Konstantin (Kirill) Mikhailovich Simonov - poet, prose writer, playwright, publicist - was born 15 (28) November 1915 in Petrograd.

In his autobiography he recalls: “I lived my childhood and youth in Ryazan and Saratov. Father (stepfather. - Ed.) Was a military man, and many of my memories of that time are associated with the life and life of military towns and commander's hostels ”(Three notebooks. M., 1964, p. 584). A participant in the Japanese and World War I, his stepfather became a devoted father to the future poet, in the poem "Father" Simonov addressed him with words of heartfelt gratitude. Mother loved poetry, knew by heart the verses of Pushkin, Lermontov, Tyutchev; conveyed a love of literature and her son. In 1930 Simonov graduated from seven classes of a labor school, then studied at the FZU (factory school) of metalworkers and became a metal turner.

In 1931 the family moved to Moscow; Simonov graduated from the FZU of precision mechanics and worked as a turner at an aircraft plant, then in the mechanical workshop of the Mezhrabpomfilm film factory, as a turner at the Mosfilm film studio. He combined his work in production with his studies at the Literary Institute. M. Gorky.

In 1938 published a poem "Pavel Cherny" and a collection of poems "Real people" as a separate book. The first works "Winner" ( 1937 ) - about N. Ostrovsky, "Battle on the Ice" ( 1938 ), "Suvorov" ( 1939 ) attract attention for their multidimensionality, but in these poems the young author wrote, as it were, about one thing - about courage, about human dignity, about readiness for heroism. The poem "Murmansk Diaries" ( 1938 ), praising the "daring world of great desires and passions," and poems about Amundsen, about the Spanish republican. Simonov became the personification of the young poetry of the pre-war years, earning recognition for its versatility, energy, perseverance, ability to work, clarity of thought.

Poems late 1930s "Battle on the Ice", "Winner", "Suvorov" not only signaled the arrival of a large-scale poet in literature, but also expressed the feeling of a military threat, the approach of war. Her breath is heard from the fronts of Spain, fighting against fascism - and Simonov writes the poem "The General" and other poems about Spain.

In 1938 Simonov graduated from the Literary Institute. M. Gorky.

In 1939 on the instructions of the Political Administration of the Red Army, he left for Khalkhin-Gol in connection with the Japanese aggression in Mongolia as a war correspondent for the newspaper "Heroic Red Army". He writes the poem "Letters Home", the poem "Far in the East", etc.

In 1940 wrote his first play "The Story of One Love", at the end of the same year it was staged at the Moscow Theater. Lenin Komsomol. Wide popularity fell to the lot of his next play - "A guy from our city", staged in the same theater on the eve of the war, in March 1941... In the image of her hero Sergei Lukonin, the author embodied the honesty and courage of his generation, his disinterestedness and patriotism. Middle June 1941 Simonov graduated from the courses of war correspondents at the Military-Political Academy.

June 24, 1941 Simonov went to work in the newspaper "Battle Banner" of the 3rd Army in the Grodno region. Then he was appointed to the editorial office of the newspaper of the Western Front "Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda", at the same time he sent war correspondence to "Izvestia". At the end of July for the entire period of the war he became a war correspondent for the Krasnaya Zvezda newspaper, where he sent poems, essays, articles from Murmansk, Odessa, from the Don and Karelian fronts. He worked on the Western and Southern Fronts, in the Primorsky Army (Odessa), in the Special Crimean Army, in the Black Sea Fleet, in the Murmansk direction of the Karelian Front, in the Northern Fleet, then again on the Western Front. The essay "Off the coast of Romania" Simonov wrote after a campaign from besieged Odessa in a submarine, where he spent 10 days among people who were to "either survive together or die together." Then Simonov landed behind enemy lines beyond the Arctic Circle, came under bombardment in the seamen of Feodosia, repulsed by a landing party, worked on the Transcaucasian, Bryansk, Stalingrad fronts.

