Ostap Bender - the real story of the great schemer (2 photos). Which Ostap Bender is the best?

He calls himself Ostap-Suleiman-Bertha-Maria-Bender Bey, as he introduced himself in the novel “The Twelve Chairs”, and in “The Golden Calf” he called himself Bender-Zadunaisky, although throughout the entire novel he is simply called Ostap Ibrahimovich. Ostap's year of birth is also ambiguous - in "The Twelve Chairs" he was 27 years old in 1927, while in "The Golden Calf" he mentioned that he was 33 years old ("the age of Christ"), the time of action is 1930. So, we can consider Ostap Bender’s birth year to be 1900 or 1897.

From the scattered and sometimes contradictory stories of Ostap, which he told to various characters on different pages, Ostap’s childhood passed either in Mirgorod or in Kherson, and in 1922 he was in Tagansk prison. And it was after leaving prison that he developed his famous “400 relatively fair ways of taking money from the population.”

So, appearing for the first time in the novel “The Twelve Chairs,” Bender arrives in Stargorod, where he immediately begins to develop vigorous activity. It's funny that many critics immediately saw in " young man twenty-eight years old" former prisoner-recidivist. Indeed, Ostap Bender had nothing, he didn’t even have a coat, but at the same time he managed to look like a real dandy and a heartthrob.

Bender's charisma literally captivates the reader from the first appearance - every phrase is a pearl, every decision speaks of genius. It is not surprising that he instantly becomes a leader in any society. “I will command the parade!” - this famous phrase Bender has long been a proverb, and they say that this phrase in this wording had to be abolished in official documents.

During the course of “The Twelve Chairs,” Bender has to lead what is, in his opinion, not the most intellectually burdened group of adventurers just like himself, but Bender never loses his famous optimism, even in the most deplorable circumstances.

Bender's mind is unusually flexible - sometimes he comes up with simply brilliant plans right in the course of events - so, while still entering Stargorod in one suit, the young man was not at all sure what he would do in this city - whether he would become a polygamist, or distribute the painting "Bolsheviks" writing a letter to Chamberlain." And in the end he meets Ippolit Matveevich Vorobyaninov, who tells him amazing story family diamonds from Madame Petukhova. So, Ostap’s plans changed instantly, and the new friends decided to set off to get treasures.

Money is the idol, the idol and the meaning of Ostap’s whole life; he sincerely and selflessly loves these “yellow circles”.

“Since there are some banknotes wandering around the country, there must be people who have a lot of them,” Ostap is sacredly sure of this and is ready to put his life into searching.

Alas, the search for the family diamonds, which sometimes seemed so close, was not successful for Bender. Moreover, at the end of the novel, Ostap is killed by the former leader of the nobility Vorobyaninov. By the way, they say that the authors of the novel, Ilf and Petrov, had serious contradictions about the ending of the novel - should Bender be left alive or killed? In the end, everything was decided by lot - and Kisa Vorobyaninov struck the razor along the defenseless neck of the sleeping Ostap...

Surprisingly, the lack of happy endings in both novels does not sadden the readers at all, although all of them, no doubt, succumb to Bender’s charisma and sincerely wish him luck in his scams. So, the end of each book seems to promise - Ostap Bender will return again, with a new adventure and new congenial ideas.

By the way, they said that Ilf and Petrov announced a third novel with Bender, and even its title was published in the press - “Scoundrel”, but this novel, alas, never saw the light of day.

There are many versions of who was the prototype of Ostap Bender - some even name the name Valentin Kataev, although Kataev himself said that it could be one of the writers’ Odessa childhood friends.

The image of Ostap Bender was embodied on the screens by several brilliant Russian actors, among whom the most prominent are Sergei Yursky, Archil Gomiashvili, Oleg Menshikov, and, of course, Andrei Mironov.

Monuments to Ostap Bender stand today in many Russian and Ukrainian cities - St. Petersburg and Kharkov, Pyatigorsk and Kremenchug, as well as in Elista, Yekaterinburg, Berdyansk and many others.

Despite the fact that the first novel by Ilf and Petrov was published more than 80 years ago, Ostap Bender remains one of the most recognizable, bright and timeless characters today, and each of his lines has long become a quotation. Critics and literary scholars may argue about how exactly the authors managed to create such controversial image– at his core, Bender was an ordinary swindler and scoundrel, and at the same time it is simply impossible not to love him. Charming and gallant, daring and noble in his own way, stylish and poor - this is him, Ostap Ibrahimovich Bender, “the son of a Turkish subject.”

