Yan Borisovich Frid was born on May 31 in 1908 in Krasnoyarsk. In 1932 he graduated from the directing department of the Leningrad Theatrical Institute, and in 1938, from the VGIK, where his mentor was Sergei Eisenstein. Since 1938, the director started working at Lenfilm, where he made his debut with a short film based on Anton Chekhov'sshort story "Surgery." Then he made the children's adventure film "Patriot". Starting from October 1941 he participated in the Great Patriotic War. Between January 1944 and May 1945 he was head of the Army House of the Red Army of the 15th Air Army. He fought on the Leningrad and 2nd Baltic fronts. Participated in the defense and lifting of the blockade of Leningrad, the liberation of the Baltic states. He exited the war with the rank of a major. Member of the CPSU since 1939. In the early 1950s, Yan Frid filmed documentaries. In 1953 he directed the film-play Lyubov Yarovaya, and in 1955 he adapted Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare for screen. Later, the director made pictures of various genres, but from the beginning of the 1970s he specialized in the genre of musical film, making the film Farewell to St. Petersburg about the stay of Johann Strauss II in Russia. Yan Frid received all-union recognition after Dog in the Manger hit the television screens, which was based on the play of Lope de Vega, with Mikhail BoyarskyMargarita Terekhova in the lead roles. Great success awaited Yan Frid with films Die Fledermaus with Yuri and Vitaly Solomin, Lyudmila Maksakova; "Silva" with Ivar Kalninsh; "Pious Marta" with Margarita Terekhova and Emmanuel Vitorgan; "Don Cesar de Bazan" with Anna Samokhina, Mikhail Boyarsky and Yuri Bogatyrev. In addition to the above, the director has directed the films "The Road of Truth", "Another's Trouble", The Green Carriage, "Free Wind", "Tartuffe". In 1932-1962 Frid taught at the Leningrad Ostrovsky Theater Institute; since 1970 he was a professor at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory. In the mid-1990s, Yan Frid, along with his wife Victoria Gorshenina moved to permanent residence in Stuttgart, Germany. He died on December 19, 2003 in Stuttgart.