The poet's fame, already at the beginning of the war, grew into popular love for him, Simonov's poems not only taught how to fight, but literally helped to live. The poem "Wait for me, and I will return ..." ( 1941 ) has been rewritten millions of times. The high emotional intensity of the verse expressed the pathos of the times, behind the poeticization of female fidelity the idea of \u200b\u200bfidelity to the motherland arose. "Wait for me ..." has become an irreplaceable part of the country's spiritual life. Many composers wrote music to him, among them A. Novikov, V. Solovyov-Sedoy, M. Blanter, M. Koval, V. Muradeli.

Simonov's poems of the first war years "Do you remember, Alyosha, the roads of Smolensk ...", "Homeland", "The major brought the boy on the gun carriage ...", "I don't remember, day or ten ...", "Attack" and others continued the best traditions of Russian classical poetry. They were addressed not to the abstract generalized reader, but to the responsive heart of everyone. The most striking example is Simonov's poem "Kill him!", Calling for a rebuff to the enemy. July 18, 1942it appeared in the newspaper Krasnaya Zvezda, the next day in Komsomolskaya Pravda, July 20 in "Windows TASS", he was broadcast on the radio, dropped from airplanes printed on leaflets. As S. Baruzdin recalls, everyone at the front and in the rear was shocked by Simonov's poem-ballad "The Son of an Artilleryman" ( 1941 ). The "Open Letter" ( 1943 ) Simonova - a rebuke to a woman who betrayed a soldier on the day when he and his platoon stood to death on the front line.

Simonov also refers to the events of the war in the play Russian People ( 1942 ), which was one of the most significant works of Soviet drama during the war. Pravda published the play Russian People during the dramatic retreat of our troops in the summer of 1942 alongside the most important military materials. This play was published in besieged Leningrad. In the 1970s under the name "Captain Safonov" it was staged in Vietnam.

Simonov acted as a kind of scout for new topics: he was the first in the theater to raise the topic "Russian people", the first to write a story about the Battle of Stalingrad "Days and Nights" 1943-44 ). The story was created quickly, but with forced interruptions and in a special nervous tension - between four trips to the front. The author's intention was to give not a pathetic outcome of the Battle of Stalingrad, but a harsh picture of the battles of those days.

Victorious 1945 Simonov met in the ranks of the fighters of the 4th Ukrainian Front, marched through the Transcarpathian Ukraine, southern Poland, Slovakia, and worked in the Czechoslovak corps. IN the last days battles for Berlin was in parts of the 1st Ukrainian and 1st Belorussian fronts. He was present at the signing on May 8, 1945 of the Act of Germany's unconditional surrender in Berlin (Karls-Horst).

In 1944 Simonov visited Romania, Poland, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Italy. After the war he visited Japan, China, USA and other countries. As a result of these trips, the plays "Under the chestnut trees of Prague" ( 1945 ) and "Russian question" ( 1946 ), a book of poems "Friends and Enemies" ( 1946-49 ), the book of essays "Fighting China"; in China, Simonov was a Pravda correspondent for the 4th Field Chinese Army. Simonov's story "Smoke of the Fatherland" ( 1946-56 ), which caused controversy in criticism, and the lyric story "The Case of Polynin" ( 1969 ) revealed new facets of Simonov's skill.

In 1950-53 Simonov was the editor-in-chief of Literaturnaya Gazeta, in 1946-50 and in 1954-58 - Chief editor of the magazine "New World".

1958 to 1960 lived in Tashkent, worked as a correspondent for Pravda in the republics of Central Asia, traveled to the Pamir, Tien Shan, Hungry Steppe, Karakum, along the routes of gas pipelines under construction.

In 1963-67 as a correspondent for "Pravda" he visited Mongolia, Taimyr, Yakutia, Krasnoyarsk Territory, Irkutsk Region, Kola Peninsula, etc.

In 1970 was in Vietnam, published the book "Vietnam, winter of the seventieth ..." ( 1970-71 ). In the dramatic poems about the Vietnam War, "Bombing in the Squares", "Over Laos", "Dzhurka" and others, there are comparisons with the Great Patriotic War.

