Home Lighting A story about a brownie. How Kuzya's brownie was born. Cartoon film crew

A story about a brownie. How Kuzya's brownie was born. Cartoon film crew


Published: 2016-02-19 11:17:10
The author does not object to analytical analysis and criticism in reviews.

Getting to know each other (stories about the brownie Prosha)

Story one

Antoshka was kneeling on a chair, leaning his elbows on the windowsill and propping up
palms full of pink cheeks, looking sadly out the window. Large flakes of snow, very similar to fluff, were smoothly swirling outside the window.
It seemed as if someone in the sky was knocking out a huge feather bed.
Snowflakes, lazily swirling, fell onto the windowsill, forming a thick layer of snow wool on it.
From the height of the fifth floor, the courtyard seemed small and reminded Antoshka of an anthill.
Children were playing happily in the yard. Someone was running back and forth with a stick, chasing the puck;
someone was sledding down an ice slide; someone was making a snowman...
“They’re having fun,” Antoshka thought, and tears appeared in his eyes out of resentment.
The fact is that Anton caught a cold and his mother put him under “house arrest” for several days until he fully recovered.
Anton was bored. Nearby, near the battery, the cat Tishka was sleeping, lounging.
“Some people are lucky,” thought Antoshka, looking at the cat, “sleep and don’t have any worries.” But I need to take all sorts of medications. And on
You can’t go outside...” Antoshka completely lost his temper. Tears began to shine in her eyes again. He sat by the window and sobbed quietly, grieving that
how many interesting things in life he missed during the days of illness.
Suddenly, behind him, a strange sound was heard, similar to the rustling of a newspaper. Tishka the cat opened his eyes and turned his head towards
sound and froze, like a hunter, ready to rush at his prey. A moment later, the cat jumped up, arched its back and threateningly
hissed. Anton looked around and almost fell out of his chair, from surprise and unexpectedness: in the room, on the bookcase, with his legs hanging down,
a little man was sitting. More precisely - a boy, and looked at Anton with a smile, big blue eyes. His face was strewn
hemp. Red hair stuck out in all directions and resembled a small shock of hay. The boy had real ones on his feet
bast shoes that Antoshka saw only on TV, in cartoons and movies. The boy was dressed in a red, white polka dot, shirt with an oblique
collar, and gray canvas pants.
- Hello! – he said in a quiet, pleasant voice. - My name is Prosha.
Anton looked at the boy in amazement. His eyes widened in surprise and fear. He couldn't say a word.
“Don’t be afraid of me,” said the boy. - And I know your name. You are Anton. Is not it? – he continued smiling.
“A-A-Anton I...” Antoshka stammered and not recognizing his voice. - And who are you?
- I am Prosha. Brownie. Live here. I mean, together with you, in the same apartment. - Let's be friends! - he suggested.
“Come on...” the stunned Antoshka muttered in a hoarse voice from excitement.
“Just please lock the cat in another room, otherwise he won’t let me in,” the brownie asked.
- Has he seen you here before? “Did he know that you live with us?” Antoshka asked, slowly coming to his senses.
- Of course I knew! Brownie cats, even if they don’t see, still feel.
The little brownie was small and very charming, so Antoshka very soon stopped being afraid of him. And also, after a few minutes, they
They were already chatting happily, as if they had been bosom friends for a long time.
“Climb onto my closet,” the little brownie suggested, “it’s good here!” And the cat won't get it.
- Oh yes! – Anton realized, “I’ll send him out now!”
He took Tishka in his arms and carried him to another room. Tishka didn’t particularly resist. He, just as calmly, lay down by the warm radiator and
instantly fell asleep, moving his ears sensitively.
- Lazy person! - Antoshka said as he left the room, following Tishka, and closed the door tightly.
The brownie dashingly jumped off the cabinet, looking warily at the door, walked up to Anton and extended his small palm to him.
- Why didn’t you come earlier? – Antoshka asked, shaking Prosha’s hand.
- I was embarrassed. “Yes, and I was afraid to scare you,” the little brownie explained.
“Do you want us to play something,” Antoshka suggested, “I have so many toys!” - and he began to show the brownie his
"wealth".
“And sometimes I play with your toys,” Prosha admitted in a guilty voice.
“And I’m thinking: why are my things sometimes lying in the wrong place where they should be,” Anton said with a smile. - Yes, you take everything you need.
“If you want, play,” he generously allowed, “I don’t feel sorry for it one bit!”
The boys played enthusiastically all day. Time flew by cheerfully and unnoticed. At the sound of the front door, the little brownie flinched and was scared.
looked at Antoshka.
“It’s probably mom who came home from work,” Anton guessed. - Let me introduce you to her!
The brownie abruptly jumped to his feet, rushed to the closet and disappeared without a trace, as if he had disappeared into thin air.
-Anton! Antoshka! - Mom called. - How are you feeling, baby? – she asked.
“Okay, mom,” Anton responded confusedly. He stood in the middle of his room, looking around in surprise, and could not
believe what happened.
He squeezed his eyes tightly shut. He stood there for a minute. I opened my eyes, but the brownie did not appear...
Antoshka told his mother an amazing story about a boy - a brownie. Please.
- Dreamer! – the mother said smiling, gently stroking the baby’s head.
And Anton decided that he was just imagining it all...

