Lasha Bugadze

Lasha Bugadze
ლაშა ბუღაძე

Lasha Bugadze.
Born (1977-01-01)1 January 1977
Tbilisi, Georgia
Occupation Writer
Nationality Georgian
Literary movement Postmodernism
Notable works The Literature Express (2009)

Lasha Bugadze (born 1977) is a Georgian novelist and playwright. Among his noteworthy plays are Shocked Tatyana, which satirizes war heroism,[1] and writer of Soldier, Love, Bodyguard and ... the President.[2]

Information

Lasha Bughadze, born in Tbilisi in 1977. He graduated from I. Nikoladze Art College and Shota Rustaveli Theatre and Film Georgian State University, the Faculty of Drama and Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, the Faculty of Art. He is the author of numerous novels and of plays that have been performed in many European cities. His works have been translated into French and English. Bughadze focuses his critical and ironic attention on inter-generational relationships and describes situations in which people fall victim to their prejudices, rigid ideas or stereotypes. He won the Russia and Caucasus Region category of the BBC International Radio Playwriting Competition in 2007 and one of the two top prizes in 2011 for his play The Navigator. Bughadze is a writer and presenter of literary programmes broadcast on radio and TV by the Georgian public broadcaster. He is also a gifted cartoonist. He lives and works in Tbilisi.[3]

Bibliography

His works are translated and published on Georgian, Russian, Armenian, French, German, English and Polish languages. Lasha Bughadze’s personal exhibition of caricatures and graphic works was held in Basel (Switzerland, 1995) and Tbilisi (“Baia-Gallery”, 1996).

He hosts television and radio programmes on different channels. In addition, he has his own column “Comments about Moon” in the newspaper “24 Hours” and weekly literary-public columns in the journals “Tabula” and “Liberal”.

Novels

Short Stories

Plays

Collections of Plays

Scripts

Awards

References

  1. http://context.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2005/11/18/110.html
  2. "caucaz.com". caucaz.com.
  3. translationlab.ge

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.