell ill with typhus, was brought to Petrograd, where, with the help of M. Gorky, he managed to get an academic ration and a room in the "House of Arts".

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The father hoped that his eldest son, in whom teachers saw enviable abilities, would certainly be an engineer or a doctor, then he would agree to an official, at worst, to a clerk, he would live only "like everyone else", he would give up "fantasies." .. The first story "The Merit of Private Panteleyev" (a propaganda brochure signed by ASG was written in 1906) was confiscated and burned by the secret police. The first publications (stories) were in 1906, in St. Petersburg. The signature "AS Green" first appeared in 1908 under the story "Oranges" (according to other sources - under the story "The Case" in 1907). In 1908, the first collection, The Invisible Hat, was published with the subtitle "Stories about the Revolutionaries." Not only in his youth, but also at the time of wide popularity, Green, along with prose, wrote lyric poems, poetic feuilletons and even fables.

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After finishing the novel "The Shining World", in the spring of 1923 Green went to the Crimea, to the sea, wanders around familiar places, lives in Sevastopol, Balaklava, Yalta, and in May 1924 settles in Feodosia - "the city of watercolor tones." In November 1930, already ill, he moved to Old Crimea. Green died on July 8, 1932 in Feodosia. In 1970, the literary-memorial museum of Alexander Grin was created in Feodosia.

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Among the works - poems, poems, satirical miniatures, fables, essays, short stories, short stories, stories, novels: "Case" (1907, story), "Oranges" (1908, story), "Reno Island" (1909, story), "Colony Lanfier" (1910, short story), "Winter's Tale" (1912, short story), "Fourth for All" (1912, short story), "Passage yard" (1912, short story), "Zurbagansky shooter" (1913, story) , "Captain Duke" (1915, short story), "Scarlet Sails" (1916, published 1923, an extravaganza novel), "Walking the Revolution" (1917, essay), "Rebellion", "Birth of Thunder", "Pendulum of the Soul" , "Ships in Lisse" (1918, published 1922, short story), "Pied Piper" (published 1924, a story about post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Heart of the Desert" (1923), "Shining World" (1923, published 1924, novel), "Fandango" (published 1927, a story on the theme of post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Running on the Waves" (1928, novel), "Mistletoe Branch" (1929, short story), "Green Lamp" (1930, short story), "The Road to Nowhere" ( 1930, novel), "An Autobiographical Tale" (1931).

Description of the presentation by individual slides:

1 slide

Slide Description:

2 slide

Slide Description:

Green was born on August 23 (old style - August 11), 1880 in Slobodskoy, a district town in the Vyatka province, in the family of an "eternal settler" - an exiled rebel Pole. Mother, a Russian woman, died when Green was 13 years old. Soon after the birth of their son, the Grinevsky family moved to Vyatka. "I did not know a normal childhood," Green wrote in his "Autobiographical Tale", "in moments of irritation, for willfulness and unsuccessful teaching, they called me" swineherd "," gold-dropper, "they predicted a life for me, full of groveling from people who were successful and successful. ...

3 slide

Slide Description:

Explaining the origin of his literary pseudonym, Green said that "Green!" - so shortly the guys called Grinevsky at school, and "Green Pancake" was one of his children's nicknames. In the summer of 1896, after graduating from the four-year Vyatka city school, Green left for Odessa, taking with him only a willow basket with a change of linen and watercolors. He got to Odessa with six rubles in his pocket.

4 slide

Slide Description:

Hungry, ragged, in search of a "vacancy", he went around all the schooners in the harbor. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks. Then in Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile. After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks.

5 slide

Slide Description:

Four months later, "Private Alexander Stepanovich Grinevsky" escapes from the battalion, hides in the forest for several days, but he is caught and sentenced to a three-week strict arrest "on bread and water." The Penza Social Revolutionaries help him to escape from the battalion a second time, supplying him with a fake passport and send him to Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile.