1950-60s Simonov continues to work in prose on the theme of the Great Patriotic War. In 1959 the novel "The Living and the Dead" was released, followed by the novels "Soldiers are not born" ( 1964 ) and "Last Summer" ( 1971 ). These works made up the trilogy "The Living and the Dead", which is dedicated to three different stages of the Great Patriotic War: the first book - the first weeks of the war, retreat, the second book - the decisive battle on the Volga, in the third - 1944, the battles for the liberation of Belarus. Simonov's constant attention and addiction to people who are strong, beautiful in their courage and purposefulness.

Depicting the decisive stages of the war, the battles of Moscow and Stalingrad, the author creates an artistic history of the entire war. The trilogy was well received by the readers; based on the novel "The Living and the Dead", a 2-part film was produced.

1970s were also fruitful. In addition to "The Last Summer", readers and viewers received the stories "Twenty Days Without War" and "We Will Not See You", the movie "Twenty Days Without War", two volumes of diaries "Different Days of War", a book of speeches about literature "Today and Long "; to this must be added articles, essays, TV speeches. The activity of Simonov as a translator deserves special attention; M. Vagif, M. Vidadi, S. Vurgun, B. Shinkuba, G. Gulyam, H. Alimdzhan, A. Mukhtar, M. Karim, K. Kaladze, F. Khalvashi, R. Gamzatov, E. Mezhelaitis, V. Nezval, V. Tavlai, N. Hikmet, I. Taufer, D. Methodiev, Zulfiya, R. Kipling.

The person who will be discussed later was an amazing, extraordinary playwright, prose writer, poet and writer of the Soviet era. His fate was very interesting. She presented him with many difficult tests, but he withstood them in a dignified manner and passed away as a real fighter, who completed his civil and military duty to the end. As a legacy to his descendants, he left his memory of the war, expressed in numerous poems, essays, plays and novels. His name is Konstantin Simonov. The biography of this man, truly, deserves special attention. In the literary field, he had no equal, because it is one thing to invent and fantasize, and quite another to see everything with your own eyes. But first things first.

Parents of Simonov Konstantin and a short biography of the family

The Simonov family is of rare aristocratic blood. His father was the nobleman Mikhail Agafangelovich Simonov - Major General, a graduate of the Imperial Nicholas Academy, holder of the Order of Merit to the Fatherland. The latest data about him date back to 1920-1922. They talk about his emigration to Poland.

On the maternal side, the writer's surname comes from Rurik. Simonov's mother was called Alexandra Leonidovna Obolenskaya. She was a princess. The ancestor of this surname was Prince Obolensky Ivan Mikhailovich. All the nobles who wore it were his descendants.

Konstantin Simonov: biography and creativity (briefly)

Simonov Kirill (this is his real name) was born in the then Petrograd in 1915 on November 15 (28). He did not know his father at all, since he went to the First World War and disappeared without a trace. Although later his relatives claimed that his father had really emigrated to Poland and intended to take his wife and son, apparently their interests did not coincide.

When Simonov was four years old, he and his mother moved to Ryazan. And there Kirill had a stepfather - Ivanishev A.G. This was a former officer of the tsarist army, a colonel. After the revolution, he joined the ranks of the Red Army and first taught tactics at a military school, but later became the commander of the Red Army. As in any military family, the life of Ivanishev, his wife and adopted son took place in constant travel to garrisons and commander's hostels. Simonov was afraid of his stepfather, since he was very strict, but at the same time he respected him very much, because it was he who gave him the hardening that came in handy later. The poet will even dedicate his touching poem "Stepfather" to him in the future.

Study and the beginning of the creative path

The biography of the writer Konstantin Simonov indicates that he finished the seven-year period in Saratov and instead of the eighth grade he learned to be a turner and went to work. His salary, however small, was a good support for their meager family budget. Then the whole family moved to Moscow. It happened in 1931. For several years Simonov was a turner at an aircraft plant. During these years he began to compose his first poems. In 1934, the young man entered them. Gorky. In 1936, Konstantin Simonov first published his poems in the magazines Molodaya Gvardiya and Oktyabr.

