At last, in 1930, he achieved fame throughout the Soviet Union with Anzor, an adapted translation into a Caucasian setting of Vsevolod Ivanov’s civil-war play Armoured Train 14-69.
Vsevolod Pudovkin | Vsevolod Bobrov | Sergei Ivanov | Ivanov | Vsevolod Ivanov | Vsevolod II of Kiev | Sergey Ivanov | Vsevolod Vishnevsky | Igor Ivanov | Vyacheslav Vsevolodovich Ivanov | Vsevolod Mstislavich | Vsevolod Klechkovsky | Vsevolod IV of Kiev | Vsevolod Bazhenov | Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov | Kirill Ivanov (sport shooter) | Georgi Ivanov | Vyacheslav Nikolayevich Ivanov | Vyacheslav Ivanov (poet) | Vyacheslav Ivanov | Vsevolod Mstislavich of Volhynia | Vsevolod Balitsky | Vsevolod Abramovich | Stilian Ivanov | Ivanov (play) | Ivan Ivanov | Eduard Ivanov | Dmitri Yaroslavich Ivanov | Dmitri Igorevich Ivanov | Dmitri Alekseyevich Ivanov |
He made sketches for sets and costumes for various plays such as Brecht's The Good Woman from Szechuan and Fear and Misery of the Third Reich, Pushkin's The Queen of Spades, Brandon Thomas's Charley's Aunt and V.Ivanov's Armored Train 14-69.