“I’m certainly not a cherub. I don’t have wings, but I respect the Criminal Code. That’s my weakness.”

Wikimedia Commons Files on Wikimedia Commons

Ostap Bender - main character novels by Ilya Ilf and Yevgeny Petrov “The Twelve Chairs” and “The Golden Calf”, “the great strategist”, “an ideological fighter for banknotes”, who knew “four hundred relatively honest ways of taking away (withdrawing) money”. One of the most popular heroes of a picaresque novel in Russian literature.

Bender himself introduces himself as Ostap-Suleiman-Berta-Maria-Bender Bey(in "The Twelve Chairs") and Bender-Zadunaisky(in "The Golden Calf") In the novel "The Golden Calf" Bender is called Ostap Ibrahimovic.

Biography

Origin of the name

From his biography, he usually reported only one detail: “My dad,” he said, “was a Turkish subject.”

According to one version, the mention of the father’s “Turkish citizenship” and the patronymic “Ibrahimovic” do not indicate an ethnic connection with Turkey. In this, contemporaries saw a hint of Bender’s father’s residence in Odessa, where Jewish businessmen accepted Turkish citizenship so that their children could bypass a number of discriminatory laws related to religious affiliation, and at the same time receive grounds for exemption from conscription during Russian-Turkish war. In addition, the name Ibrahim is known to be the Arabic form of the name Abraham.

According to another version, Ilf and Petrov deliberately gave Bender an “international” Ukrainian ( Ostap) - Hebrew ( Bender) - Turkish ( Ibrahimovic, -Suleiman, -Beat) name precisely in order to exclude the above interpretations and emphasize the universality, the universality of this personality. As you know, Odessa is an international city, as was the duo of authors of “The Twelve Chairs” and “The Golden Calf”. The possibility that Odessa authors borrowed the surname of the main character from the name of a city close to their homeland, which is called Bender in Romanian (Romanian: Bender), was expressed by historian Viktor Khudyakov. After all, in the novel “12 Chairs” the acrobat of the Columbus Theater is also mentioned Georgette Tiraspolskikh- and Bendery and Tiraspol are located opposite each other on different banks of the Dniester. In addition, the city of Bendery has a Turkish past, and its most important attraction, widely known outside the city, is the Turkish fortress.

The ending of the novel “The Golden Calf” also confirms V. Khudyakov’s version: Ostap does not cross the USSR border with Poland or Finland, does not sail across the sea towards Istanbul, but chooses to cross Romania, the Dniester River, near Tiraspol - and on the other side, with the former then the Romanian side is just Bendery.

Bender's life until 1927

"The twelve Chairs"

“At half past eleven, from the north-west, from the direction of the village of Chmarovka, a young man of about twenty-eight entered Stargorod. A homeless person was running after him.”

This is how he first appears in the novel. great schemer.

According to a number of commentators on the novel (in particular, M. Odessky and D. Feldman), the description indicates that a prisoner entered Stargorod, repeatedly convicted and very recently released, that is, a recidivist criminal (a fraudster, since immediately after his release he builds plans related to fraud). In fact, a homeless tramp who has neither a coat nor socks in the cold spring (ice on puddles), but travels in a fashionable suit and smart shoes:

“He didn’t even have a coat. A young man entered the city in a green, narrow, waist-length suit.”

But for a repeat offender there is nothing unusual here. He does not have an apartment and should not have one - Soviet legislation provided that those sentenced “to imprisonment” were deprived of “the right to occupied living space.” This means that he became homeless after his first term, there was nowhere to return, and he had nowhere to store his wardrobe. If “a young man of about twenty-eight” was arrested before the onset of cold weather, then he did not wear a coat. Bender kept his shoes and suit because they were taken away after the sentencing and returned upon release, but the socks and underwear that were left for the prisoners were worn out.

"Golden calf"

The actions of Ostap Bender in the first part of his biography (“12 chairs”) may fall under the relevant articles of the Criminal Code, while in the second part - “The Golden Calf” - he is, in fact, investigating a crime, albeit for the purpose of blackmail. Such duality of the hero is quite in the spirit of a classic detective story.

Killing and resurrecting a hero

In the preface to The Golden Calf, Ilf and Petrov jokingly said that towards the end of writing The Twelve Chairs, the question of a spectacular ending arose. A dispute arose between the co-authors whether to kill Ostap or leave him alive, which even caused a quarrel between the co-authors. In the end, they decided to rely on lot. Two pieces of paper were placed in the sugar bowl, on one of which a skull and crossbones were drawn. The skull fell out - and thirty minutes later the great schemer was gone.