Work as a correspondent

In 1939, Simonov was sent as a war correspondent to Khalkin Gol. His real name is Cyril, he changed to "Constantine" due to the fact that he badly pronounced the letter "r". From that moment he was Simonov Konstantin. His biography continued with significant, but difficult events.

When the war with Germany began, he was 25 years old. On the very first mission, he, along with his comrades in arms, took the main blow from the most powerful tank units of the German army.

Defense of Mogilev

In July 1941, Simonov arrived at a rifle regiment, which was located 6 km from Mogilev. The task of the unit was to defend this city. The battle went on for 14 hours at Buinicheskoye field. In this battle, the Germans suffered colossal losses of equipment - 39 tanks were simply burned.

The dead fellow soldiers of Simonov will forever remain in his memory and have become models of courage and true heroism. When he returned to Moscow from the encirclement, the first thing in the newspaper "Izvestia" on July 20 appeared his first war report - the essay "Hot Day" and photographs of destroyed tanks.

At the end of the war, Simonov was looking for his colleagues who participated in the battle on Buinicheskoye field, but neither his commander Kutepov, nor those who were with him in the terrible moments next to him, survived. They fought to the end and laid their lives on the altar of a common cause.

And the victory over the Germans was met in Berlin by the correspondent of "Krasnaya Zvezda" Simonov Konstantin. The biography of this man tells amazing facts from his difficult front-line fate. He had to visit besieged Odessa, he went into battle on a submarine, attacked with infantry, landed in the enemy's rear with scouts, got into a bombing raid in Feodosia.

Awards and literary works

The poet Konstantin Simonov, whose biography is expressed in this case very briefly, was awarded in 1942 the Order of the "Battle Red Banner". In 1943 Simonov was awarded the rank of lieutenant colonel. Front-line soldiers who faced him during the war years noted that he was a very brave and reliable person. This is how his stepfather raised him, who, perhaps, was not as affectionate as the child wanted then, but he instilled in his stepson a sense of duty and honor of a real officer.

The writer himself admitted that all the material was given to him by the work of a war correspondent. During the war Simonov Konstantin (his biography confirms this) wrote three plays, two collections of poems "War" and "With you and without you", the story "Days and Nights."

Personal life

First, Evgenia Laskina, a philologist by education, became his wife. She was also in charge of one of the departments of the Moscow magazine. In 1939, the couple had a son, Alexei.

In 1940, Simonov began an affair with Valentina Serova. It happened not long before the death of her husband, the hero of Spain, Anatoly Serov. The whole country followed this novel. She is a beautiful and bright movie star, the standard of femininity itself, and he is a popular poet and writer who never missed a single of her performances and always sat in the front rows with flowers. They have been married for 15 years.

Larisa Zhadova, the Hero's daughter, became the third wife of Konstantin Simonov Soviet Union Alexei Zhadov and the widow of the poet Semyon Gudzenko, Simonov's friend. He adopted her daughter, and then they had a common child. The girl was named Alexandra. The third wife of the writer also bequeathed her ashes to scatter over the Buinicheskoye field, which happened a year and a half after her husband's death.

Konstantin Simonov was a very sincere poet and writer. His complete biography contains a lot of very interesting facts, which are still used by modern directors in their documentaries and feature films.

Once the writer was asked what was the most difficult during the war. He replied: "To leave people in the most critical situations for them."

Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov has a rather rich biography. This man did not forget about literature even during the Second World War. During his life, he managed to do a lot and left a mark for his admirers.

1. The real name of Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov is Cyril.

2. This writer did not know anything about his father because he disappeared during the First World War.

3. From the age of 4, Simonov and his mother began to live in Ryazan.

4. The first wife of Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov was Natalya Viktorovna Ginzburg.

5. The writer dedicated a wonderful poem to his wife with the title "Five Pages".

6. Since 1940, the writer was in love with actress Valentina Serova, who at that time was the wife of the brigade commander Serov.

