Ilf and Petrov, Soviet humorists active at the end of the 1920s and in the ’30s. The intimate literary collaboration of Ilya Ilf (pseudonym of Ilya Arnoldovich Faynzilberg; b. Oct. 3 [Oct. 15, New Style], 1897, Odessa, Russian Empire [now in Ukraine]—d. April 13, 1937, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) and Yevgeny Petrov (pseudonym of Yevgeny Petrovich Katayev; b. Nov. 30 [Dec. 13, New Style], 1903, Odessa, Russian Empire [now in Ukraine]—d. July 2, 1942, Crimea, U.S.S.R.) resulted in a number of immensely popular satirical works.
Born into a poor Jewish family, Ilf worked at various trades while a youth, becoming a journalist in Odessa at age 18. He went to Moscow in 1923 to begin a career as a professional writer. Petrov, the son of a teacher, began his career as a news-service correspondent, worked briefly as a criminal investigator, and went to Moscow in 1923, where he became a professional journalist. Initially, Ilf worked on the staff of Gudok (“The Whistle”), the central rail-workers’ newspaper, while Petrov worked on the satirical journal, Krasny perets (“Red Pepper”). In 1926 Petrov moved to “The Whistle,” and he and Ilf formed their unique literary partnership.
In 1928 they published the first fruit of their collaboration, Dvenadtsat stulyev (The Twelve Chairs), a rollicking picaresque novel of farcical adventures within a framework of telling satire on Soviet life during the New Economic Policy (NEP) period. The work was an instant success, and its rogue-hero—the irrepressible Ostap Bender—became overnight, and remained, one of the most popular personages in Russian fiction. Killed off at the end of The Twelve Chairs, Bender was resurrected in a sequel, Zolotoy telyonok (1931; The Little Golden Calf), an equally humorous but more serious and trenchant satire centring upon pretenders who claim to be the son of a dead Soviet hero.
In 1936, following a tour of the United States, Ilf and Petrov wrote Odnoyetazhnaya Amerika (“One-Storied America”), a witty account of their automobile trip across that country. In large part an exposé of the materialistic and uncultured character of American life, the work nevertheless indicates that many aspects of capitalist society appealed to the authors. A kind of sequel to this work was the long story Tonya (1937), which portrays with appropriate satirical touches the life of Soviet people compelled to live in a capitalist society. In addition to these major works, from 1932 Ilf and Petrov collaborated on a number of humorous and satiric sketches for the newspaper Pravda.
In 1937 Ilf died of tuberculosis. Petrov continued his literary work, writing for the newspaper Literaturnaya gazeta (“Literary Gazette”) and the magazine Ogonyok (“Little Light”). He died in 1942, when the airplane in which he was traveling from Sevastopol to Moscow crashed.