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Anton Chekhov

Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (January 29, 1860 - July 14/15, 1904) was a doctor and writer.

He was born in Taganrog[?], Russia.

He qualified as a doctor in 1884 although he rarely practised. After a successful production of The Seagull by the Moscow Art Theatre, he wrote three more plays for the same company: Uncle Vanya, The Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard. In 1901 he married Olga Leonardovna Knipper (1870-1959), an actress who performed in his plays.

Chekhov is one of the few Russian dramatists whose works are well known in western Europe. His plays commonly feature the struggle of a sensitive individual to maintain his integrity against the temptations of worldly success. A recurring theme is the pointlessness of radical, human/mechanical change, versus the powerful inertia of slow natural/organic cycles.

He died in Badenweiler, Germany of tuberculosis and is now buried in Novodevichy Cemetery.

Table of contents

Works

Plays

Nonfiction

Short Stories

Many of these were written under the pseudonym "Antosha Chekhonte".

Novels

 

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