History of the creation of the poem:

Marina Tsareva
"Birthday of the Brownie"

« Brownie's birthday» .

Master Class “Making a doll as a talisman”.

(For children of senior preschool age).

Target: making a doll - a talisman.

Tasks:

Continue to introduce children to the history of folk culture;

show the connection between generations and the significance of cultural heritage;

Talk about the family as a form of unification of people related by blood, show the functional responsibilities of each family member;

Introduce children to the faith of our ancestors in Brownie, tell them about the day Domovoi's birth, as noted earlier;

To increase the ethnopedagogical competence of parents based on the study of traditions based on the study of traditions of spiritual and moral education of children through the creation of a doll - an amulet;

To educate morality on the basis of folk traditions;

Create a joyful, good mood in children.

Educational areas: "Cognition", "Communication", "Socialization", "Music", "Artistic creativity".

Preliminary work: excursion to the village school museum; conversations with children; reading proverbs, sayings, fairy tales; looking at pictures about the life and everyday life of people in the old days, learning poetry; involving parents in creating dolls - amulets.

Equipment: pieces of colored fabric 20*20 cm, pieces of triangular-shaped fabric, pieces of rectangular fabric 5*10 cm (according to the number of children, threads, cotton wool, scissors.

(The group is decorated like a Russian upper room, with a Russian stove. The hostess and children are in Russian folk costumes. The children sit on chairs arranged in a semicircle).

Mistress: Hello, good fellows and beautiful girls! God bless those who are in our house - our guests! We will talk about family, sing and dance, and make dolls! Welcome! (Bows to the guests at the waist).

Guys, do you know what such a bow means?

Children's answers: greeted everyone, glad to see everyone, wished everyone health and happiness!

Mistress: today I propose to take an unusual journey into the past.

“It is a great gift to be born once,

Breathe, open your eyes and forever -

Be surprised by the world you see,

Where is the house and the river, the grove and the river.”

Today we will learn with you how people lived in the old days. Do you think they lived alone or in families?

Children's answers: lived in large families.

Mistress: What is family? List who lives in the family?

Children's answers: mothers, fathers, children, grandmothers, grandfathers, great-grandmothers, great-grandfathers.

Mistress: everyone you named are relatives who all live together as one big family. No wonder they said in the old days « Home to live - not to walk with your ears open", « Home to live - to grieve about everything". In those distant times, families were big: under one roof, in one hut, mother, father, children, great-grandmothers and great-grandfathers lived. What were they doing?

Children's answers: worked in field: they plowed the land, sowed wheat and rye, fished, went hunting, farmed.

Mistress: What crafts were they engaged in in those distant times?

