Post on 31-Dec-2015
Ayn Rand (her first name rhymes with “mine”)
February 2, 1905 – March 6, 1982
It begins in Russia
Ayn is born Alisa Rosenbaum in St. Petersburg, Russia to Anna & Zinovy (Fronz) Rosenbaum on Feb. 2, 1905
Alisa’s father is a pharmacist with his own shop.
She is the second of three girls As a youngster, she is very
curious and learns to read at age 6.
By age 9 decided she’d be a writer
Home LifeSisters Natasha, Nora, Alisa
Anna Rosenbaum, mom
Alisa and her dad
Alisa at three
Then…. In 1917, she witnesses the opening shots of the
Bolshevik Revolution. Her father becomes fearful as his business is
confiscated by soldiers. He worries for his family’s safety and takes them to Yevpatoria, Crimea – 1300 miles away from St. Petersburg. Crimea is now part of the Ukraine.
Traveled from here
to here
1306 miles from St. Petersburg, Russia to Crimea
Alisa’s adolesence
She attended and finished high school in Crimea
While there, she became very interested in United States history. It fascinated her that the US was a nation where people were allowed to live freely. This was different than the Utopian ideal that the Russian government was trying to promote at the time.
Family moves back
The Rosenbaums moved back to St. Petersburg. Alisa continued her schooling at the University of Petrograd. She studied Philosophy and History, graduating in 1924.
She studied screenwriting as a career at the State Institute of Cinema Arts.
She was very interested in watching films from America and with Western ideas/ culture.
Let the writing begin….
1925 – first published piece about Polish born actress Pola Negri.
1926 – wrote a booklet entitled, “Hollywood: American Movie City” published in Russia
Pola Negri
“Hollywood: American Movie City”
Freedom!
1925 - granted permission from the Soviet authorities to leave the country to visit relatives.
Leaves Russia, never to return Arrives in New York in 1926 Does visit relatives in Chicago Makes her way to Hollywood to
be a screenwriter
Alisa’s passport picture, 1925
Day 2 in Hollywood: Meets famous director Cecil B. DeMille and gets a job working in the studios
Changes her name to Ayn Rand
Cecil B. DeMille
HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD
Frank & Ayn Meets her future husband, actor Frank
O’Connor, at the studios. They get married in 1929 and remain together until his death in 1979.
Rand dies in March, 1982
Frank & Ayn, 1964
Published Works
1936 –We The Living 1943 –The Fountainhead 1957 – Atlas Shrugged 1946 - Anthem
During her writing career, she wrote screenplays, plays, essays, articles, and speeches. She also gave lectures at colleges and taught at the college level.
Bibliography
http://ellensplace.net/ar_05_26.html
http://media.npr.org/assets/bakertaylor/covers/a/anthem/9780451191137_custom-0fb16e48c731d4ccf48263ee62a18de4bcd59d04-s6-c10.jpg
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Rand.html
http://www.aynrand.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_ayn_rand_aynrand_biography
http://www.kids.britannica.com
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_ccFvAOyc8kg/TIec3eSi2lI/AAAAAAAABAk/Ja3MwytAYHI/s1600/Cecil-b-demille_paramount-pictures.jpg
http://www.imdb.com/media/rm1229625344/nm0624470