According to the testimony of E. Petrov’s brother, Valentin Kataev (in the book “My Diamond Crown”) plot basis"The Twelve Chairs" was taken from A. Conan Doyle's story "The Six Napoleons", in which gem was hidden in one of the plaster busts of the French emperor. Two criminals were hunting for the busts, one of whom was eventually stabbed to death with a razor by his accomplice. In addition, Kataev also mentions “a hilariously funny story by a young, early deceased Soviet writer from Petrograd Lev Lunts, who wrote about how a certain bourgeois family runs away from Soviet power abroad, hiding his diamonds in a clothes brush."

Writer Valentin Kataev indirectly speaks in favor of this version: “As for the central figure of the novel by Ostap Bender, he was written based on one of our Odessa friends. In life, of course, he bore a different surname, but the name Ostap was preserved as a very rare one. The prototype of Ostap Bender was the elder brother of one remarkable young poet... He had nothing to do with literature and served in the criminal investigation department to combat banditry..."

After the publication of the book, O. Shor showed up to Ilf and Petrov in order to demand “author’s royalties” for using the image, but the writers laughed and explained that the image was a collective one, therefore there was no talk of remuneration, but they drank a “peace treaty” with him, after to which Osip left his claims, asking the writers only one thing - to resurrect the hero.

It should also be noted that in 1926, a year before Bender appeared on the pages of the book, in Moscow, where Ilf, Petrov and Kataev lived, with great And Mikhail Bulgakov’s play “Zoyka’s Apartment,” showing the morals of the NEP, was staged with great success (two hundred performances were given in total) at the Vakhtangov Theater. The play features the character Amethyst, aka Putkinovsky, aka Anton Siguradze, who is very similar to the future Bender. This is a charming rogue, an artistic rogue, an elegant swindler, very active and eloquent, getting out of various situations. Amethyst, like Bender, was released from prison before his first appearance in the play. Amethyst was shot in Baku, just as Bender was stabbed to death in Moscow - but both of them miraculously resurrected. Amethysts can convince anyone of anything (except the police). Amethyst's blue dream - Cote d'Azur and white pants (" - Ah, Nice, Nice!..[cf. Oh, Rio, Rio!..] The azure sea, and I’m on its shore - in white trousers!»

In the 19th century, the image of the great schemer with a dream of Rio was anticipated by Baron Nikolai von Mengden (son of General von Mengden and Baroness Amalia) (1822-1888), who in 1844, in an adventurous way, out of idle curiosity, ended up in Rio de Janeiro. Posing as a Russian senator, he received an audience with the Brazilian Emperor Pedro II. After spending time in Rio de Janeiro “enjoyably,” Nikolai Mengden returned to Russia, where he had already been dismissed from service. This story was told in the memoirs of Baroness Sophia Mengden, published in 1908 in the magazine “Russian Antiquity”.

Bender on screen

There were film adaptations of the novels both in the USSR and abroad. For example, “The Twelve Chairs” was staged in Poland, Germany, and Cuba. In the first foreign film adaptations, the plot was significantly changed, and the name of the main character was also changed. Below is a list of actors who played the role of Ostap Bender.

Performer Film director Release date
Igor Gorbachev Alexander Belinsky
Igor Gorbachev is the first Ostap Bender on television. He appeared in 1966 in a television play Leningrad television "12 chairs".
Sergey Yursky Mikhail Shveitser
Sergei Yursky became the first Ostap Bender in cinema, starring in the film adaptation "Golden calf" 1968. Counts [ by whom?] that it was Jursky who managed to create the most exact image Bender from The Golden Calf. It is noteworthy that at the time of filming, Yursky’s age (born in 1935) was 33 years old, in full accordance with the novel: “ I am thirty-three years old - the age of Jesus Christ. What have I done so far?..»
Frank Langella Mel Brooks
Frank Langella played Ostap Bender in the American film adaptation "12 chairs ". The only performer in the film adaptations of the novel who meets the author’s description: “28 years old” (that is, a young, not a mature man, like everyone else), “with military bearing.”
Archil Gomiashvili Leonid Gaidai
Archil Gomiashvili played the role of Ostap twice: in the film by Leonid Gaidai "12 chairs" and in the film “The Comedy of Bygone Days” by Yuri Kushnerev, released in 1980. In Gaidai’s film, Bender speaks in the voice of Yuri Sarantsev, due to the wheezing of the ill Gomiashvili (according to another version, since Gomiashvili’s speech contained a Georgian accent). Although Archil Gomiashvili’s age did not at all correspond to Bender’s age indicated in the novel, some [ Who?] they think he's Bender the best Bender from all the film adaptations of The Twelve Chairs.
Andrey Mironov Mark Zakharov
Andrei Mironov played the role of Ostap Bender in a four-part musical film "12 chairs". His role is considered one of classical performances Bender.
Sergey Krylov Vasily Pichul
Singer Sergei Krylov played Ostap Bender in the film by Vasily Pichul "Idiot's Dreams"(). Bender is about 40 years old.
Georgy Deliev Ulrike Ottinger
In the film by German director Ulrike Ottinger "The twelve Chairs" main role played by Odessa resident Georgy Deliev.
Nikolay Fomenko Maxim Papernik
Nikolai Fomenko played Bender in the production "Twelve Chairs" 2005, shown on television in early January 2005.
Oleg Menshikov Ulyana Shilkina
An eight-episode series was filmed in 2006. series "Golden Calf", in which the role of Ostap Bender was played by Oleg Menshikov. The acting embodiment of the image of Ostap by Menshikov was recognized as one of the most unsuccessful.

