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IMDbPro

Anton Chekhov(1860-1904)

  • Writer
  • Actor
  • Script and Continuity Department
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Anton Chekhov
Trailer for Vanya on 42nd Street
Play trailer1:34
Vanya on 42nd Street (1994)
1 Video
2 Photos
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov was born in 1860, the third of six children to a family of a grocer, in Taganrog, Russia, a southern seaport and resort on the Azov Sea. His father, a 3rd-rank Member of the Merchant's Guild, was a religious fanatic and a tyrant who used his children as slaves. Young Chekhov was a part-time assistant in his father's business and also a singer in a church choir. At age 15, he was abandoned by his bankrupt father and lived alone for 3 years while finishing the Classical Gymnazium in Taganrog. Chekhov obtained a scholarship at the Moscow University Medical School in 1879, from which he graduated in 1884 as a Medical Doctor. He practiced general medicine for about ten years.

While a student, Chekhov published numerous short stories and humorous sketches under a pseudonym. He reserved his real name for serious medical publications, saying "medicine is my wife; literature - a mistress." While a doctor, he kept writing and had success with his first books, and his first play "Ivanov." He gradually decreased his medical practice in favor of writing. Chekhov created his own style based on objectivity, brevity, originality, and compassion. It was different from the mainstream Russian literature's scrupulous analytical depiction of "heroes." Chekhov used a delicate fabric of hints, subtle nuances in dialogs, and precise details. He described his original style as an "objective manner of writing." He avoided stereotyping and instructive political messages in favor of cool comic irony. Praised by writers Lev Tolstoy and Nikolai Leskov, he was awarded the Pushkin Prize from the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1888.

In 1890, Chekhov made a lengthy journey to Siberia and to the remote prison-island of Sakhalin. There, he surveyed thousands of convicts and conducted research for a dissertation about the life of prisoners. His research grew bigger than a dissertation, and in 1894, he published a detailed social-analytical essay on the Russian penitentiary system in Siberia and the Far East, titled "Island of Sakhalin." Chekhov's valuable research was later used and quoted by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in his "Gulag Archipelago." In 1897-1899, Chekhov returned to his medical practice in order to stop the epidemic of cholera.

Chekhov developed special relationship with Stanislavsky and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko at the Moscow Art Theater. He emerged as a mature playwright who influenced the modern theater. In the plays "Uncle Vanya," "Three Sisters," "Seagull," and "Cherry Orchard," he mastered the use of understatement, anticlimax, and implied emotion. The leading actress of the Moscow Art Theater, Olga Knipper-Chekhova, became his wife. In 1898, Chekhov moved to his Mediterranean-style home at the Black Sea resort of Yalta in the Crimea. There he was visited by writers Lev Tolstoy, Maxim Gorky, Ivan Bunin, and artists Konstantin Korovin and Isaac Levitan.
BornJanuary 29, 1860
DiedJuly 15, 1904(44)
BornJanuary 29, 1860
DiedJuly 15, 1904(44)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos1

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Known for

Haluk Bilginer and Melisa Sözen in Winter Sleep (2014)
Winter Sleep
8.0
  • Writer
  • 2014
Ward 6
  • Writer
    Linda Darnell and George Sanders in Summer Storm (1944)
    Summer Storm
    6.6
    • Writer(as Anton Chekov)
    • 1944
    James Mason, Vanessa Redgrave, David Warner, and Simone Signoret in The Sea Gull (1968)
    The Sea Gull
    6.6
    • Writer
    • 1968

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Writer



    • Historia de mi vida
      • writer
      • Released
      • TV Series
      • 1963
    • Chekhov in New York
      • Writer
      • Post-production
      • Short
    • Chekhovian
      • Writer
      • In Production
    • Affair of Honor
      • based on "The Bear" by
      • Completed
      • Short
    • Ward 6
      • story by
      • Pre-production



    • Khristina Blokhina, Artur Pavlenko, and Anastasia Sorokina in Gone (2025)
      Gone
      Short
      • writer
      • 2025
    • Simon Fortin, Christopher Jon Martin, Peter Rinaldi, Lauren Guglielmello, Mia Vallet, Ryan Czerwonko, Christopher Ryan, Megan Metrikin, and Ellie Mae Miller in Sea Gull (2024)
      Sea Gull
      • Writer
      • 2024
    • Laurie Heynes in In the Garden: An Anton Chekhov Story (2024)
      In the Garden: An Anton Chekhov Story
      8.5
      Short
      • Writer
      • 2024
    • The Sisters Project (2024)
      The Sisters Project
      Short
      • playwright
      • 2024
    • A story hard to name (2024)
      A story hard to name
      Short
      • novel
      • 2024
    • Sur l'autre rive (2024)
      Sur l'autre rive
      5.8
      TV Movie
      • play "Platonov"
      • 2024
    • Stupid Fucking Bird (2024)
      Stupid Fucking Bird
      TV Movie
      • based on a story by
      • 2024
    • Anton Chekhov, Caitlin Branigan, Flora Banhegyi, and Lisa Gurfinkel in Tri Sestry (2024)
      Tri Sestry
      Short
      • writer
      • 2024
    • Genç sahne
      TV Series
      • writer (as Anton Çehov)
      • 2024
    • The Still Life of an Actor
      Short
      • play
      • 2024
    • Omuwendo (2024)
      Omuwendo
      Short
      • based on the short story "The Ninny"
      • 2024
    • Sadness (2024)
      Sadness
      Short
      • Writer
      • 2024
    • Chayka (2024)
      Chayka
      • play
      • 2024
    • Andrew Scott in National Theatre Live: Vanya (2024)
      National Theatre Live: Vanya
      8.6
      • written by
      • 2024
    • Konstantina Ntinapogia in Ward No. 6 (2023)
      Ward No. 6
      Short
      • based on
      • 2023

    Actor



    • David Kimelman and Denisa in Do Svidaniya (2016)
      Do Svidaniya
      Short
      • Inspiration
      • 2016

    Script and Continuity Department



    • He Died with a Felafel in His Hand (2001)
      He Died with a Felafel in His Hand
      7.0
      • additional dialogue
      • 2001

    • In-development projects at IMDbPro

    Videos1

    Vanya on 42nd Street: The Criterion Collection Blu-Ray
    Trailer 1:34
    Vanya on 42nd Street: The Criterion Collection Blu-Ray

    Personal details

    Edit
    • Alternative names
      • Anton P. Cechov
    • Height
      • 6′ 1¼″ (1.86 m)
    • Born
      • January 29, 1860
      • Taganrog, Russian Empire [now Rostov Oblast, Russia]
    • Died
      • July 15, 1904
      • Badenweiler, Baden, Germany(complications from lung tuberculosis)
    • Spouse
      • Olga Knipper-ChekhovaMay 25, 1901 - July 15, 1904 (his death)
    • Other works
      Playwright: "Ivanov"
    • Publicity listings
      • 2 Biographical Movies
      • 17 Print Biographies
      • 7 Portrayals
      • 3 Articles

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Uncle of Olga Tschechowa and Michael Chekhov.
    • Quotes
      When an actor has money he doesn't send letters, he sends telegrams.
    • Nickname
      • Antosha Chekhonte

    FAQ10

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