7. The main inspiration for the writer was precisely love.

8. The last wife of Simonov is Larisa Alekseevna Zhadova, from whom he had a daughter.

9. The first poems of Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov were published in the editions "October" and "Young Guard".

10.Simonov chose a pseudonym for himself because it was difficult for him to pronounce his name Cyril.

11.In 1942, the writer was awarded the title of senior battalion commissar.

12.After the end of the war, Simonov already had the rank of colonel.

13. Mom Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov was a princess.

14.Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov's dad was of Armenian origin.

15.In childhood, the future writer was brought up by his stepfather.

16. The writer spent his childhood in the commander's hostels and military camps.

17.Mother Simonov never recognized his pseudonym.

18. Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov died of cancer in Moscow.

19. In his youth, Simonov had to work as a metal turner, but even then he had a passion for literature.

20. Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov is considered the laureate of six Stalin prizes.

21. Despite the fact that his stepfather treated the future writer strictly, Constantine respected and loved him.

22.Simonov was able to combine two professions into a single one: military science and literature. He was a war correspondent.

23. Konstantin Mikhailovich wrote his first poem in the house of his own aunt of a noble family, Sophia Obolenskaya.

24. In 1952, the people were presented with the first novel by Simonov entitled "comrades in arms."

25. Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov became in demand only in the 40-50s.

26. Only 7 people took part in the farewell ceremony with the great writer of Soviet times: a widow with children and Mogilev local historians.

27. In the postwar years, Simonov had to work as an editor in the magazine "New World".

28. This writer had no respect for Solzhenitsyn, Akhmatova and Zoshchenko.

29.The first wife of Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov was from a respected noble family.

30. When Simonov's second wife, with whom he lived for 15 long years, died, he sent her a bouquet of 58 roses.

31. After the death of the writer, his body was cremated, and the ashes were scattered over the Buinichesky field.

32. Until 1935, Simonov worked at the plant.

33. After the war, Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov visited the USA, Japan and China.

34. The writer had a speech defect.

35. Films were shot based on the scripts of most of the works of this creator.

36.Shortly before his own death, Simonov managed to burn all the records that had anything to do with the painful love for Serova.

37.The most touching poem from Simonov's work was dedicated to Serova.

38. Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov had to treat his wife Valentin Serov for alcoholism.

39.The writer's stepfather participated in the German and Japanese war, and therefore the discipline in their home was severe.

40.Simonov was considered the first person who began to study trophy documents and extract reliable information from them.

41. When Simonov's wife died, he was resting in Kislovodsk.

42 In the Gorky Literary Institute, the future writer received a successful education.

43.Simonov's service began at Khalkin-Gol, where he met Georgy Zhukov.

44. It was Simonov's first wife who insisted on the publication of Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita.

45 At the age of 30, Simonov finished fighting.

46. \u200b\u200bKonstantin Mikhailovich Simonov was present at the signing of the act of surrender of enemy Germany.

47. Konstantin Mikhailovich gave a harsh assessment of Stalin.

48.Simonov was considered the only Soviet writer who gave answers to every letter.

49. In addition to the fact that Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov was a writer, he was also considered a screenwriter of that time.

50 The stepfather of the writer who raised him was a teacher.

Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov is a wonderful Russian poet. Kostya Simonov was born in November 1915 in Petrograd (St. Petersburg). His father is Colonel of the General Staff Mikhail, his mother is Princess Obolenskaya. A boy was born in a difficult time for the country. Walked First World War, followed by the revolution, then the years of the Civil. Kostya's father is missing. Simonov moved to Ryazan with his mother.

In Ryazan, his mother marries Ivanishchev. The new husband, a colonel in the Russian army, was now teaching at the local military school. The boy grew up in a good family. Order and discipline reigned at home. --- After graduating from school, Simonov mastered the wisdom of the profession of a turner. In 1931 the family moved to Moscow, where Konstantin went to work at an aircraft plant. Soon he will change his place of work and will work as a technician at Mosfilm. At the age of 16, Simonov began writing poetry, and went to study at the Gorkov University. The young man studied the first three courses in the evening department, then transferred to the day department.