Children's answers: potters were engaged in pottery - they made dishes from clay, coopers made barrels, tinkers repaired copper samovars, blacksmiths forged iron, made horseshoes for horses.

Mistress: That's right, guys! In the family, everyone obeyed the elder. The elders taught the young "to my mind". Tell me, what responsibilities did each family member have?

Children's answers: mother and father went to the field to work, the old people stayed to manage the house, the older children nursed the younger ones.

Mistress: That's right. So the parents went to the field, the old and young remained in the house. Grandmother is busy around the house, grandfather is busy in the yard with the cattle "walks". Do you know that the most important item in the hut was the stove, in the old days - the Russian stove. The saying has survived to this day "Dancing from the Stove", that is, starting from the very beginning, from the basis of everything. Until recently, guests entering the house made three bows to the hosts, the images and the stove. Why did the stove receive such attention?

Children's answers: they cooked food in the stove, baked, washed, warmed themselves on the stove, nursed babies.

Mistress: The fire was always maintained in the oven, and at night it was stored in the form of coals. The oven was always kept clean. And behind the stove, according to the old belief, he lives brownie or Grandfather-Neighbor, as he is also called. And so that he would be kind to his owners, they put a saucer of milk behind the stove for him so that he could enjoy it. Do you guys know that Grandfather Brownie. Like you and me, we have birthday? In those old days, the Russian people celebrated February 10 Brownie's birthday. Who is this and how was he celebrated? birthday, will tell us (in advance one of the children is given the task of preparing a short story about Brownie. You can involve your parents.)

Mistress: here we are talking, talking about Brownie, but where is he himself? It’s his holiday, but he doesn’t exist.

(Runs in Brownie) .

Brownie: oh, I heard what you are talking about me, and let's quickly run here. But what did I forget? Ah, misfortune, misfortune, grief! Ah-ah-ah, first we need to say hello. Hello kids. Hello, dear guests! Hello, hostess! Why are you all smart and beautiful? Why are you gathered here?

Mistress: holiday because!

Brownie: what holiday? Whose holiday?

Hostess and children: Yes, it’s yours!

Brownie: oh, I forgot again. Ah, misfortune, misfortune, grief! And if it’s a holiday, then let’s all dance!

(Brownie, children and hostess perform a dance “I’ll go outside.”, folk words and music).

Mistress: our dear Grandfather Brownie, V birthday It is customary to give gifts. Our children have prepared poems for you.

(Children read pre-learned poems).

In our old house

Cats lived, mice lived;

And in the dusty attic,

In the stuffy, gloomy semi-darkness,

Behind the stove, behind the chimney

Once upon a time there lived a cheerful brownie.

He lived a long time ago, two hundred years ago

During the day, he snored in a secluded place.

Snored so much that the spiders

They turned green with melancholy.

And in a dream, having gained strength,

At night he played all kinds of pranks.

Almost bursting from the strain,

Howled in the chimney like a blizzard.

Stomped, grunted and sneezed,

He didn’t give everyone peace.

Not out of malice... - for fun

And for general fun.

I give you my word of honor

I'm going to die right there!

That I saw him twice.

True, in the picture.

But... it didn’t happen.

It didn’t happen, it didn’t have to.

But I know that it is there.

That he is nearby somewhere, here.

There's a sniffle behind us,

The floorboards squeak.

Old, kind, mischievous,

Bearded Brownie.

Brownie: Thank you, guys, for the gift! I really liked the poems!

(Draws attention to the amulets dolls). And what kind of beauty is this you have!

What kind of dolls?

Mistress: and this is Grandfather Brownie, amulets dolls. For a long time in Rus', families gathered in huts in the evenings, and the elders taught the younger ones how to make a rag doll. A rag doll is not a simple toy, it is a talisman.

Brownie: ah, trouble, trouble, disappointment! I’ve been living for three hundred years, but I don’t even know about it.

Mistress: Don't be upset, Grandpa! What kind of dolls these are and why they were made, he will tell us (ask one of the children to tell the story with their mother, who took part in making the dolls - amulets. Everything is discussed in advance).