Monuments to Ostap Bender

Monument to Ostap Bender and Kisa Vorobyaninov in Cheboksary

Ostap Bender is immortalized by monuments in a number of cities:

  • Berdyansk, Zaporozhye region. - immortalized together with Shura Balaganov in the park named after. P. P. Schmidt.
  • Zhmerynka, Vinnytsia region of Ukraine, near the station - a monument in the form of a standing Ostap surrounded by chairs.
  • Melitopol, intersection of B. Khmelnitsky Ave. and st. Kirov, near the City cafe.
  • Pyatigorsk - a monument near the “Proval”.
  • St. Petersburg - a monument to the great schemer was erected on July 25, 2000, on Ostap’s “birthday,” on Italianskaya Street, building 4, at the entrance to the Zolotoy Ostap restaurant.
  • Starobelsk, Lugansk region of Ukraine - a monument to Ostap Bender was installed in the “Student” park of LNU named after. Shevchenko.
  • Kharkov, a number of monuments (for more details, see Monuments to the heroes of the works of Ilf and Petrov in Kharkov).
  • Cheboksary - a monument to Ostap Bender and Kisa Vorobyaninov on Efremov Boulevard (Cheboksary Arbat).
  • Yekaterinburg - a monument to Ostap Bender and Kisa Vorobyaninov was erected in August 2007 on Belinsky Street.
  • In honor of Ostap Bender, the annual humor festival “Golden Ostap”, held since 1992 in St. Petersburg, was named, and awards were awarded as part of this festival.
  • OJSC "VINAP" (formerly Novosibirsk Brewing Plant) produced beer under the brand " Comrade Bender"with an image on the label of Bender, Kozlevich, Panikovsky and Balaganov in the Wildebeest car and with quotes from the book.
  • In the early 90s, one of O. Bender’s film performers, Archil Gomiashvili, founded the Golden Ostap club/restaurant in Moscow.

Links

  • Web-magazine “Evening windbag”. In the footsteps of the Great Schemer Ostap Bender

Notes

  1. M. Odessky, D. Feldman. Literary strategy and political intrigue. “Twelve Chairs” in Soviet criticism at the turn of the 1920s-1930s
  2. Khudyakov V.V. The scam of Chichikov and Ostap Bender // In the blooming acacias the city... Bendery: people, events, facts / ed. V. Valavin. - Bendery: Polygraphist, 1999. - pp. 83-85. - 2000 copies.
  3. Khudyakov V.V.- ISBN 5-88568-090-6
  4. In the blooming acacias the city... Bendery: people, events, facts / ed. V. Valavin. - Bendery: Polygraphist, 1999. - 464 p. - 2000 copies.- ISBN 5-88568-090-6
  5. Eduard Bagritsky.
  6. "Smugglers" ()
  7. "The Twelve Chairs", ch. XXX "At the Columbus Theater"
  8. Housing Code of the RSFSR, article 60, part 2, norm 18
  9. Daniel Kluger. The first detective of the Soviet Union
  10. Electronic library - Books for readers and downloaders (; Science Fiction. Fantasy Fantasy Rassadin S., Sarnov. In the land of literary heroes 1-2
  11. Information about Osip Shor
  12. Osip Shor With reference to materials from the newspaper “Novye Izvestia” dated November 6, 1999.
  13. V. Kataev. My Diamond Crown / M., “Soviet Writer”, 1979.
  14. Epoch. Events and people. //TV channel “Belarus”, November 23, 2011, 15:30 Sergey Belyakov. Lonely sail of Ostap Bender / “New World” 2005, No. 12
  15. Levin A. B.“Twelve Chairs” from “Zoyka’s Apartment” Michael Bulgakov . Collected works in five volumes. Volume 3: Plays. M:
  16. Fiction
  17. , 1992. “Zoyka’s apartment”. Comments.
  18. “Excerpts from a family chronicle” (from the memoirs of Baroness Sophia Mengden)

