Alexander Arturovich Rowe is a famous Soviet film director. During his cinematic life, he made many fairy tales, which have become classics of domestic and world cinema.
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The biography of the great storyteller Rowe
Alexander Arturovich Row was born in the Ivanovo region in 1906 into a family of an Irish engineer and Greek woman. Arthur Howard Rowe arrived in 1905 in the city of Yuryevets under a contract to raise a flour mill, and in 1914, leaving his family, he left Russia.
Row's mother was in poor health, and Alexander had to work from an early age - to sell artisanal haberdashery. After graduating from a seven-year school, he entered the industrial and economic college. At the age of 15, Rowe became interested in art and began working in the Blue Blouse agitation theater. The new hobby captivated him so much that Row transferred from an industrial technical school to a film school, which he successfully graduated in 1930, and in 1934 he became a graduate of the Drama College named after Yermolova.
While still a student at the Drama College, Rowe began working at the Mezhrabpomfilm film studio - first as an assistant and then as an assistant to the director. He worked with the famous director Yakov Protazanov on the set of his films "Puppets" and "Dowry".
"Soyuzdetfilm" was later renamed the CCDLF (Central Film Studio for Children and Youth Films named after M. Gorky).
In 1937, Alexander Rowe was admitted to the Soyuzdetfilm studio, where in 1938 he made his film debut as a fairy tale film "By the pike command." So a fabulous movie for viewers of different ages became the main business of his life.