Brownie: (thanks for the story). That's me Think: I- Brownie, I protect your home. So? And who will protect me, old man? I want a doll like this! Where can I get it? Ah, misfortune, misfortune, grief!

Mistress: don't be upset, Grandpa Brownie. Making dolls has always been a family affair. Let us, too, as a large family, learn how to make a doll - a talisman. And you, Grandfather, sit down with our children and help each other. (Russian folk melodies sound).

So, on your tables you have everything you need to make amulets. We will make a doll without the help of a needle, that is, we will not sew anything.

1. Take the fabric (a square, fold it in half, smooth it, fold it in half again, smooth it again. When we open our piece, we get a cross - this is the middle.

2. Make a ball from a piece of cotton wool and place it in the middle, fold the fabric diagonally, matching the corners, tie it tightly with thread - this will be the head.

3. Stepping back a little from the head, carefully gather the fabric with thread to form a body.

4. Now we will need two threads to make the handles. We lift the left and right corners of the fabric a little to the sides, and, stepping back a little from the edges, we tie them up. We got handles.

5. Now we will dress our doll. Let's do it to her first apron: take a rectangular piece of fabric, bend it through a thread and tie it at the waist. Next we will tie a scarf for her. We take the fabric in the form of a triangle and tie it on the doll’s head.

The amulet doll is ready! Look how many beautiful dolls we have made. They are all different, but each of us put a piece of our soul into it. Now your homes will have their own amulet, which will protect your home and protect your families from difficulties and troubles. Grandfather Brownie, you also have your own amulet, let it protect you, and you protect our group.

Guys, please tell me where we traveled? What new have you learned? What were we doing? What are amulets dolls used for? (Children's answers).

Today we all did a great job, thank you everyone for your attention, for your friendly attitude, thank you guys, thank you to our mothers, guests!

Brownie: Hostess, dear guys, I also want to thank you for the holiday for me, for the gifts and treat you to sweets! ( Brownie takes out treats from behind the stove and distributes them to children and guests).

A story about a brownie for younger schoolchildren

Children of different school ages about the brownie

Brownie - talisman and amulet of the house

Egorova Galina Vasilievna.
Position and place of work: teacher of home education, KGBOU "Motyginskaya comprehensive boarding school", Motygino village, Krasnoyarsk Territory.
Description of material: This story is written for children of primary school age 8 - 12 years. This material may be useful and interesting for primary and secondary teachers. This story can be used in thematic classes for children in grades 2 - 5, or for reading with the family at their leisure. The story briefly summarizes information about the brownie.
Target: Forming an idea of ​​the useful qualities of a brownie through a story.
Tasks:
- educational: talk about the useful abilities of a brownie;
- developing: develop attention, memory, imagination, speech, vocabulary, curiosity;
- educational: cultivate interest in the history of brownies and the world around them.
Content
Probably every house has its own brownie. And I also have my favorite keepers of peace and good atmosphere in the house.

When people hear about him, the image of a small, shaggy and funny creature always appears in their heads. Who is he really?
In the modern world, it is believed that the brownie is a special energy about a meter high. Over time, it becomes similar to its residents who live together for a long time. Some magicians believe that the age of the brownie can reach 500-600 years.
This is surprising, but it is believed that brownies, like people, have their own holiday. For them, New Year is on the night of February 10-11. At this time, it is advisable to congratulate your brownie and his family on the holiday. They also write that all brownies sleep in winter and only wake up on New Year’s Eve to take a walk and have some fun.
No one will be able to see a brownie, and you shouldn’t want to. They say that this is not good.
The brownie can also feel damage approaching the house. As soon as a person with bad intentions comes into your house, the brownie begins to worry and tell you about the guest’s evil intentions. If you do not feel these clues, then he attracts your attention in other ways: a plate may break, or clothes will rip, or something will spill on the table. This is how the brownie calls on your vigilance - pay attention to this person!
A brownie can destroy bad energy in the house. But he can also play pranks. Probably everyone in their life has put something in a prominent place, and then could not find this thing. At the same time, the brownie does not cause much harm. You need to kindly and respectfully ask him to put the thing back in its place. And he will definitely return!
It is believed that if you have a good relationship with your brownie, then he will protect you and your home from evil spirits, damage and all kinds of misfortune.
The brownie gets very used to his home and it is very difficult to move him to a new place. When moving, it is very important and necessary to lure the brownie into a new home. Otherwise, he will remain in his old place, will be sad and yearning. And the owner himself cannot be happy in a new house without his brownie.
Don't forget these funny, but very defenseless fairy friends!