6 slide

Slide Description:

After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. After arriving there in a "stage-by-stage" order, Green flees exile and reaches Vyatka. The father gives him the passport of the "personal honorary citizen" AA who recently died in the hospital. Malginova and Green returned to St. Petersburg, so that a few years later, in 1910, they again went into exile, this time to the Arkhangelsk province. Prisons, exile, eternal need ... It was not for nothing that Green said that his life path was strewn not with roses, but with nails ...

7 slide

Slide Description:

Having joined the Petersburg literary circles, he collaborated in many magazines. In 1916 in Petrograd he began to write the "fairy tale" "Scarlet Sails". From the end of 1916 he was forced to hide in Finland, but, having learned about the February Revolution, he returned to Petrograd. In 1919, from Petrograd he was drafted into the Red Army, where he served as a signalman. In 1920, the seriously ill Green, who fell ill with typhus, was brought to Petrograd, where, with the help of M. Gorky, he managed to get an academic ration and a room in the "House of Arts".

8 slide

Slide Description:

The father hoped that his eldest son, in whom teachers saw enviable abilities, would certainly be an engineer or a doctor, then he would agree to an official, at worst, to a clerk, he would live only "like everyone else", he would give up "fantasies." .. The first story "The Merit of Private Panteleyev" (a propaganda brochure signed by ASG was written in 1906) was confiscated and burned by the secret police. The first publications (stories) were in 1906, in St. Petersburg. The signature "AS Green" first appeared in 1908 under the story "Oranges" (according to other sources - under the story "The Case" in 1907). In 1908, the first collection, The Invisible Hat, was published with the subtitle "Stories about the Revolutionaries." Not only in his youth, but also at the time of wide popularity, Green, along with prose, wrote lyric poems, poetic feuilletons and even fables.

9 slide

Slide Description:

After finishing the novel "The Shining World", in the spring of 1923 Green went to the Crimea, to the sea, wanders around familiar places, lives in Sevastopol, Balaklava, Yalta, and in May 1924 settles in Feodosia - "the city of watercolor tones." In November 1930, already ill, he moved to Old Crimea. Green died on July 8, 1932 in Feodosia. In 1970, the literary-memorial museum of Alexander Grin was created in Feodosia.

10 slide

Slide Description:

Among the works - poems, poems, satirical miniatures, fables, essays, short stories, short stories, stories, novels: "Case" (1907, story), "Oranges" (1908, story), "Reno Island" (1909, story), "Colony Lanfier" (1910, short story), "Winter's Tale" (1912, short story), "Fourth for All" (1912, short story), "Passage yard" (1912, short story), "Zurbagansky shooter" (1913, story) , "Captain Duke" (1915, short story), "Scarlet Sails" (1916, published 1923, an extravaganza novel), "Walking the Revolution" (1917, essay), "Rebellion", "Birth of Thunder", "Pendulum of the Soul" , "Ships in Lisse" (1918, published 1922, short story), "Pied Piper" (published 1924, a story about post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Heart of the Desert" (1923), "Shining World" (1923, published 1924, novel), "Fandango" (published 1927, a story on the theme of post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Running on the Waves" (1928, novel), "Mistletoe Branch" (1929, short story), "Green Lamp" (1930, short story), "The Road to Nowhere" ( 1930, novel), "An Autobiographical Tale" (1931).

Slide 1

Slide 2

Green was born on August 23 (old style - August 11), 1880 in Slobodskoy, a district town in the Vyatka province, into the family of an "eternal settler" - an exiled rebel Pole. Mother, a Russian woman, died when Green was 13 years old. Soon after the birth of their son, the Grinevsky family moved to Vyatka. "I did not know a normal childhood," Green wrote in his "Autobiographical Tale", "in moments of irritation, for willfulness and unsuccessful teaching, they called me" swineherd "," gold-dropper, "they predicted a life for me, full of groveling from people who were successful and successful." ...

