Abstract

The image of the Constituent Assembly played in 1917 and early 1918 an important role in the life of theaters, which had the magnificent title “Imperial” before the fall of the monarchy. Between February and October 1917, both the artists and the administration of the State theaters considered the “master of the Russian land” as the only authorized institution for the “final” and radical theatrical reform. After the Bolsheviks came to power and until Jan-uary 1918,the Constituent Assembly became a symbol of the coming liberation from the power of the Bolsheviks, whose power the State (former Imperial) theaters did not officially recognizeat thattime. Loyalty to the “master of the Russian land” was repeatedly emphasized by both artists and theater management: on the originally intended day of the Constituent Assembly’s convocation, November 28, a solemn performance was held at the Mikhailovsky thea-ter in Petrograd; a month later, at the Mariinsky theater, government boxes were declared boxes of the Constituent Assembly (and not of the Council of People’s Commissars). In early January 1918, the Bolsheviks conducted a forceful operation to establish control over the State stage, which included the removal of the Chief Commissioner for State theaters, Fyodor Batyushkov, from its management and the arrest of the Manager of the Opera company, AlexanderSiloti. Coinciding with the dispersal of the Constituent Assembly, these events dealt a powerful blow to the “saboteurs” in the Theater department, depriving them, after the liquidation of the “master of the Russian land”, of the hope for apeaceful deliverance from the Leninist government.

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