Dinu Săraru
Dinu Săraru (born 30 January 1932 in Slătioara, Vâlcea) is a Romanian novelist and playwright. A member of Writers' Union of Romania, he belonged to the Central Committee of the Romanian Communist Party prior to 1989, and headed Teatrul Mic and Teatrul Foarte Mic from 1977 to 1990. Subsequent to the fall of the communist regime, he served as chairman of the National Theatre Bucharest,[1] being appointed in 2001 and resigning in 2004.[2] He has claimed that his work during the communist regime was not for the purpose of glorifying dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu, but rather included subtle dissident themes.[3]
Dinu Săraru | |
---|---|
Born | Constantin Grigore Săraru January 30, 1932 Slătioara, Vâlcea, Romania |
Occupation | Novelist and Playwirght |
Notes
- (in Romanian) "Dinu Săraru: 'Chezăşia viitorului nostru comunist'", Cotidianul, November 13, 2011; accessed October 12, 2013
- (in Romanian) Eveline Păuna, "Dinu Săraru, la 80 de ani: 'Dacă am trăit mult, a trebuit să fac multe…'" Archived 2013-03-22 at the Wayback Machine, Q, January 29, 2012; accessed October 12, 2013
- (in Romanian) Marinela Raţă, "Săraru: Să nu confundăm munca unui popor cu Ceauşescu", Evenimentul Zilei, January 27, 2010; accessed October 12, 2013
gollark: If you tweak them at all, they probably stop working properly for unfathomable chemistry/physics reasons.
gollark: I mean, consider enzymes. They can do things which regular non-biochemist chemists could only dream of, and often do multiple functions at once and interact with each other in bizarre ways.
gollark: Much of the foolish human body is like this, because it's hyperoptimized in some ways by a design process which doesn't care if our brains can actually make sense of it.
gollark: No good spec sheet/documentation either.
gollark: And there's nowhere to source parts, and no way to swap, say, fried retinas out.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.