The first poems of Simonov were published in 1936. Two years later (in 1938) Konstantin Mikhailovich graduated from the institute and immediately became the editor of the Literaturnaya Gazeta. I entered the postgraduate course of the Institute of Philosophy and Literature, finished only a year. It was not calm in the east, a conflict flared up with Japan, and the poet was sent to Khalkhin Gol. There he worked for the newspaper "Heroic Red Army". On a business trip, the poet writes a cycle of poems about Mongolia. The cycle was called "To neighbors in a yurt". During the Soviet-Finnish war, the poet studied at the courses of war correspondents at the Frunze Military Academy. From the pen of Simonov, such works as "The Story of One Love", "A Guy from Our City" are published.

With the outbreak of World War II, Simonov ended up at the front. The poet spent the entire war in the army, he was called one of the most courageous and easy-going correspondents. Constantine saw it as his duty to equate his literary work with arms. The War years left in Simonov's soul a lot of impressions and experiences, which were reflected on paper. Everyone knows about the war verses of Simonov, who warmed the hearts of Russian soldiers in the trenches of the Second World War.

In 1942, Konstantin Mikhailovich joined the party. He became a senior battalion commissar. A year later, the commissioner was awarded the rank of lieutenant colonel. When the war ended, the poet became a colonel. Simonov, the correspondent, was not looking for hot soldiers' tales, he was not looking for eyewitnesses to the events. He himself was always at the forefront, and could tell no less than others. He was among the defenders of Odessa, participated in the Battle of Stalingrad, in the Battle of Kursk. Operation Bagration also did not go without him, the liberation of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria and the capture of Berlin - Simonov was everywhere. For four years of the Great Patriotic War the poet received four military orders.

When the war ended, Simonov was sent on a business trip abroad. The poet visited China, USA, Japan, France, Canada. During his trips he wrote several plays and poems. It is worth noting that the poet was awarded as many as six Stalin prizes for his work (!).

Simonov was the editor of Novy Mir, Literaturnaya Gazeta, deputy general secretary of the Writers' Union, was a deputy of the Supreme Soviet and a member of the CPSU Central Committee. During the postwar years, Simonov has done a huge amount of work. He was engaged in creativity and helped others. He talked a lot with the front-line soldiers, using his position, helped them with "earthly questions" and questions of creativity.

Konstantin Simonov died at the end of August 1979 in Moscow. The poet's ashes are scattered over the Buynichnoye field according to his will. The fact is that on July 13, 1941, it was here that he stood to death as part of the 388th Infantry Regiment, and here for the first time he realized that there was a chance to win the war.

Constantine's work was close to the people. He spent the war years at the forefront, and along with Tvardovsky, he is the most popular poet of the 20th century.

It seems both simple and almost ordinary, only for some reason tears well up in my eyes

There is practically no humor in this story, and it will not fit into the usual 2-3 paragraphs on the Internet. But, believe me, it's worth it. Moreover, the story is, in fact, exclusive, it sounded several times in a close circle, without being carried out. Now it looks like it’s time for more coverage, just before Victory Day.

In the 70s, our family lived in Rostov-on-Don at the address: Krepost pereulok, house 141, apt. 48. An ordinary brick five-story building in the city center, across the road obliquely from the Breeze pool, if anyone is interested in the exact location.

There and now someone lives in our two-room Khrushchev. As well as on the floor above, in the 51st apartment, in a one-room. But during my childhood, grandmother Sonia lived in apartment number 51, a quiet smiling old woman. I remember her badly, one might say, I don’t remember anything at all, except that she always had a soft plastic bag with caramels in the hallway, which she treated me to, who came running for salt or some other household errands.

My mother and Sofya Davidovna often talked, the neighbors at that time were much closer to each other, therefore, the relationship was more open.

