Flight (play)
Flight is a play by Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov. It is set during the end of the Russian Civil War, when the remnants of the White Army are desperately resisting the Red Army on the Crimean isthmus. The lives of the abandoned Serafima Korzukhina, the university professor Sergei Golubkov and the White generals Charnota and Khludov are closely intertwined.
Written in 1927, the play was rehearsed but never allowed to be performed during Bulgakov's lifetime, as the authorities felt that it glorified the Whites. It wasn't played until 1957, 17 years after Bulgakov's death.
The plays European premiere was at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre in 1972, directed by Val May.[1]
The play is the basis for the film The Flight, which premiered in 1970.
In 1972 Valentin Bibik composed the opera "Flight" op.12/45, by the same name play of Mikhail Bulgakov, which premiered in 2010 under conductor Roman Kofman.
References
- "Bulgakov, Mikhail Afanasievich". SovLit.net Encyclopedia of Soviet Writers. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
External links
- interview with Victoria Bibik by Yulia BENTIA, special to The Day, Kiev, Ukraine
- Flight (Act III: scene VI) on YouTube, the Kiev National Philharmonic orchestra under the baton of Roman Kofman