Slide 3

Explaining the origin of his literary pseudonym, Green said that "Green!" - so shortly the guys called Grinevsky at school, and "Green Pancake" was one of his children's nicknames. In the summer of 1896, after graduating from the four-year Vyatka city school, Green left for Odessa, taking with him only a willow basket with a change of linen and watercolors. He got to Odessa with six rubles in his pocket.

Slide 4

Hungry, ragged, in search of a "vacancy", he went around all the schooners in the harbor. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks. Then in Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile. After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years.
On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks.

Slide 5

Four months later, "Private Alexander Stepanovich Grinevsky" escapes from the battalion, hides in the forest for several days, but he is caught and sentenced to a three-week strict arrest "on bread and water." The Penza Social Revolutionaries help him to escape from the battalion a second time, supplying him with a fake passport and send him to Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile.

Slide 6

After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. After arriving there in a "stage-by-stage" order, Green flees exile and reaches Vyatka. The father gives him the passport of the "personal honorary citizen" AA who recently died in the hospital. Malginova and Green returned to St. Petersburg, so that a few years later, in 1910, they again went into exile, this time to the Arkhangelsk province. Prisons, exile, eternal need ... It was not for nothing that Green said that his life path was strewn not with roses, but with nails ...

Slide 7

Having joined the Petersburg literary circles, he collaborated in many magazines. In 1916 in Petrograd he began to write the "fairy tale" "Scarlet Sails". From the end of 1916 he was forced to hide in Finland, but, having learned of the February Revolution, he returned to Petrograd. In 1919, from Petrograd he was drafted into the Red Army, where he served as a signalman. In 1920, the seriously ill Green, who fell ill with typhus, was brought to Petrograd, where, with the help of M. Gorky, he managed to get an academic ration and a room in the "House of Arts".

Slide 8

The father hoped that his eldest son, in whom teachers saw enviable abilities, would certainly be an engineer or a doctor, then he would agree to an official, at worst, to a clerk, he would live only "like everyone else", he would give up "fantasies." .. The first story "The Merit of Private Panteleyev" (a propaganda brochure signed by ASG was written in 1906) was confiscated and burned by the secret police. The first publications (stories) were in 1906, in St. Petersburg. The signature "AS Green" first appeared in 1908 under the story "Oranges" (according to other sources - under the story "The Case" in 1907). In 1908, the first collection, The Invisible Hat, was published with the subtitle "Stories about the Revolutionaries." Not only in his youth, but also at the time of wide popularity, Green, along with prose, wrote lyric poems, poetic feuilletons and even fables.

Slide 9

After finishing the novel "The Shining World", in the spring of 1923 Green went to the Crimea, to the sea, wanders around familiar places, lives in Sevastopol, Balaklava, Yalta, and in May 1924 settles in Feodosia - "the city of watercolor tones." In November 1930, already ill, he moved to Old Crimea. Green died on July 8, 1932 in Feodosia. In 1970, the literary-memorial museum of Alexander Grin was created in Feodosia.

Slide 10

Among the works - poems, poems, satirical miniatures, fables, essays, short stories, short stories, stories, novels: "Case" (1907, story), "Oranges" (1908, story), "Reno Island" (1909, story), "Colony Lanfier" (1910, short story), "Winter's Tale" (1912, short story), "Fourth for All" (1912, short story), "Passage yard" (1912, short story), "Zurbagansky shooter" (1913, story) , "Captain Duke" (1915, short story), "Scarlet Sails" (1916, published 1923, an extravaganza novel), "Walking the Revolution" (1917, essay), "Rebellion", "Birth of Thunder", "Pendulum of the Soul" , "Ships in Lisse" (1918, published 1922, short story), "Pied Piper" (published 1924, a story about post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Heart of the Desert" (1923), "Shining World" (1923, published 1924, novel), "Fandango" (published 1927, a story on the theme of post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Running on the Waves" (1928, novel), "Mistletoe Branch" (1929, short story), "Green Lamp" (1930, short story), "The Road to Nowhere" ( 1930, novel), "An Autobiographical Tale" (1931).

