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...some time, the celebrated author Alexander Solzhenitsyn has been under attack in the Soviet Union...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Solzhenitsyn: A Candle in the Wind | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

Last month the play finally opened to cheers at the Taganka, Director Yuri Lyubimov's famous experimental theater in Moscow. For many Russians, its debut seemed to signify a small break in the official campaign to silence Russia's independent writers and intellectuals, including Novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Poet Alexander Tvardovsky, who recently handed in his resignation as editor of the liberal magazine Novy Mir (TIME, March...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Union: Poet on a String | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

...Tvardovsky's greatest service to Russia and Russian literature was his discovery and support of the work of Alexander Solzhenitsyn. It was Tvardovsky, for example, who first brought One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (see SHOW BUSINESS) to the attention of Nikita Khrushchev. The Premier was so impressed by the novel that he ordered it to be published in Novy Mir in 1962. But in 1966 Solzhenitsyn's writings were banned and he was expelled from the Soviet Writers Union last November...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Union: The Truth That Hurt | 3/2/1970 | See Source »

...actors to follow such script instructions convincingly? Casper Wrede, the British producer and director of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, has a simple solution: make them cold and miserable. For the filming of Alexander Solzhenitsyn's bleak novel about Stalin's political prisoners, Wrede persuaded a former inmate of a Soviet prison camp, now living in Paris, to make drawings from which a grimly authentic set could be built. Then he took his all-male, largely English cast to a location in Norway 200 miles north of Oslo, where the topography, light conditions and bitter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Simulating Siberia | 3/2/1970 | See Source »

...owner of a Manhattan townhouse, he lives conservatively for a man who earns more than $100,000. In his spare time, he reads (lately Galbraith's Ambassador's Journal and Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich), watches news and sports on TV ("85% of the rest is junk"). Also, "I talk to my wife"-Lorraine Perigord, his third, an accomplished painter whom he married in 1955. Mike has a son by his first marriage, Chris, 22, who was a top reporter at the Harvard University radio station but went into newspapering...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The Mellowing of Mike Malice | 1/19/1970 | See Source »

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