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Foreigners gathered under this cover. Some by passport, some by spirit, and some simply too flamboyant for this world. Meryl Streep and Mikhail Baryshnikov, Alla Pugacheva and Jean Cocteau, Vera Polozkova and Greta Garbo. And also Audrey Hepburn, Margarita Terekhova, Andrey Danilko, Renata Litvinova... They have one thing in common: they are ‘different,’ they ‘didn't fit in’—and so they created their own. Their own cinema, their own ballet, their own theater... Their own culture. Journalist, critic, essayist, and editor-in-chief of Zima magazine, Sergei Nikolaevich doesn't just write about celebrities—he deciphers them. With an almost intimate precision, yet elegant and aesthetically pleasing.
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Foreigners gathered under this cover. Some by passport, some by spirit, and some simply too flamboyant for this world. Meryl Streep and Mikhail Baryshnikov, Alla Pugacheva and Jean Cocteau, Vera Polozkova and Greta Garbo. And also Audrey Hepburn, Margarita Terekhova, Andrey Danilko, Renata Litvinova... They have one thing in common: they are ‘different,’ they ‘didn't fit in’—and so they created their own. Their own cinema, their own ballet, their own theater... Their own culture. Journalist, critic, essayist, and editor-in-chief of Zima magazine, Sergei Nikolaevich doesn't just write about celebrities—he deciphers them. With an almost intimate precision, yet elegant and aesthetically pleasing.
2 Artikel
Technische Daten
Autor/-in
Nikolaevich Sergei
Verlag
Vidim Books
ISBN
9788069096479
Format
Paperback
Year Published
2025
Seiten
384
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Foreigners gathered under this cover. Some by passport, some by spirit, and some simply too flamboyant for this world. Meryl Streep and Mikhail Baryshnikov, Alla Pugacheva and Jean Cocteau, Vera Polozkova and Greta Garbo. And also Audrey Hepburn, Margarita Terekhova, Andrey Danilko, Renata Litvinova... They have one thing in common: they are ‘different,’ they ‘didn't fit in’—and so they created their own. Their own cinema, their own ballet, their own theater... Their own culture. Journalist, critic, essayist, and editor-in-chief of Zima magazine, Sergei Nikolaevich doesn't just write about celebrities—he deciphers them. With an almost intimate precision, yet elegant and aesthetically pleasing.