Alexander Dudoladov

In 1987, he moved to Moscow and wrote monologues for well-known entertainers such as Klara Novikova,[1] Yevgeny Petrosyan,[2] Vladimir Vinokur,[3] Mikhail Grushevsky, Efim Shifrin and Jan Arlazorov.

[4] The most famous humoresques are: Not Fed, Before and After, A Drop, Switch, Unpromising Matryonikha, Ambivalence, But Music Sounds, A Look into Tomorrow,[5] You Are All the Same.

The Story There Would be no Tomorrow [6] which was also published in the Malay translation in Malaysia[7] is a kind of parable about the end of the world.

In it, the absurdity of everyday life from the point of view of eternity is pictorially conveyed and the process of refraining is interestingly described.

[8] Alexander Dudoladov is the author of the screenplay for the movie Brunette for 30 cents (1991, directed by Sergey Nikonenko),[9] as well as the screenwriter and co-director of the film Grandfather is Good, But Does... Not Tell There the Money was Hidden (1993, in cooperation with Anatoly Grushko and Igor Rukh).