His career in the theatre effectively stalled, Erdman turned his attention to the cinema. Even before the writing of
The Suicide, he had created scripts for several
silent films, the most famous being
Boris Barnet's
The House on Trubnaya. The legend of Erdman's arrest comfortably states that his fate was sealed when Stanislavsky's actor
Vasily Kachalov thoughtlessly recited Erdman's satirical fables to Stalin during a night party in the
Kremlin. In fact, as shown by Erdman's biographer John Freedman, it was surely a combination of many things - including the scandal around
The Suicide, a bitterly satirical short play titled
A Meeting About Laughter that was pulled from publication shortly before going to press, bitter public attacks on Erdman in the press by many, including the prominent regime-friendly playwright Vsevolod Vyshnevsky, and the extremely popular satirical fables co-authored by Erdman and his friend Vladimir Mass, which were recited orally all over Moscow. Erdman was arrested 10 October 1933, as was Mass. The arrest took place in front of the entire film crew on the set of the filming of the first Soviet attempt to create a musical,
Jolly Fellows (director
Grigory Aleksandrov). He was held for several days in the bowels of the KGB headquarters at Lubyanka, then was hurriedly deported to the town of
Yeniseysk in
Siberia. The following year he was permitted to move to
Tomsk, where, thanks to the patronage of the prominent local actress Lina Samborskaya, he was able to secure a job as the literary director at the Tomsk Drama Theatre. His only major work there would appear to have been a dramatization of Maxim Gorky's novel
Mother in 1935. Although he was not allowed to appear in Moscow, Erdman would visit the city illegally in the 1930s. During one of such visits, he read to
Mikhail Bulgakov the first act of his new play
The Hypnotist (never completed). Bulgakov was so impressed by his talent that he petitioned Stalin to sanction Erdman's return to the capital. The petition was ignored, but Erdman was allowed to write the script for another Grigory Alexandrov comedy
Volga-Volga (1938). At the outbreak of
World War II, Erdman was in
Ryazan with his friend and collaborator
Mikhail Volpin, whom he had known since his time with Mayakovsky. As both men had a history as political prisoners, they were unable to enlist in the army in the ordinary fashion. Instead, they had to travel by foot to
Tolyatti, a distance of 600 kilometers, in order to enlist in a special unit open to disenfranchised persons and former priests. In 1942, through
Lavrentiy Beria's patronage, Erdman obtained a transfer to Moscow for himself and Volpin, and they spent the remainder of the war writing material for the Song and Dance Ensemble at the Central Club of the
NKVD. ==The Post-War and Thaw Eras==