Natalia Gusejewa

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Natalia Gusejewa, 2018

Natalia Gusejewa ( Ukrainian Наталя Анатоліївна Гузєєва / Natalja Anatolijiwna Husjejewa ; born August 8, 1952 in Kiev , Ukrainian SSR ) is a Ukrainian screenwriter and writer. She is the author of the cartoon characters Kapitoschka and Petya Pyatotschkin, who were well-known in the successor states of the Soviet Union . The films of the same name belong to the Golden Collection of Cartoons 1943–1991 in Russia.

Life

Gusejewa was born the daughter of a TV presenter and an actress. She graduated from the Faculty of Cybernetics in " Applied Linguistics " at Kiev University . She worked as a linguist, translator, journalist, screenwriter, and editor in the animation studio. Since 1985 she has been a member of the Union of Filmmakers of Ukraine . She has lived in Germany since 1995 and in Munich since 2001. She is married and has a daughter.

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By 1993 Natalia Gusejewa's books were published in the Ukraine by the Weselka publishing house with a circulation of 6 million. They have been published in Russia and Ukraine since 2004 and are also popular with Russian- and Ukrainian-speaking readers in America, Canada, Israel and Germany.

  • The adventures of Kapitoschka (Verlag AST-Astrel)
  • Kapitoschka (publisher Strekoza)
  • Petya Pyatochkin's 23 annoyances (Strekosa, Tesis publishers)
  • Petya Pyatochkin and Santa Claus (Asbuka-Attikus Publishing House)
  • How Petya Pyatochkin counted elephants (Machaon-Ukraina publishing house)
  • Petya Pyatochkin and the hilarious hubbub (Asbuka-Attikus, Machaon-Ukraina publishers)
  • Petja Pjatochkin and 17 times lovesickness (Verlag Strekosa)
  • Once upon a time there was the girl Lenotschka (Asbuka-Attikus, Stary Lew, Goodparents publishers)
  • How Petya Pyatochkin counted elephants (Vivat Verlag)

Published in Germany

  • Invisible story from the book Skype Mama , publisher edition.fotoTAPETA, Berlin, 2013, ISBN 978-3940524232

Gusejewa translates books from the “Michael Neugebauer Edition” publishing house into Russian. She is the author of the libretto for the ballet “Anne Frank” (with support from the Anne Frank Fund and the Jewish Fund of Ukraine, 2006).

Web links