List of foreign film adaptations

Chelyabinsk became famous as Tankograd thanks to its tank factory. Osip Shor, a man who is recognized as the main prototype of Ostap Bender, the hero of the novels “12 Chairs” and “The Golden Calf” by Ilya Ilf and Evgeny Petrov, took an active part in the construction of the enterprise.

“Russian Planet” has collected details of the biography of Osip Shor, which do not look pale even against the background of the adventures of the great schemer.

Odessa scams

For a long time it was believed that Osip Shor was born in Odessa,” historian Boris Oksenkrug tells a RP correspondent. - But then documents were found that allowed us to establish that his homeland was the small town of Nikopol. There his father had a store, a mill and a small candle factory. The merchant of the 2nd guild Benjamin Shor and his wife Kunya moved to Odessa only a year after the birth of their son Osi, who was born on May 30, 1899. The news that the prototype of Ostap Bender turned out not to be from Odessa, but from Nicopolis, greatly upset the capital of humor, which was flattered by the title of the homeland of the great schemer.

There was another child in the Shore family - Nathan. At the beginning of the last century, he became a famous futurist poet and took the pseudonym Anatoly Fioletov. And his younger brother Osip preferred that his friends call him in the Ukrainian manner - Ostap, and even signed with this name. This is mentioned in the book “My Diamond Crown” by Valentin Kataev, who, in fact, introduced Ilya Ilf and Evgeny Petrov to their future hero. He directly points to him as the prototype of a Turkish subject: “Ostap Bender was based on one of our Odessa friends. He was the younger brother of one remarkable futurist poet... The futurist's brother was Ostap, whose appearance the authors preserved in their novel almost completely intact: athletic build and romantic, purely Black Sea character. He had nothing to do with literature and served in the criminal investigation department to combat banditry, which had reached threatening proportions...”

Before getting into the criminal investigation department, Osip Shor graduated from the Iliadi men's gymnasium - the same one where, by the will of the authors, Ostap Bender later “studied,” continues Boris Oksenkrug. - Osip had a penchant for exact sciences. Of all the humanitarian subjects, he showed interest only in jurisprudence. A good knowledge of the laws later became very useful to the born adventurer. After graduating from high school, he entered the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Novorossiysk University, but soon dropped out of the university. And he made a living card games- such people were then called katran workers. In this capacity he succeeded more than in his studies, easily beating even professional cheaters.

Osip's cherished dream was to emigrate to Brazil or Argentina. Dreaming of long journeys, he dressed accordingly: he wore light clothes, a white captain's cap and scarf. With him tall- 1 m 90 cm, in this image he looked impressive.

In 1916, the expelled student received a summons to the army. To avoid military service, he pulled off his first scam.

Osip Shor was a Jew by nationality, says Boris Oksenkrug. - But he decided to pass himself off as a Turk - children of foreign nationals were not taken into the army. He invented a Turkish father for himself, forged documents and avoided conscription without any problems. Moreover, he managed to make money on his idea - he helped several fellow countrymen become “Greeks” and “Kurds” for a small fee. This scam by Osip Shor is documented. The reliability of several others is highly questionable; they can rather be attributed to the realm of folklore.

If you believe the urban myths of Odessa, then Osip Shor’s next scam was inspired by a random find. One day, on a country road, he saw a chicken whose feathers had fallen out for some unknown reason. Anyone else would have passed by, but Ostap was immediately struck by the idea of ​​how to make capital on a sick bird. He founded the Ideal Chicken company, declared himself a professor and began giving lectures, explaining that this naked creature is the fruit of the labors of Odessa breeders. They managed to develop a breed that does not need to be plucked, but can be immediately put into soup or sent for processing for meat. Representatives of many poultry farms in the south of Russia became interested in the opening and entered into contracts for the supply of miracle birds, making an advance payment. But when the time came to receive the first batch of “ideal chickens,” the director disappeared in an unknown direction.