More than one generation of children has grown up with stories about the adventures of the cute brownie Kuzi. Who created this character and how was the first cartoon about the “hereditary” brownie Kuzma filmed?

Who invented Domovenka Kuzya

The birthday of the fairy-tale brownie Kuzma is October 8, 1972. Who invented the Brownie Kuzya? The “mother” of the beloved children’s character is the Soviet writer Tatyana Alexandrova, and since Alexandrova was also a cartoonist, she not only created the literary hero, but also immediately drew him.

Little Tanya was pushed to the idea of ​​creating such an unusual nursery by her nanny. The fact is that I was born into a Moscow family of an engineer and a doctor. She had a twin sister - Natasha. The parents, due to their busy lives, did not have the opportunity to babysit their girls, so Tanya and Natasha had a personal nanny - Matryona. Matryona was a simple woman, from the Volga peasants, she constantly told the girls stories from Russian folklore: about witches, goblins, brownies, hedgehog grandmothers. These folk motifs subsequently formed the basis not only for the cycle of stories about the brownie Kuzenka, but also for Tatyana Alexandrova’s collection “Tales of an Old Rag Doll.”

The story “Kuzka in the New House” was first published in 1975. Tatyana drew several illustrations for the book, but they were not allowed to be published because she was not a member of the Union of Artists. It was in 1975 that the Soviet Union first learned who invented Domovenka Kuzya. But the publication of the next two books about the magical brownie had to be handled by the writer’s husband, Valentin Berestov, since Alexandrova died in 1983.

Who is Brownie Kuzya

According to the plot of the book and cartoon, Kuzya (or Kuzma) is a hereditary brownie, whose age is only seven centuries. Such a character as the “brownie” has been characteristic of Russian folklore mythology from time immemorial. The Slavs called the spirit who kept order and protected their home from all troubles and adversity. Brownie Kuzya - kind and thrifty - is a fairy-tale character created in the best traditions of folklore.

The history of the creation of the first cartoon

The first adventure of the brownie Kuzka in the form of an animated puppet film was released in 1984 and was called “A House for Kuzka.” This funny story lasted 17 minutes, which won the hearts of not only children, but also adults.

T/o "Ekran" after the death of Tatyana Alexandrova turned to her husband - poet and writer Valentin Berestov - with an offer to participate in writing a script for an animated film based on the story "Kuzka in the New Apartment". Berestov, of course, agreed - this is how the story of the creation of the cartoon began. The little brownie Kuzya began to appear on television screens the very next year, and t/o “Ekran” decided to release three more films based on Alexandrova’s books.

In 1985, the cartoon “The Adventures of a Brownie” was created, the script for which was also developed by Berestov, and in 1986, “A Tale for Natasha”. The last film in the series was the 1987 cartoon “The Return of the Brownie.” The last two films about Kuzenka lasted only 10 minutes. It is also worth noting that the last three films have little in common with the original texts of Alexandrova’s stories - the film crew considered the display of the original plot on the screen too intricate for children, so the script group, to which Marina Vishnevetskaya was added, practically wrote the story anew. Perhaps this was the reason that the first film about the brownie Kuzma is more popular than the last three. Still, the author’s word must remain primary.

Cartoon film crew

The charming hereditary brownie Kuzma has become more popular than his creators: not every TV viewer knows who wrote the children's book “Kuzma the Brownie,” much less the names of the people who worked on the cartoon.