Slide presentation

Slide text: A.GRIN


Slide text: Green was born on August 23 (old style - August 11), 1880 in Slobodskoy, a district town in the Vyatka province, in the family of an "eternal settler" - an exiled rebel Pole. Mother, a Russian woman, died when Green was 13 years old. Soon after the birth of their son, the Grinevsky family moved to Vyatka. "I did not know a normal childhood," Green wrote in his "Autobiographical Tale", "in moments of irritation, for willfulness and unsuccessful teaching, they called me" swineherd "," gold-dropper, "they predicted a life for me, full of groveling from people who were successful and successful." ...


Slide Text: Explaining the origin of his literary pseudonym, Green said that "Green!" - so shortly the guys called Grinevsky at school, and "Green Pancake" was one of his children's nicknames. In the summer of 1896, after graduating from the four-year Vyatka city school, Green left for Odessa, taking with him only a willow basket with a change of linen and watercolors. He got to Odessa with six rubles in his pocket.


Slide text: Hungry, ragged, in search of a "vacancy", he went around all the schooners in the harbor. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks. Then in Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile. After his release from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. On his maiden voyage, on the Platon transport ship, he first saw the shores of the Caucasus and Crimea. Green did not sail as a sailor for long - after the first or second voyage he was usually written off for his rebellious disposition. Later he was a lumberjack and gold digger in the Urals. In the spring of 1902 the young man found himself in Penza, in the royal barracks.


Slide text: Four months later, "Private Alexander Stepanovich Grinevsky" escapes from the battalion, hides in the forest for several days, but he is caught and sentenced to a three-week strict arrest "on bread and water." The Penza Social Revolutionaries help him to escape from the battalion a second time, supplying him with a fake passport and send him to Kiev. From there he moved to Odessa, and then to Sevastopol. For his propaganda activities in Sevastopol, he paid with prison and exile.


Slide text: After being released from the Sevastopol casemate, Green leaves for St. Petersburg and there soon ends up in prison again. Green is exiled to Turinsk, Tobolsk province for 4 years. After arriving there in a "stage-by-stage" order, Green flees exile and reaches Vyatka. The father gives him the passport of the "personal honorary citizen" AA who recently died in the hospital. Malginova and Green returned to St. Petersburg, so that a few years later, in 1910, they again went into exile, this time to the Arkhangelsk province. Prisons, exile, eternal need ... It was not for nothing that Green said that his life path was strewn not with roses, but with nails ...


Slide text: Having joined the Petersburg literary circles, he collaborated in many magazines. In 1916 in Petrograd he began to write the "fairy tale" "Scarlet Sails". From the end of 1916 he was forced to hide in Finland, but, having learned of the February Revolution, he returned to Petrograd. In 1919, from Petrograd he was drafted into the Red Army, where he served as a signalman. In 1920, the seriously ill Green, who fell ill with typhus, was brought to Petrograd, where, with the help of M. Gorky, he managed to get an academic ration and a room in the "House of Arts".


Slide text: The father expected that from his eldest son, in whom teachers saw enviable abilities, an engineer or a doctor would certainly come out, then he would agree to an official, at worst, to a clerk, he would only live "like everyone else," fantasy "... The first story" The Merit of Private Panteleev "(a propaganda brochure signed by ASG was written in 1906) was confiscated and burned by the secret police. The first publications (stories) were in 1906, in St. Petersburg. The signature "AS Green" first appeared in 1908 under the story "Oranges" (according to other sources - under the story "The Case" in 1907). In 1908, the first collection, The Invisible Hat, was published with the subtitle "Stories about the Revolutionaries." Not only in his youth, but also at the time of wide popularity, Green, along with prose, wrote lyric poems, poetic feuilletons and even fables.


Slide text: After finishing the novel "The Shining World", in the spring of 1923, Green travels to the Crimea, to the sea, wanders around familiar places, lives in Sevastopol, Balaklava, Yalta, and in May 1924 settles in Feodosia - "the city of watercolor tones". In November 1930, already ill, he moved to Old Crimea. Green died on July 8, 1932 in Feodosia. In 1970, the literary-memorial museum of Alexander Grin was created in Feodosia.

