The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Atamanov, Lev, 1905-1981

LC control no.no2010127368
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingAtamanov, Lev, 1905-1981
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Атаманов, Лев, 1905-1981
Атаманов, Л. (Лев), 1905-1981
Atamanov, L. (Lev), 1905-1981
Other standard no.0000000080944570
14967896
Q2395785
Associated countryArmenia
Associated placeSoviet Union
Place of birthMoscow (Russia)
Place of deathMoscow (Russia)
Field of activityAnimated film Soviet animation
Profession or occupationMotion picture producers and directors
Special noteNon-Latin references not evaluated.
URIs added to this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. Please do not remove or edit the URIs.
Found inLosharik, 2006: title frame (Л. Атаманов = L. Atamanov)
Internet movie database, Aug. 5, 2010 (Lev Atamanov, 1905-1981; director, producer, writer, birth name: Lev Konstantinovich Atamanov; alternative name: L. Atamanov)
Wikipedia, 7 Jan. 2022: entry for Lev Atamanov (Russian: Лев Атаманов = Lev Atamanov) born Feb. 21, 1905 in Moscow, Russian Empire, died 12 Feb. 1981 in Moscow, Soviet Union, aged 75; one of the foremost Soviet animation film directors and one of the founders of Soviet animation art. He is the director of the famous classics of Soviet animation, such as the prize-winning fairy tales The Yellow Stork (1950), Scarlet Flower (1952), The Golden Antelope (1954), the full-length animation The Snow Queen (1957), and the modern satirical tale The Key (1961))
   <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lev_Atamanov>
T: New York Times style magazine, Dec. 5, 2021: in an article entitled "The magician's flight" on page 104 (Miyazaki looked to works like ... the Armenian animator Lev Atamanov's "The Snow Queen" (1957), whose heroine self-effacingly sacrifices her shoes to a river to beg for help in finding her lost friend, and whose gleefully amoral, knife-wielding Robber Girl -- who captures the heroine and steals her bonnet and muff, then is horrified and furious to find herself moved to tears by her victim's tale of woe -- is a forerunner to [Miyazaki's] wolf girl of "Princess Mononoke.")
Associated languagerus