The director of the project was Aida Zyablikova, who was famous for her passion for serial films: the vast majority of her cartoons were released in two or more parts (“Koloboks are conducting the investigation,” “Once upon a time there was Saushkin,” etc.)

The production designer for the cycle was Gennady Smolyanov, whose arsenal included work on the cartoons “The Wizard of the Emerald City” and “The Adventures of Dunno and His Friends.”

The brownie Kuzya was voiced by the famous Soviet actor Georgy Vitsin, and the colorful Baba Yaga was voiced by Tatyana Peltzer.

Brownie Kuzma, thanks to Alexandrova’s books and talented animated films, became a real folk hero. Therefore, viewers no longer care who invented Brownie Kuzya - they continue to watch good old cartoons with affection and quote their favorite characters.

Who doesn’t know the brownie Kuzya and Nafanya?! These heroes of a series of Soviet cartoons based on the fairy tales of Tatyana Alexandrova have firmly entered not only every home of the former USSR, but have also become firmly entrenched in the folklore of children and adults.
The script for the first episode of the cartoon “A House for Kuzka” was based on Tatyana Alexandrova’s fairy tale “Kuzka in a new apartment”, published by the publishing house “Children’s Literature” in 1977. An excerpt from this fairy tale under the title “Kuzka in the New House” was published back in 1976 in the newspaper “Nedelya”, and Tatyana Ivanovna began writing the story itself in the fall of 1972 in the estate of the artist Vasily Polenov, where Sergei Prokofiev once composed the music for the ballet "Romeo and Juliet". Even the exact date of birth of the character is known - it is October 8, 1972. It is on this day that it is customary to celebrate the birthday of the brownie Kuzi at the Polenovo estate. At the same time, the writer, who was also an artist by training (VGIK animation department), made the first drawings for the book, which largely determined the final appearance of the characters on the screen. But the writer was not allowed to illustrate her first book, citing the fact that she was not a member of the Union of Artists. As a result, the drawings included in the book turned out to be far from the images that the writer herself intended. The remaining two parts of the trilogy were never released before her death.
Tatyana Ivanovna Alexandrova (January 10, 1929, Kazan - December 22, 1983, Moscow) - Russian Soviet children's writer, artist, author of the fairy tale about the brownie Kuzka.

In 1977, the first book was published about the brownie Kuzka, who found himself in various stories. The preface to this book was written by Alexandrova’s husband, writer Valentin Berestov. Then the books “Chest with Toys”, “Toy School” were published, and the fairy tale “Katya in the Toy City” was written in collaboration with Valentin Berestov.

After Alexandrova's death in 1983, the first cartoon about the brownie, House for Kuzka, was released.

The writer's husband, the poet Valentin Berestov, was very upset about the death of his wife, and after her death he set himself the goal of achieving the publication of all parts of the story at any cost. At the same time, he received an order from the Multitelefilm studio (a division of the TV company EKRAN) to create a script based on the already published book “Kuzka in the New Apartment.” Valentin Dmitrievich set to work, and the very next year the cartoon was released on screens and immediately gained enormous popularity. The continuation was not long in coming, and in 1985 the second series “The Adventures of the Brownie” was released, the script for which was written based on the yet unpublished parts of the story “Kuzka in the Forest” and “Kuzka at Baba Yaga’s”, which, through the efforts of Valentin Dmitrievich , finally saw the light in 1986. In the same year, the third episode of the cartoon was released, and a year later the last one.
Valentin Dmitrievich Berestov (April 1, 1928, Meshchovsk, Kaluga province - April 15, 1998, Moscow) - Russian poet, lyricist, writing for adults and children, translator, memoirist, Pushkin scholar, researcher.

In the last years of his life, he wrote and published children's fairy tales together with his wife, artist and writer Tatyana Alexandrova. Compiled (together with his wife) “Favorites” based on V. I. Dahl’s “Explanatory Dictionary” (published in 2001)

Many poets and writers of the 1940-1960 generation (children and adults), with whom he was friends and whom he patronized, are grateful to Valentin Berestov.

