Sesame Street and Soviet culture
How do you translate a hit American kids TV series to a post-Soviet Russia negotiating its identity and navigating what media freedom might mean or not? Anne McElvoy finds out.
Muppets in Moscow is Natasha Lance Rogoff's account of launching a Russian version of the American tv series Sesame Street. If a single announcer supplies the dialogue dubbing when a foreign film is shown in Russia where do you find the technical skills you need? Should you feature exclusively ethnically Russian actors or include nationalities from former Soviet republics? What puppets from Russian folklore might be suitable and what kind of education for children are you trying to achieve? Anne McElvoy asks Natasha about how she found the answers to these questions and how that period of Russian TV differs from the media landscape there today.
Plus New Generation Thinker Victoria Donovan looks at punk protest and films such as Little Vera (1988); Lucy Weir traces the ways in which art and music responded to the era of Perestroika and beyond; and, Tamar Koplatadze explores how literature from across the former republics of the USSR is beginning to process the Soviet past.
Producer: Ruth Watts
Natasha Lance Rogoff is appearing at Jewish Book Week 2023 which runs at Kings Place in London until March 5th.
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- Wed 1 Mar 2023 22:0091热爆 Radio 3
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