Mark Donskoy
Mark Semyonovich Donskoy[a] (6 March [O.S. 21 February] 1901 – 21 March 1981) was a Soviet film director, screenwriter, and studio administrative head. Donskoy was born in Odessa in a Jewish family. During the Civil War, he served in the Red Army (1921-1923), and was held captive by the White Russians for ten months. After he was freed, he was discharged from military service.
He studied psychology and psychiatry at the Crimean Medical School. In 1925 he graduated from the legal department of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the Crimean M.V. Frunze University in Simferopol. He worked in investigative bodies, in the Supreme Court of the Ukrainian SSR, and in the bar association. He published a collection of short stories drawn from his life called "Prisoners" (1925).
Donskoy began his career in film in 1926. He worked in the script department, but soon advanced as an assistant director in Moscow. Later he worked in Leningrad as an editing assistant. In 1935 he became the first Soviet dubbing director; he dubbed the American film The Invisible Man.
Following this, he directed numerous films. He also worked from time to time as a studio administrator: in 1938–1941, and in 1945-1955 he was the administrative director of Soyuzdetfilm's film studio in Moscow; in 1942-1945 and in 1955-1957 he was director of the Kiev film studio; after 1957, he was director and art director of the Maxim Gorky film studio where he mentored Ousmane Sembène.
His wife was the screenwriter Irina Borisovna Donskaya [ru] (1918–1983).

Prostitute

Верность матери

The Village Teacher

Rainbow

My Apprenticeship

The Childhood of Maxim Gorky

The Childhood of Maxim Gorky

My Universities

Foma Gordeyev

Mother

The Horse That Cried

Alitet Leaves for the Hills

Mother

Song of Happiness

In the Big City

The Taras Family
His Excellency

A Mother's Heart

Hello, Children!

The Romantics

Nadezhda

The Taras Family

The Orlovs

The Orlovs

Foma Gordeyev

How the Steel Was Tempered

How the Steel Was Tempered

My Universities