Many years passed, we moved long ago, and one day my mother told me an amazing story. She, of course, learned this from a neighbor, so now it turns out - "from third parties", excuse me if I am mistaken somewhere. I tell you how I heard it.

Sofia Davidovna studied in Moscow in her youth, did an internship in some publication, and when the war began she became a stenographer-typist in the editorial office of the Krasnaya Zvezda newspaper. There were several young girls of them, and they worked mainly for the grandees of Soviet journalism - that summer of 1941, Sonia got Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov, it was his texts that she reprinted most of the time.

And the time was hard. The Germans approached Moscow, daily air raids, the editorial office moved somewhere in the suburbs of the capital, in fact, an evacuation is being prepared. And suddenly, in the midst of all this nightmare, they announce: "There is a concert in Moscow! At the Philharmonic! There are invitation cards for the newspaper, who wants to go?"

Everyone wanted to go. We found some kind of bus, or a lorry, a full body of music lovers, including Sophia and Simonov. In the yard, either the end of summer, or the beginning of autumn, we arrived without incident.

And there is beauty - ladies in fashionable dresses, officers in ceremonial uniforms, a few civilians also found something to dress up in. Our girls are staring, mass famous people, what are you! On the stage - the orchestra ... then the memories are blurred, like my mother hesitantly recalls that it was about the premiere of Shostakovich's symphony. But in general, you feel the atmosphere, right? A piece of a happy peaceful life.

In the middle of the first act, air defense sirens begin to howl. The orchestra stops playing, the manager comes out and says: "Comrades, we have an unexpected break, whoever wants can go down to the foyer, there is a bomb shelter, it will be safer." The hall sits in silence, not a single person rises from his seat. "Comrades, I ask you - go down to the bomb shelter!" In response, silence, even the chairs do not creak. The steward stood, stood, threw up his hands and left the stage. The orchestra continued to play until the end of the first act.

Applause died down, and only then everyone went down to the foyer, where they waited for the alarm. Sonia, of course, looks after "her" Simonov, how he is there and with whom. Everyone knew about his romance with Valentina Serova, and it had to happen - at this concert they almost accidentally met.

Serova was with some military men, Simonov grabbed a desperately rebuffing Sofka, went up to the actress with her and introduced them to each other. This, of course, was more likely a reason to start a conversation, but that was enough for the young stenographer - of course, Serova herself, the star of the screen! ..

Then Simonov and Serova stepped aside and there, behind the columns, they talked for a long time about something. The conversation went on in a slightly raised tone, everyone around delicately, as it were, did not notice what was happening. Simonov asked Serov about something, she shook her head, he insisted on an answer, but as a result he only achieved that Valentina Vasilyevna turned around and left Simonov alone at these columns.

Then the beginning of the second act is announced, everyone returns to the hall, wave of the conductor's baton, and the music rumbles again. Time flies by and almost at night the truck is driving back, spectators are shaking in the back, a drizzle is drizzling. Sophia glances furtively at Simonov, who sits in silence, smoking cigarettes, one after another ...

They arrive at the location, everyone goes to sleep, full of impressions.

In the middle of the night, at three o'clock, our heroine wakes up from the fact that a messenger wakes her up: "Sofka, get up, she urgently demands you!" She, asleep, hastily dressed, runs into the house where Simonov lived. Konstantin Mikhailovich is standing at a dark window, looking into the distance. "Sophia, sit down at the typewriter" - and begins to dictate:

"Wait for me, and I will return, just wait very much,
Wait for the yellow rains to bring sadness
Wait for the snow to be swept, wait for the heat
Wait, when others are not expected, having forgotten yesterday ... "

And Sofka knocks on the keys and cries. And tears fall on the first printed copy of the famous poem.

I thought for a long time whether to write this post. After all, there is no written evidence. Sofya Davidovna Yukelson died in the late eighties, no other similar memories could be found, Yandex does not know anything about this either.

In some archives, there will probably be facts confirming or refuting this story. But it seems to me worthy to be preserved in our memory - a small piece of the history of a large country.

So it goes. (not mine)


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