Восхищена Вами, калбатоно Натрули! Красивая женщина, работающая, в одиночку вырастила двоих сыновей и сделала всё, чтобы развить их таланты. Голос Гелы уникален от природы, но кто знает, как бы всё сложилось, если бы Вы не помогли ему...
The movie war and peace... The russian film from the 1960's... excellent! I remember watching this movie late one weekend night on PBS channel 12 years ago.
Agora todos estão juntos Pra Representar, uma Nova Valsa Nova Flores Abrindo, Suas Próprias Dança Dançando, levemente Frutuano Em, Grandes Nomes, JUNTOS Vendo Há todos os seus sonhos Sejam felizes Por, Interpretar qualquer coisa, Que Transformou Muitas, Coisas Que Nem, Tudo Vai estar juntos, contigo ande For Fazer Os MESMOS Livros Novos, com A Únicas, Vozes voltando Novamente, Prá Representar cada Casal juntos Dançando Levemente E uma Mulher Que, Ninguém Pode está perto, Pra Convidar, Ele E, Uma Folha, de Pagamento pra Trazer Outros Jovens juntos Nó meio do Salão Quando, Estiver Prescrevendo SEUS PRÓPRIOS Vídeos, TODOS juntos Dançando Levemente, com a Minha, Próprias Palavras Quando, Já Encontrou No MESMOS Cânticos, FLORESCENDO Os seus próprios vídeos
Боярская, все везде портит, в роли Екатерины Великой, это вообще уродство, так играть, она в прислуги не годится, не понимаю кто ее везде показывает с ее внешностью, нос вздёрнутый, глаза злющие, грудь провалилась... 😅😢😂
Вальс Шостаковича это то что нельзя словами описать, что то заоблачное, Тихонов с Савельевой станцевали так как никто и никогда,столько невинности в этом танце,музыка и фильм на века
В фильме "Война и мир" князь Болконский и Наташа Ростова танцуют под вальс выдающегося композитора Вячеслава Александровича Овчинникова, а не Дмитрия Шостаковича.
(September 12 [25] 1906[1][2][...], Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Province, Russian Empire[3][5] - August 9 1975[3][4][...], Moscow, RSFSR, USSR[3][5]) - Soviet composer, pianist, teacher, musical and public figure. People's Artist of the USSR (1954), Hero of Socialist Labor (1966). Winner of the Lenin Prize (1958), five Stalin Prizes (1941, 1942, 1946, 1950, 1952), The State Prize of the USSR (1968), the State Prize of the RSFSR named after M. I. Glinka (1974). He is an Oscar nominee for the music for the film Khovanshchina[6], as well as a two-time Grammy nominee for Piano Concerto No. 2 and Symphony No. 4[7]. One of the greatest composers of the 20th century, the author of 15 symphonies and 15 quartets, six concerts, two operas, an operetta, three ballets, numerous works of chamber music, as well as music for films and theatrical productions. In 1957-1974 - Secretary of the Board of the Union of Composers of the USSR, in 1960-1968 - Chairman of the Board of the Union of Composers of the RSFSR.
It's strange, that this wonderful scene which shows the representation of aristocratic self confidence was created by a Russian director in the Soviet Union of the 60th. At least, the Bolsheviks after Stalin never tried, to destroy the culture of their country. Despite of the fact, that Tolstoj and Dostojewski were deeply religious, their books were never banned or rewritten in the SU, not even during the reign of Stalin. See the difference !
@@schurlbirkenbach1995 Until the seventeenth year, soldiers, peasants, and workers were not considered human beings. For example, there was a notice in the park: Dogs and lower ranks are not allowed to enter the park.
@@schurlbirkenbach1995 "Measures amounting to mockery were added to the usual military regime. Contemporaries well remember the inscription at the entrance to Primorsky Boulevard (In Sevastopol. - I.P.): "do not drive dogs, lower ranks are not allowed to enter." (Lychev I. Memoirs of potemkinets. To the twentieth anniversary of the revolutionary mutiny on the battleship Potemkin / With a preface and ed. Zofa. M.-L.: Molodaya gvardiya, 1925. p. 18) I lived in the barracks opposite the magnificent city garden, my daily walk was through its shady wonderful alleys. These walks were shared by my fox terrier Boer. One day, as I was entering the garden, I caught sight of the newly posted paper on the gate, as various orders of the authorities were usually posted. “Lower ranks and dogs are not allowed in.” General Brusilov A.A. My memories / Comp. V.A. Avdeev, S.G. Nelipovich. M.: Olma-press Starry World, 2004. pp.42-43 "I remember how my valet Ivan, noticing my loneliness, advised me to go for a walk - either along the embankment or in the Summer Garden. It already struck me then that the entrance to this garden was forbidden to “dogs and lower ranks.” Later, when I joined the regiment, I was outraged when I learned that Sergeant Nikolai Pavlovich had to be content with a dusty regimental yard for walks with his children, while in the Summer Garden, beardless junkers of the first year of service sat on cozy benches with young ladies." (Ignatiev A.A. Fifty years in the ranks. Moscow: Voenizdat, 1986. p. 83) "The uniform of a soldier - defender of the Fatherland - has never been held in high esteem. In many garrisons, absurd restrictions were imposed on soldiers, such as the prohibition to walk on the “sunny” side of crowded streets; the St. Petersburg commandant asked the mayor to allow lower ranks, contrary to existing rules, not to cross tram cars to the exit to the front platform, “... due to the inconvenience of meeting with officers and finding them in the same room”... Etc. But not only the statute and custom put unnecessary restrictions on the soldier in everyday life, but also the public. Non-military people who said “you” to a tramp considered themselves entitled to address a soldier as “you”. Not anecdotes, but authentic facts - inscriptions above the entrance to some public places: “dogs and lower ranks are strictly prohibited from entering.”.. And the soldier remembered the “dog” comparisons in the 17th year! The soldier remembered in such a way that for many months public places became unvisited across the face of the country, the streets impassable, the roads impassable." (Denikin A.I. The Old Army. Officers. M.: Iris-press, 2005. p. 129)
On the one hand, you are right... but on the other hand, humanity must preserve the best that has happened in history.The Soviet Composer understood this:(September 12 [25] 1906[1][2][...], Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Province, Russian Empire[3][5] - August 9 1975[3][4][...], Moscow, RSFSR, USSR[3][5]) - Soviet composer, pianist, teacher, musical and public figure. People's Artist of the USSR (1954), Hero of Socialist Labor (1966). Winner of the Lenin Prize (1958), five Stalin Prizes (1941, 1942, 1946, 1950, 1952), The State Prize of the USSR (1968), the State Prize of the RSFSR named after M. I. Glinka (1974). He is an Oscar nominee for the music for the film Khovanshchina[6], as well as a two-time Grammy nominee for Piano Concerto No. 2 and Symphony No. 4[7]. One of the greatest composers of the 20th century, the author of 15 symphonies and 15 quartets, six concerts, two operas, an operetta, three ballets, numerous works of chamber music, as well as music for films and theatrical productions. In 1957-1974 - Secretary of the Board of the Union of Composers of the USSR, in 1960-1968 - Chairman of the Board of the Union of Composers of the RSFSR.
Let me correct you: One of the best Soviet composers. His great-grandfather was a Pole, a participant in the Polish uprising of 1830, after which he was exiled to Russia in the Urals. Despite the civil war, famine and devastation, the Bolsheviks not only did not close any institutes and conservatories, but also opened new ones. So he is a deeply Soviet man.