When the noise died down, the great schemer returned to Odessa and opened new office- selling indulgences. Absolution was in great demand among the raiders, who wanted to save their souls before going on business. Deciding to increase his income, Osip began selling places in heaven - he drew a diagram of heaven and invited everyone to choose where he would end up after death, according to his taste and pocket. Best places Wealthy Odessa residents eagerly bought them up. The successful business operated under the guise of local priests, who received a percentage of the income. But Osip Shor failed to feed the police, and the office had to be closed.

They say that from time to time the Turkish citizen earned money by consulting bandits and coming up with robbery schemes for them. So, one day he groped weakness one of the local banks - chimneys. He advised Vaska Kosoy’s gang not to break down the door, but to dress up as chimney sweeps and go down inside using a rope. The robbery went perfectly, and Osip Shor received his share of the loot.

Benya Krik vs Bender

In 1916, Osip Shor made another attempt to build an honest career and entered the mechanical faculty of the St. Petersburg Institute. But the civil war began.

Osip Shor met the October Revolution in St. Petersburg. Soon he decided to return to his native Odessa, away from unsafe historical events, - literary critic Irina Vaganova tells the RP correspondent. - The journey home through a country engulfed in fire took 10 months. Shor experienced many adventures with which we are all very familiar from the novels of Ilf and Petrov. To earn a living, he pretended to be a grandmaster and gave simultaneous games, although he did not really know chess. As a fire inspector, he robbed institutions that came his way. He got a job as an artist on a steamship that made propaganda trips along the Volga. He pretended to be a representative of some underground anti-Soviet organization and collected secret contributions for the just cause of the fight against the Bolsheviks. And he even married a middle-aged, plump butcher shop owner, whom we know as Madame Gritsatsueva. With her support, he survived the hungry winter.

Returning to Odessa, Osip Shor decided not to quarrel with the new government. He joined the Odessa Criminal Investigation Department, receiving the position of detective to combat banditry. Physical form allowed: Osip has been involved in classical wrestling since childhood and was fond of weights. And his success in football was so impressive that one of the first Russian pilots and European champion in cycling, Sergei Utochkin, predicted that Osya Shor would someday become a world star in this sport.

Good knowledge of the criminal world made the new opera a real find for the criminal investigation. So much so that the legendary Mishka Yaponchik - who himself became the prototype of Benny Krik from the stories of Isaac Babel - “ordered” an overzealous employee. He inflicted serious damage on the gang that controlled Moldavanka: he solved cases of robbery of two banks and a manufactory, caught several robbers red-handed and extracted testimony from them.

It's hard to believe that the prototypes of Ostap Bender and Benny Krik hated each other fiercely, but this one does. Jap declared Osip Shor his personal enemy and swore revenge on him. The first attempt ended unsuccessfully - Osip Shor survived the shootout in the cafe without receiving a scratch, and four killers, as we would now call them, died, says Boris Oksenkrug. “Then the bandits made a new attempt. But by mistake they killed Shor’s older brother, Nathan, who was just about to get married and, together with his bride, was choosing furniture for their future home. Having received the news of his death, Osip did not sleep for several days. I didn't even attend my brother's funeral. He smashed raspberries, knocking out the killer's address. And managed to recognize him. Having burst into the apartment where the bandit was just walking with several raiders, he shot them all with a Mauser. And he brought his brother’s killer to his knees and was about to shoot him, but he saw that five small children were watching in horror at the scene of their father’s execution. Osip Shor was unable to pull the trigger. Bursting into tears, he, together with the pardoned bandit, who repented of his crime, drank moonshine until the morning and read the poems of his late brother. And the next morning he left Odessa forever and went to Moscow, vowing never to take up arms again.

There, Osip Shor almost immediately ended up in the Tagansk prison - for a drunken fight with a man who insulted his companion. But he was soon released: as soon as the data came from the Odessa UGRO, he was released. The hero of the fight against banditry was offered a job at the Petrograd Criminal Investigation Department, but he did not change his decision to never kill people again.

During this period of his life, Osip Shor often lived in the apartment of his close friend, Odessa resident Yuri Olesha. Osip told the story of his adventurous life to another of his fellow countrymen, the writer Valentin Kataev. And he introduced him to his younger brother Evgeniy Petrov and his best friend- young journalist Ilya Ilf. The result of this historical meeting was the birth of Ostap Bender, whose adventures are partially borrowed from the biography of Osip Shor.

In 1934, when the novel “The Twelve Chairs” became a cult favorite and sold out in huge numbers, Osip Shor decided that he was owed part of the royalties, says Irina Vaganova. - He came to Ilf and Petrov and demanded to pay money for retelling his stories. The authors laughed at him, saying that Ostap Bender is a collective image. Then Osip arranged major scandal and demanded at least the resurrection of the hero who died at the end of the book. The authors agreed, and this compromise led to the writing of a sequel - the novel “The Golden Calf”.

