Alexander Griboyedov
Born 1795 (age 34) · Moscow, Russian Empire
Appears in 5 titles

Alexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov (1795–1829) was a Russian diplomat, playwright, poet, and composer. He is recognized as homo unius libri, whose fame rests on the verse comedy 'Woe from Wit' or 'The Woes of Wit', a satire on Russian aristocratic society that quickly became an event of Russian culture, spreading among the reading public in handwritten copies. As predicted by his contemporary Alexander Pushkin, many lines from 'Woe from Wit' became proverbs and sayings ("Legend is recent, but I can hardly believe it", "Happiness takes no account of time"). He was murdered in 1829 along with all staff of the Russian embassy in Qajar Persia, where he served as Russian ambassador, by an angry mob.

Filmography

Woe from Wit
4.3
Woe from Wit
1952
Writer
Hoře z rozumu
1956
Theatre Play
Woe From Wit
Woe From Wit
2000
Writer
The Student
The Student
1969
Writer
Woe From Wit
Woe From Wit
1994
Author