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235:. The banker Melkiel backed her plans and she launched the first ever Russian private theatre in 1880 (officially named the A.A. Brenko Drama Theatre, but popularly known as the Pushkin Theatre – for the simple reason that it was situated close to
258:, although she had the final say. Brenko was driven by the artistic event and she was exploited by other actors and directors. The theatre folded for financial reasons in 1882 (to be later purchased by the entrepreneur
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Brenko went on to teach drama (in her own theatre college between 1890 and 1905) and in 1915 she opened the free
Workers' Theatre where 25 plays were produced in the course of two years.
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and performed, together with some of the actors in her troupe, at battle fronts.
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Brenko authored four plays (1883–1916) and six books of memoirs (1924–1933).
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in 1848 and first worked as a teacher. She trained as an actress in
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at the
Krugosvet Online Encyclopedia // Энциклопедия Кругосвет
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Stage actress, theatrical entrepreneur, playwright, memoirist
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Women in
Russian Theatre: The Actress in the Silver Age
310:. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 75–.
250:Brenko shared management decisions with the actors
437:Dramatists and playwrights from the Russian Empire
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377:. Театр и его история. Анна Алексеевна Бренко.
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220:and married the music critic Iosif Levenson.
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307:Historical Dictionary of Russian Theatre
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223:She had made a name for herself at the
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268:In 1917, Brenko not only embraced the
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304:Laurence Senelick (13 August 2015).
200:, honored in 1924 with the title of
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432:Memoirists from the Russian Empire
336:Catherine Schuler (17 June 2013).
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422:Actresses from the Russian Empire
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181:( А́нна Бренко́)– was a Russian
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342:. Routledge. pp. 115–122.
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202:Meritorious Artist of the RSFSR
143:Meritorious Artist of the RSFSR
427:Theatre managers and producers
375:The Russian Theatre's Hisrotry
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151:Anna Alekseyevna Chelishcheva
21:Eastern Slavic naming customs
417:People from Vladimir, Russia
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391:The Archives of Anna Brenko
159:А́нна Алексе́евна Чели́щева
16:Russian actress (1848–1934)
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19:In this name that follows
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447:Russian women memoirists
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363:Анна Алексеевна Бренко
256:Vasily Andreyev-Burlak
393:/ Бренко А.А., архив.
169:– 15 November 1934,
58:Anna Brenko in 1870s
245:Aleksandr Ostrovsky
241:William Shakespeare
212:Brenko was born in
270:October Revolution
349:978-1-136-15597-0
317:978-1-4422-4927-1
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123:Years active
68:Anna Chelishcheva
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190:entrepreneur
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98:(1934-11-15)
78:7 April 1848
37:Chelishcheva
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412:1934 deaths
407:1848 births
179:Anna Brenko
46:Anna Brenko
33:family name
29:Alekseyevna
401:Categories
288:References
194:playwright
187:theatrical
126:1873–1920s
74:1848-04-07
25:patronymic
198:memoirist
274:Red Army
214:Vladimir
163:Vladimir
82:Vladimir
233:Siberia
155:Russian
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229:Moscow
196:, and
171:Moscow
139:Awards
131:Spouse
104:Moscow
23:, the
344:ISBN
312:ISBN
254:and
243:and
208:Life
175:USSR
108:USSR
93:Died
64:Born
262:).
227:in
35:is
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