Ostap Bender is building ChTZ

After reading an advertisement in the newspaper that workers were needed at the construction site of the five-year plan - the country's first tractor plant - Osip Shor went to Chelyabinsk. Arriving in the Urals, he discovered that his old acquaintance, Odessa resident Vasily Ilyichev, was working as the director of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant. He hired a friend as a supply worker.

Most sources indicate that Osip Shor came to Chelyabinsk in 1934 and worked at the plant until 1937, historian Sergei Spitsyn tells a RP correspondent. - But in state archive Chelyabinsk region Documents have been preserved from which it follows that he worked at ChTZ from June 13, 1931 to October 20, 1932. This is confirmed by the employees of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant Museum: Vasily Ilyichev was the director of the enterprise from May 11, 1931 to September 29, 1932. This means that the Chelyabinsk period in the life of Osip Shor could not have lasted three years. Unfortunately, Shor’s personal file was not preserved - it was destroyed due to the expiration of the statute of limitations. However, it is known that it contained 29 pages - several times more than many employees who worked at ChTZ all their lives. One can only guess what scams of the great schemer were described in it.

Urban folklore tells that Vasily Ilyichev was arrested as an “enemy of the people” in 1937 in his own office. Osip Shor happened to be nearby and could not calmly watch as the NKVD arrested a friend to whom he owed a lot. I tried to protect him and a fight broke out. As a result, Osip himself was arrested. In Chelyabinsk they believe that he managed to escape while he was being led into the “crater.”

The first director of ChTZ, Vasily Ilyichev, was indeed repressed, but not in 1937, but in 1938, and not in Chelyabinsk, but in Moscow, continues Serey Spitsyn. “Osip Shor could not have been present at his arrest, since he received five years in the camps for economic crimes committed as a supplier. This, by the way, was a very lenient sentence for those times - apparently, the judges took into account Shor’s heroic past. The beginning of the Great Patriotic War he met behind barbed wire. And he managed to escape only on the way to the front, where he asked to volunteer in order to gain freedom.

Having escaped, Osip Shor hid from the authorities for a long time and tried to break the blockade of Leningrad - to get into the surrounded city and find his relatives. But he failed. But with the help of Yuri Olesha, he was able to achieve an amnesty and move to a legal position. From the shock he experienced, he developed eczema, which developed into skin cancer.

After the war, Osip continued his search. He managed to find out that his mother died of starvation in the besieged city. But he managed to find younger sister Elsa (his mother’s daughter from her second marriage), who was evacuated to Tashkent, and went after her.

It sounds absolutely incredible, but Osip Shor managed to defeat cancer, having successfully recovered from this fatal disease, says Irina Vaganova. - Unfortunately, there are no details of how he managed to do this. Together with his sister, he moved to Moscow and worked for 15 years as a conductor on the Moscow-Tashkent train. He retired due to disability, having almost completely lost his sight. Shortly before the death of Osip Shor, Valentin Kataev’s book “My Diamond Crown” was published, and the whole country found out who real prototype favorite hero. Osip was literally attacked by journalists. But he categorically refused to give interviews, deciding to keep his secrets. Died in Moscow in 1978. He was buried at Vostryakovsky cemetery.

At home, in Nikopol, a monument was erected to Osip Shor. On its base it is written: “To Nikopol resident Osip Shor. He is the son of the Turkish citizen Ostap-Suleiman Ibrahim Berta Maria Bender-bey, aka Ostap Ibrahimovich, aka the prototype of the great schemer Ostap Bender (I. Ilf and E. Petrov).”

Ostap Bender - the main character famous novels Ilya Ilf and Evgeny Petrov "Twelve Chairs" and "Golden Calf". Without a doubt, Bender is one of the most bright characters Russian literature, each replica of which has long been parsed into quotes. This is an amazingly charming swindler, smart, subtle and incredibly inventive, whose goal, faith and eternal passion is money. He does not hide his sincere love for banknotes, and his whole life is subordinated to their extraction. Despite the fact that in the end all his grandiose projects fail, Bender always remains a winner - even with his throat cut, even robbed and caught, as happened to him in the denouement of both novels.


