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In Kharms Way for string quartet and 2 actors Coda (Funeral March) Music by Ray Luedeke Text adapted from Daniil Kharms (1905-42) The Madison String Quartet actors Neil Redfield and Cristina Ramos Directed by Courtney Laine Self The Tenri Cultural Institute, New York City 29 April 2016 The National Opera Center NYC 28 April 2016 Daniil Kharms (Russian: Дании́л Ива́нович Хармс, 30 December 1905 – 2 February 1942) was an early Soviet-era surrealist and absurdist poet, writer and dramatist. He came to be known for his children's literature. His "adult" works were not published during his lifetime with the sole exception of two early poems. His work was saved from the war by loyal friends and hidden until the 1960s when his children's writing became widely published and scholars began the job of recovering his manuscripts and publishing them in the west and in samizdat. Kharms was arrested in 1931 and forced to live in Kursk for most of a year. He was arrested as a member of "a group of anti-Soviet children's writers", and some of his works were used as an evidence. Soviet authorities, having become increasingly hostile toward the avant-garde in general, deemed Kharms' writing for children anti-Soviet because of its refusal to instill materialist and social Soviet values. Kharms was arrested on suspicion of treason in the summer of 1941. He was imprisoned in the psychiatric ward at Leningrad Prison No. 1. and died in his cell in February 1942 — most likely from starvation, as the Nazi blockade of Leningrad had already begun. His manuscripts were preserved by his sister and, most notably, by his friend Yakov Druskin, a music theorist and amateur theologist and philosopher, who dragged a suitcase full of Kharms's and Vvedensky's writings out of Kharms's apartment during the blockade of Leningrad and kept it hidden throughout difficult times.