Russian screenwriter, novelist, journalist (1887–1917)
Anna Mar |
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Born | Anna Yakovlevna Brovar February 19, 1887
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
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Died | April 1, 1917 (aged 30)
Moscow, Russian Empire |
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Burial place | Vvedenskoye Cemetery |
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Other names | Anna Yakovlevna Lenshina, Princess Dream |
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Occupation(s) | Screenwriter, playwright, novelist, journalist |
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Anna Mar (1887–1917; née Anna Yakovlevna Brovar, pseudonym Princess Dream) was a Russian screenwriter, playwright, novelist, and journalist.[1][2][3] She was one of the most prolific screenwriters of early Russian cinema and 13 films were made from her scripts between 1914 and 1918.[2]
Her most significant work is the novel Zhenshchina Na Kreste (English: Woman on the Cross; in a censored version, 1916; the full text was published in 1918).[3][4] From 1914 to 1917, under the pseudonym "Princess Dream", Mar was in charge of the “Intimate Conversations” section of the “Journal for Women.” Her constant dialogue with readers supplied Mar with themes for her many screenplays.[3]
She died of suicide on April 1, 1917, in Moscow.[2]
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