He calls himself Ostap-Suleiman-Bertha-Maria-Bender Bey, as he introduced himself in the novel “The Twelve Chairs”, and in “The Golden Calf” he called himself Bender-Zadunaisky, although throughout the entire novel he is simply called Ostap Ibrahimovich. Ostap's year of birth is also ambiguous - in "The Twelve Chairs" he was 27 years old in 1927, while in "The Golden Calf" he mentioned that he was 33 years old ("the age of Christ"), the time of action is 1930. So, we can consider Ostap Bender’s birth year to be 1900 or 1897.

From the scattered and sometimes contradictory stories of Ostap, which he told to various characters on different pages, Ostap’s childhood passed either in Mirgorod or in Kherson, and in 1922 he was in Tagansk prison. And it was after leaving prison that he developed his famous “400 relatively fair ways of taking money from the population.”

So, appearing for the first time in the novel “The Twelve Chairs,” Bender arrives in Stargorod, where he immediately begins to develop vigorous activity. It’s funny that many critics immediately saw in the “young man of about twenty-eight” a former recidivist prisoner. Indeed, Ostap Bender had nothing, he didn’t even have a coat, but at the same time he managed to look like a real dandy and a heartthrob.

Bender's charisma literally captivates the reader from the first appearance - every phrase is a pearl, every decision speaks of genius. It is not surprising that he instantly becomes a leader in any society. “I will command the parade!” - this famous phrase of Bender has long become a saying, and, they say, this phrase in this wording had to be abolished in official documents.

During the course of “The Twelve Chairs,” Bender has to lead what is, in his opinion, not the most intellectually burdened group of adventurers just like himself, but Bender never loses his famous optimism, even in the most deplorable circumstances.

Bender's mind is unusually flexible - sometimes he is born simply genius

personal plans right in the course of events - so, still entering Stargorod in one suit, the young man was not at all sure what he would do in this city - whether he would become a polygamist, or would distribute the picture “The Bolsheviks Write a Letter to Chamberlain.” And in the end, he meets Ippolit Matveevich Vorobyaninov, who tells him the amazing story of Madame Petukhova’s family diamonds. So, Ostap’s plans changed instantly, and the new friends decided to set off to get treasures.

Money is the idol, the idol and the meaning of Ostap’s whole life; he sincerely and selflessly loves these “yellow circles”.

“Since there are some banknotes wandering around the country, there must be people who have a lot of them,” Ostap is sacredly sure of this and is ready to put his life into searching.

Alas, the search for the family diamonds, which sometimes seemed so close, was not successful for Bender. Moreover, at the end of the novel, Ostap is killed by the former leader of the nobility Vorobyaninov. By the way, they say that the authors of the novel, Ilf and Petrov, had serious contradictions about the ending of the novel - should Bender be left alive or killed? In the end, everything was decided by lot - and Kisa Vorobyaninov struck the razor along the defenseless neck of the sleeping Ostap...

They'll get a million soon. Alas, despite the fact that the million still went to Ostap (“Here I am a millionaire! An idiot’s dreams have come true!”), he was never able to keep it and was robbed by border guards while crossing the border.

Surprisingly, the lack of happy endings in both novels does not sadden the readers at all, although all of them, no doubt, succumb to Bender’s charisma and sincerely wish him luck in his scams. So, the end of each book seems to promise - Ostap Bender will return again, with a new adventure and new congenial ideas.

By the way, they said that Ilf and Petrov announced a third novel with Bender, and even its title was published in the press - “Scoundrel”, but this novel, alas, never saw the light of day.

There are many versions of who was the prototype of Ostap Bender - some even name the name Valentin Kataev, although Kataev himself said that it could be one of the writers’ Odessa childhood friends.

The image of Ostap Bender was embodied on the screens by several brilliant Russian actors, among whom the most prominent are Sergei Yursky, Archil Gomiashvili, Oleg Menshikov, and, of course, Andrei Mironov.

Monuments to Ostap Bender stand today in many Russian and Ukrainian cities - St. Petersburg and Kharkov, Pyatigorsk and Kremenchug, as well as in Elista, Yekaterinburg, Berdyansk and many others.

Despite the fact that the first novel by Ilf and Petrov was published more than 80 years ago, Ostap Bender remains one of the most recognizable, bright and timeless characters today, and each of his lines has long become a quotation. Critics and literary scholars can argue about how exactly the authors managed to create such a controversial image - at its core, Bender was an ordinary swindler and scoundrel, and at the same time it is simply impossible not to love him. Charming and gallant, daring and noble in his own way, stylish and poor - this is him, Ostap Ibrahimovich Bender, “the son of a Turkish subject.”

“I’m certainly not a cherub. I don’t have wings, but I respect the Criminal Code. That’s my weakness.”

Did you like the article? Share with your friends!