Olga Nikolaevna Blagovidova ( 1905 - 1975 ) - Ukrainian Soviet opera singer (mezzo-soprano) and teacher. People's Artist of the USSR
| Blagovidova, Olga Nikolaevna | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| basic information | ||||
| Date of Birth | May 29, 1905 | |||
| Place of Birth | Saint Petersburg Russian empire | |||
| Date of death | October 23, 1975 (70 years old) | |||
| A place of death | Odessa Ukrainian SSR , USSR | |||
| Buried | ||||
| A country | ||||
| Professions | opera singer music teacher | |||
| Singing voice | mezzo soprano | |||
| Awards | ||||
Laureate of the 1st All-Union Competition of Musicians in Moscow (1933, 2nd Prize) and the 1st All-Ukrainian Competition of Vocalists in Kiev (1937, 1st Prize) [1] . Member of the CPSU (b) / CPSU since 1945.
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 Awards
- 3 notes
- 4 Literature
- 5 Links
Biography
She was born on May 16 ( 29 - in a new style) in St. Petersburg in May 1905 .
At the age of ten, she moved to Odessa with her family. She began studying piano at the age of four in St. Petersburg, continuing her music studies in Odessa with Professor N.V. Chegodaeva. In 1921 she entered the vocal department of the Odessa Music and Drama Institute (now the Odessa National Music Academy named after A. V. Nezhdanova ), where she studied in 1925 in the class of Professor Yu. A. Raider .
In 1928-1931 Olga Blagovidova was a soloist of the Bolshoi Theater of the USSR [2] , in 1931-1932 - the Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theater (now the Paliashvili Georgian Opera and Ballet Theater ), since 1932 - the Odessa Opera and Ballet Theater . During the Great Patriotic War, she was evacuated and worked in the Kazakh Opera and Ballet Theater (1941-1944) [1] .
Over the years of artistic activity, Olga Blagovidova performed more than 30 opera parts and many chamber works. Among her parties are Carmen (Carmen Bizet), Countess (The Queen of Spades Tchaikovsky), Aksinia (The Quiet Don Dzerzhinsky), Terpilikha (Natalka Poltavka Lysenko) and others.
In 1948, Olga Nikolaevna entirely switched to teaching activities (taught vocals), which she led along with the singing since 1933. Since 1951 she was a professor at the Odessa Conservatory . Among her students are B. Rudenko , N. Ogrenich , I. Ponomarenko [3] , Z. Khristich , A. Voroshilo , L. Shemchuk , G. Vasko [4] , T. Boboshko , A. P. Zhilkin , L. Turcan and many others. It is noteworthy that O. N. Blagovidova was the only teacher in the former Soviet Union, in whose competition they. Three students of Tchaikovsky won the first prizes: Nikolai Ogrenich (1970), Ivan Ponomarenko (1974) and Lyudmila Shemchuk (1978) [5] .
She was a member of the Scientific and Methodological Council under the Ministry of Culture of the USSR, a member of the expert Higher Attestation Commission of the USSR, and was repeatedly elected deputy of the Odessa City Council.
She died on October 23, 1975 in Odessa.
Rewards
- Order of the Red Banner of Labor (11.24.1960)
- Honored Artist of the USSR (1946).
- People's Artist of the USSR (1969).
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 BLAGOVIDOVA Olga Mikolaivna (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Blagovidova Olga Nikolaevna
- ↑ Ivan Ponomarenko: “As long as there is a voice, I will sing”
- ↑ VASKO Gennadiy Ivanovich (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Ivan PONOMARENKO: “Poki є voice - I will spivati” (Ukrainian)
Literature
- Kocherba L. Olga Blagovidova. Kiev, 1973.
- Lebedeva I.O. N. Blagovidova - teacher. Moscow, 1984.
- Mystetsvo of Ukraine: Biographical dovnik / Emphasis: A.V. Kudritsky, M.G. Labinsky. Ed. A.V. Kudritsky. - K.: "Ukrainian Encyclopedia" im. M.P. Bazhan, 1997. ISBN 5-88500-071-9 .
Links
- Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia: In 12 volumes, 13 books. - T. 1. - K .: GR USE, 1978. - S. 486.