Lina Prokofiev

Lina Ivanovna Prokofieva (Russian: Ли́на Ива́новна Проко́фьева), born Carolina Codina, (21 October 1897 – 3 January 1989) was a Spanish singer and the first wife of Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev. They married in 1923. Her stage name was Lina Llubera.[1]

Lina Ivanovna Prokofieva
Left to right: Sergei, Sviatoslav, Oleg, and Lina Prokofiev in 1936.
Born
Carolina Codina

21 October 1897
Madrid, Spain
Died3 January 1989(1989-01-03) (aged 91)
Spouse(s)Sergei Prokofiev (1921–separation 1941; marriage invalidated 1948)
ChildrenSviatoslav Prokofiev (1924–2010)
Oleg Prokofiev (1928–98)

Life

Carolina Codina was born in Madrid on 21 October 1897 to Olga (née Nemïsskaya) and Juan Codina. Both of her parents were singers, her mother from Ukraine and her father from Spain. Carolina traveled with her parents to Russia when she was young. The family lived in Switzerland before sailing across the Atlantic on the Statendam to New York City in 1907. Lina graduated from Brooklyn's Public School No. 3; the graduation was held at the nearby Commercial High School on 24 June 1913.[2]

She worked for a month as an assistant to Russian socialist Catherine Breshkovsky in 1919.[3]

In 1923 she married Prokofiev[4] in Germany.[5] After living in France and the United States, the couple settled permanently in the Soviet Union in 1936. Lina attempted to dissuade her husband from relocating with his family to his homeland after being urged to do so by Pierre Souvtchinsky, who drew her attention to the persecution of Dmitri Shostakovich in the wake of the official denunciation against his opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District.[6] What Sergei said to reassure Lina about the matter is unknown, but a note he made to himself in a personal notebook from the time said: "The attacks on formalism neither affected me nor Myaskovsky."[7]

In August 1938, Sergei met Mira Mendelson, a 23-year-old literary student who was a poet and translator. They were each vacationing in Kislovodsk with their respective families. What had begun as a professional partnership quickly developed into an extramarital affair. Although Sergei had initially been dismissive about Mira to Lina, within months he revealed to her the extent of his new relationship. Lina replied that she did not object to it as long as he did not go to live with her, she recalled in interviews decades later.[8] Their marriage continued to deteriorate; on 15 March 1942, Sergei announced that he was going to live with Mira, effectively ending his marriage with Lina. A few months later when the German invasion of Russia threatened Moscow, Prokofiev tried to persuade Lina and their sons to accompany him as evacuees out of the capital, but Lina refused.[9] After the end of World War II, Sergei attempted to serve Lina with divorce papers through their son Oleg, who did not carry the task through for the sake of his mother's well-being. Sergei then filed for divorce in court on 22 November 1947. Five days later, the court announced that it had rejected his petition on the grounds that the marriage had been invalid in the first place because it had taken place outside of the country and was not properly registered with Soviet authorities. After a second court upheld the verdict, Sergei and his companion Mira were married on 13 January 1948.[10]

Just over a month later, on 20 February 1948, Lina was arrested. Her eldest son Svyatoslav later stated that she had received a call in the evening requesting that she pick up a package addressed to her. Upon stepping out of her home, she was forced into a car that had been waiting outside. Her apartment was searched by the police, who confiscated various family heirlooms and artifacts.[11] Frederick Reinhardt, an employee of the American Embassy in Moscow who was acquainted with Lina, suggested that her persistent efforts to obtain an exit visa had brought her unfavorable notice from Soviet authorities.[12] She was sentenced to incarceration in the Gulag for 20 years, serving part of her sentence at a camp in the Komi ASSR, before being moved to the Mordovian ASSR to serve the remainder.[13] The specific charges were later listed in a petition for release that she submitted to Procurator General of the Soviet Union Roman Rudenko in 1954. They included "attempting to defect," "theft of a secret document," and "criminal ties" to foreign embassies.[14] A fellow prisoner recalled that Lina attempted to follow her ex-husband's life and career, but that she only managed to learn of his death months after it had occurred:

"[S]omeone came running from the bookroom and said: 'They just announced on the radio that in Argentina a concert was held in memory of the composer Prokofiev.' Lina Ivanovna began to weep and, without uttering a word, walked away."[15]

After serving 8 years of her sentence, she was freed on 30 June 1956. Subsequent petitions to Dmitri Shostakovich[16] and Tikhon Khrennikov, the latter a personal friend of Lina,[17] resulted in her successful rehabilitation during the Khrushchev Thaw.[18] Soon thereafter Lina petitioned the courts to have them reassert her rights as Prokofiev's sole and legitimate spouse. An initial ruling in her favor was reversed by the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union on 12 March 1958, which reaffirmed that their marriage had no legal validity.[19] Shostakovich, Khrennikov, and Dmitry Kabalevsky were among the witnesses called upon by the court to give their testimonies in the case.[20]

In 1974 Lina left the Soviet Union.[21] She outlived her ex-husband by many years, dying in London on 3 January 1989.[22] Royalties from his music provided her with a modest income. Their sons Sviatoslav (1924–2010), an architect, and Oleg (1928–1998), an artist, painter, sculptor and poet, dedicated a large part of their lives to the promotion of their father's life and work.[23] She was the subject of Lina and Serge: The Love and Wars of Lina Prokofiev.

Notes

  1. Prokofiev Diaries 1915–1923, trans. Phillips: p. 428.
  2. Morrison 2013, pp. 19–20
  3. Morrison 2013, p. 25
  4. https://www.larousse.fr/encyclopedie/musdico/Prokofiev/169700
  5. Morrison 2009, pp. 306–307
  6. Morrison 2009, pp. 41–43
  7. Morrison 2009, p. 44
  8. Morrison 2009, pp. 156–159
  9. Morrison 2009, p. 177
  10. Morrison 2009, p. 306
  11. Morrison 2009, p. 308
  12. Morrison 2009, p. 307
  13. Morrison 2009, p. 309
  14. Morrison 2009, p. 309
  15. Wilson 1994, p. 310
  16. Wilson, Elizabeth (1994). Shostakovich: A Life Remembered. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 400–401. ISBN 0691029717.
  17. Wilson 1994, p. 310
  18. Morrison 2009, p. 311
  19. Wilson 1994, p. 311
  20. Мендельсон-Прокофьева, Мира Александровна (2012). О Сергее Сергеевиче Прокофьеве. Воспоминания. Дневники (1938–1967). Москва: Композитор. p. 25. ISBN 9785425400468.
  21. Prokofiev Biography: Twilight (1945–1953) Archived 2012-01-20 at the Wayback Machine. Prokofiev.org (1953-03-05). Retrieved on 28 August 2010.
  22. "Lina Prokofiev, 91, Widow of the Composer". The New York Times. January 5, 1989. Archived from the original on March 24, 2013.
  23. Norris, Geoffrey (23 January 2003). "My father was naïve". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 23 May 2010.

References

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