Thumbelina
0 sources
Thumbelina
Summary
Thumbelina is an animated short film[1]. Thumbelina has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Thumbelina's instance of is recorded as animated short film[3].
- Thumbelina was directed by Leonid Amalrik[4].
- Nikolai Erdman wrote the screenplay for Thumbelina[5].
- Thumbelina's composer is recorded as Nikita Bogoslovsky[6].
- Thumbelina's genre is film based on literature[7].
- Thumbelina's based on is recorded as Thumbelina[8].
- Thumbelina's production company is recorded as Soyuzmultfilm[9].
- Thumbelina's director of photography is recorded as Mikhail Druyan[10].
- The original language of Thumbelina was Russian[11].
- Thumbelina's country of origin is recorded as Soviet Union[12].
- Thumbelina was published on July 3, 1964[13].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Galina Novozhilova[14].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Yelena Ponsova[15].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Mikhail Yanshin[16].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Sergey Martinson[17].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Viktor Avdyushko[18].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Erast Garin[19].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Irina Pototskaya[20].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Q97200632[21].
- Thumbelina's voice actor is recorded as Igor Vlasov[22].
- Thumbelina's title is recorded as {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'Дюймовочка'}[23].
- Thumbelina's duration is recorded as {'unit': 'Q7727', 'amount': '+30'}[24].
- Thumbelina's fabrication method is recorded as traditional animation[25].
- Thumbelina's production designer is recorded as Nadezhda Privalova[26].
- Thumbelina's production designer is recorded as Tatyana Sazonova[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Thumbelina was directed by Leonid Amalrik[4]. Nikolai Erdman wrote the screenplay for Thumbelina[5].
Publication
Thumbelina was released on July 3, 1964[13]. The original language of Thumbelina was Russian[11]. Thumbelina's genre is film based on literature[7].
Why It Matters
Thumbelina has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] Thumbelina is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]