Slide number 10


Slide text: Among the works - poems, poems, satirical miniatures, fables, essays, short stories, stories, stories, novels: "Case" (1907, story), "Oranges" (1908, story), "Reno Island" (1909, story), "Colony Lanfier" (1910, story), "Winter's Tale" (1912, story), "The Fourth for All" (1912, story), "Passage yard" (1912, story), "Zurbagan Shooter" (1913 , story), "Captain Duke" (1915, story), "Scarlet Sails" (1916, published 1923, an extravaganza novel), "Walking to the Revolution" (1917, essay), "Uprising", "Birth of Thunder", " Pendulum of the Soul "," Ships in Lisse "(1918, published 1922, short story)," Pied Piper "(published 1924, a story about post-revolutionary Petrograd)," Heart of the Desert "(1923)," Shining World "(1923, published 1924, novel), "Fandango" (published 1927, a story on the theme of post-revolutionary Petrograd), "Running on the Waves" (1928, novel), "Mistletoe Branch" (1929, short story), "Green Lamp" (1930, short story), "Road nowhere "(1930, novel)," Autobiographical Yes, a story "(1931).

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Alexander green

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Father - Stefan Grinevitsky (Russified Stepan Evseevich Grinevsky; Belorussian Stefan Grinevitski, 1843-1914), a representative of the Belarusian gentry of Polesie, Disna district, Vilna province of North-Western Territory of the Russian Empire, for participation in the January Uprising of 1863 was exiled to Kolyvan, Tomsk province. Later he was allowed to move to the Vyatka province, where he arrived in 1868. Mother - Anna Stepanovna Grinevskaya (nee Lepkova; 1857-1895) Russian, daughter of the collegiate secretary Stepan Fedorovich Lepkov and Agrippina Yakovlevna. She graduated from the Vyatka midwife school and received a certificate for the title of midwife and vaccinator. Stepmother - Lidia Avenirovna Grinevskaya (nee Chernysheva, by her first husband Boretskaya) - the second wife of Stepan Evseevich Grinevsky. Daughter of the official Avenir Andreevich Chernyshev. She was born on February 15, 1865. She lived in Yelabuga, where she graduated from the gymnasium. She was married to the postal official Dmitry Boretsky. She had a son Paul from her first marriage (born June 27, 1884). In 1894 she entered the Vyatka midwife school, which she did not graduate due to a remarriage - on May 7, 1895, in the Vladimir Church of Vyatka, a wedding took place with Stepan Evseevich Grinevsky, and on July 9, 1895 L.A. Grinevskaya dropped out of obstetric school of their own free will. Wife - Nina Nikolaevna Green (1894-1970). They had no children.

Slide 3

Alexander Grinevsky was born on August 11 (23), 1880 in the town of Slobodskaya Vyatka province. Since childhood, Green loved books about sailors and travel. He dreamed of going to sea as a sailor and, driven by this dream, made attempts to escape from home.

Slide 4

Films based on his works were made

1958 - Watercolor 1961 - Scarlet Sails 1967 - Running on the Waves 1969 - Lanfier Colony 1972 - Morghiana 1983 - The Man from Green Country (TV show) 1984 - The Shining World 1984 - The Life and Books of Alexander Green (TV show) 1986 - The Golden Chain 1988 - Mister Designer 1990 - One hundred miles down the river 1992 - The road to nowhere 1995 - Gelli and Knock 2007 - Running on the waves 2012 - Green lamp

Slide 5

In 1960, on the occasion of his 80th birthday, the writer's wife opened the House-Museum of the writer in the Old Crimea. In 1970, the Green Literary Memorial Museum was also created in Feodosia. On the centenary of his birth, in 1980, the Alexander Grin House-Museum was opened in the city of Kirov. In 2010, in the town of Slobodskoy, the Alexander Grin Museum of Romanticism was created.

 

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