It should be noted that the storyline of these last three episodes had little overlap with the original text. Since the story itself, and especially its last two parts, are quite unique, and it was impossible to directly display their content on the screen without violating the ideas of the first cartoon, Marina Vishnevetskaya, who was the author of the script for the last three episodes, had to write the script almost from scratch. This is where this chronological inconsistency arose, when the second episode of the cartoon seems to precede the first. The thing is that the first part of the book trilogy ends with Kuzya, having settled into his new apartment, deciding to tell Natasha about his past, and everything that comes further in the subsequent parts of the story are his memories. “Then Kuzka’s eye, looking at the girl, suddenly winked, and from the toy was heard: “He’s lying there and barely breathing, he’s not moving his arms or legs!” And Natasha heard this story about the brownie.”
In the cartoon, this moment is omitted, so the audience perceives this inconsistency as a blunder.

Interesting Facts

In the first episode of the cartoon, songs based on poems by Valentin Berestov are heard.

The goblin from the second series based on the book is called Diadoch, and his grandson is Leshik. Instead of Crow, Magpie spreads gossip there. Brownie Kikim from the fourth series was not in the book, but there were a lot of kikimoras. Nafanya was there, but is mentioned in the text only in passing, among a long list of other Cousin’s acquaintances. The cat, according to the book, lived in Baba Yaga's kennel. That’s why in the second episode she tells him: “Scram! Tired of worse than a dog."

In addition to the trilogy by Tatyana Alexandrova mentioned in the article, there are a number of works about the brownie Kuza, written later by her daughter, Galina Alexandrova.

There are also two audio plays called “Kuzka the Brownie,” recorded by the Vimbo and Astrel publishing houses in 2008 and 2010, respectively.

A fragment of the series "The Adventures of the Brownie" is shown in "Night Watch".

Georgy Mikhailovich Vitsin (April 5, 1917, Terijoki - October 22, 2001, Moscow) - Soviet and Russian theater and film actor. People's Artist of the USSR (1990).

Nathanya was voiced by 2 actors.

In the 1st episode, voiced by Alexander Lenkov
Alexander Sergeevich Lenkov (May 17, 1943 - April 21, 2014) - Soviet and Russian theater and film actor. People's Artist of the Russian Federation (1997)
The second and third episodes were voiced by Andrey Kryukov
Kryukov Andrey Sergeevich
June 12, 1925, Moscow - August 31, 2005, Moscow
Actor, theater director, teacher.
Graduated from GITIS. He was arrested on February 20, 1951 following a denunciation, convicted and sent to a camp, from where he was released after Stalin's death.
He worked as an artist and director at the Moscow Satire Theater. He taught at GUTSEI.

Baba Yaga was voiced by Tatyana Peltzer

Tatyana Ivanovna Peltzer (May 24 (June 6) 1904 - July 16, 1992) - Soviet and Russian theater and film actress, People's Artist of the USSR (1972). Winner of the Stalin Prize, third degree (1951).


Quotation book of Domovenka Kuzka

Brownie Kuzma

Ugh, what disgusting!
I want pancakes! With sour cream.
Happiness is when you have everything at home!
Did you take out the trash? Clever girl!
There was the last brownie, but he became the first nesting one!
I don't eat this, I'm not an asshole!
I'm not greedy, I'm homely.
What is this, some kind of fairy tale? This is life.
You need to drag it into the house, not out of the house!
Who needs you... with your horde!
It’s our Kuzenka who’s going crazy... he’s going to go crazy and go to sleep
What did I say? I want cheesecakes! What did you bake!? Now eat it yourself!
“Have pity on the homeless orphan! From an early age in people, I didn’t eat enough, slept without waking up... I didn’t get enough sleep in general!!!”
Nafanya, byada, byada, grief! The chest was taken away, the chest with fairy tales!!!

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