Aleksander Pisarev
Aleksander Ivanovich Pisarev was a Russian playwright, translator and theatre critic.
In the course of just five years he authored 23 popular vaudevilles and comedies, most of which enjoyed great success on stage Moscow's Maly Theatre and St. Petersburg's Alexandrinka. His best known plays were Student and Teacher, The Magic Nose, Caliph's Recreations, The Buzzing Man, How To Marry Your Daughter. In 1826 with Alexey Verstovsky he published the popular Drama Album for the Lovers of Music and Theatre. Pisarev was a controversial figure who, on the one hand used to pan 'serious' drama and lambast Pyotr Vyazemsky and Alexander Griboyedov, on the other, was himself a shrewd satirist who ridiculed in his plays and epigrams the life and manners of Russian high society as well as some of his literary contemporaries, notably Nikolai Polevoy.
Pisarev died of tuberculosis aged only 24, much to the distress of his friends, one of whom, Sergey Aksakov was convinced that in 1828 Russian literature lost one of its greatest talents who had every potential to become the 'Russian Aristophanes'. "All of our vaudevillians of today count less than this one man, Pisarev," wrote Vissarion Belinsky years later.