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Askolʹdov, Aleksandr, 1932-2018

LC control no.n 95030380
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingAskolʹdov, Aleksandr, 1932-2018
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Askoldov, Alexander, 1932-2018
Askoldow, Alexander, 1932-2018
Asŭkʻoldopʻŭ, Alleksandŭro, 1932-2018
Аскольдов, Александр, 1932-2018
Аскольдов, Александр Яковлевич, 1932-2018
Associated countrySoviet Union
LocatedKiev (Ukraine)
Birth date1932-06-17
Death date2018-05-21
Place of birthMoscow (Russia)
Place of deathGöteborg (Sweden)
Profession or occupationActors Motion picture producers and directors
Special noteNon-Latin script references not evaluated.
Found inKomissar [MP] 1987: credits (screenplay and direction, Alexander Askoldov)
New York times film review, 6/17/88 (hdg.: Aleksandr Askoldov)
Literaturen in der "Sowjetunion", 1991: t.p. (Alexander Askoldow)
Ėnt︠s︡ikl. kino, WWW 06-17-99 (Askolʹdov, Aleksandr; director)
IMDb Internet movie database, 06-17-99 (Aleksandr Askolʹdov, b. 1937)
LC in OCLC, 06-17-99 (hdg.: Askolʹdov, Aleksandr)
OCLCbib, 06-17-99 (hdg.: Askoldov, Alexander; usage: Alleksandŭro Asŭkʻoldopʻŭ)
Wikipedia, January 1, 2017: Aleksandr Askoldov (Aleksandr Yakovlevich Askoldov, Russian: Александр Яковлевич Аскольдов; born 17 June 1932 in Moscow, USSR, is a Soviet Russian actor and film director, graduated from the Gorky Literary Institute. After finishing the advanced directing course he directed his first film, Commissar (1967). The film was banned for more than 20 years and put an end to his career as a director in the USSR.)
   <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandr_Askoldov>
IMDb, January 1, 2017: Aleksandr Askoldov (born on July 17, 1932)
   <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0039487/>
New York times WWW site, viewed June 7, 2018 (in obituary published June 6: Alexander Askoldov; b. Alexander Yakovlevich Askoldov, June 17, 1932; grew up in Kiev; d. May 21, Gothenburg, Sweden, aged 85; Soviet-era director whose one film, The commissar, was banned by censors in the late 1960s for its sympathetic portrayal of a Jewish family, only to resurface two decades later to great acclaim)
Associated languagerus