Samuel Rovinski

Samuel Rovinski Cruszco was a Costa Rican author of plays, novels, short stories and essays.

Samuel Rovinski
BornSamuel Rovinski Gruszko
1931
San José, Costa Rica
DiedAugust 31, 2013(2013-08-31) (aged 81–82)
Costa Rica
OccupationAuthor and novelist
GenreShort story and essay
SpouseSara Giberstein
ChildrenLeonor Rovinski, Yanina Robinski and Benjamin Rovinski
Relatives

Early life

Samuel Rovinski attended primary and secondary schools in San José and obtained a degree in civil engineering from the National National Autonomous University of Mexico. Rovinski founded and managed a construction company in Costa Rica. He was also a member of the Costa Rican intellectual community.[1]

Early works in theater

Rovinski has authored many plays during his time.

Plays

La Atlántida is a three-act play written in 1960 and recipient of honorary mention at the Juegos Florales Centroamericanos (Literary Competition of Central America) held in Guatemala in 1960. Los agitadores (The Agitators), written in 1964, earned the playwright honorary mention. Gobierno de alcoba (Bedroom Government) is a play in which Rovinski portrays how rightist and leftist dictators manipulate the people of their countries. Gobierno de alcoba was staged in 1967 at the Teatro Nacional. The play was directed by Andrés Saénz and Daniel Gallegos. A second staging of this play was presented by the grupo Israelita de Teatro (GIT). El laberinto (The Labyrinth) (1967) was staged at the Teatro Nacional in 1969 under the direction of Esteban polls, and Las fisgonas de Paso Ancho (The Snoopers of Paso Ancho) (1971) was staged that same year at the Escuela República de Haití in Paso Ancho by the Teatro Estudiantil Universitario (Student's University Theater).

Final years

He served for several years as CEO of the National Theatre of Costa Rica and a member of the Costa Rican Language Academy. In 2007, he published the Genesis (Theater) under the seal of the Editorial Costa Rica. After establishing that, he later died on August 31, 2013.[2]

Legacy

His play Las Figonas de Paso Ancho was adapted into a TV series and a celebrity comics series, drawn by Hugo Díaz Jiménez. [3]

gollark: The computer systems use last names for login, though.
gollark: I pick all my crimes via unbiased RNG.
gollark: It's america, so yes.
gollark: On a slightly related note, osmarks.net data harvesting.
gollark: But you're stuck with the bad name for ages and you have to update so much ~~remote configuration~~ paperwork.

References

  1. Cortés, Eladio, and Mirta Barrea-Marlys. Encyclopedia of Latin American Theater. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2003. Print.
  2. " Editorial Costa Rica: Samuel Rovinski. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  3. https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/diaz_jimenez_hugo.htm


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