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Solomiya Krushelnytska

Solomiya Amvrosiivna Krushelnytska[N 1] (Ukrainian: Соломія Амвро́сіївна Крушельницька; September 23 [11], 1872 — November 16, 1952) was a Ukrainian soprano, considered to be one of the brightest opera stars of the first half of the 20th century.[1]

Solomiya Krushelnytska
Соломія Амвросіївна Крушельницька
Born(1872-09-23)September 23, 1872
DiedNovember 16, 1952(1952-11-16) (aged 80)
Resting placeLychakiv Cemetery
NationalityUkrainian
EducationValery Wysocki [pl], Fausta Crespi
Alma materLviv Conservatory
Known forOperatic soprano
SpouseAlfredo Cesare Augusto Riccioni
Awards1951
Merited Artist of Ukraine
Memorial(s)Solomiya Krushelnytska Musical Memorial Museum [uk] in Lviv, Solomiya Krushelnytska Museum [uk] in Ternopil Oblast, the Solomiya Krushelnytska Lviv State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, Krushelnytska Monument [uk] in Ternopil, Solomiya Krushelnytska Streets in Kremenchuk [uk], Kiev [uk], Lviv  [uk], and Ternopil [uk]
Websitesalomeamuseum.lviv.ua/en
Solomiya Krushelnytska and her husband, Cesare Riccioni

During her life, Solomiya Krushelnytska was recognized as the most outstanding singer in the world.[2] Among her numerous awards and distinctions, in particular, the title of "Wagner's diva" of the 20th century. Singing with her on the same stage was considered an honor for Enrico Caruso, Titta Ruffo, Fedor Chaliapin. Italian composer Giacomo Puccini presented the singer with his portrait with the inscription "The most beautiful and charming Butterfly".

In the modern Ukrainian tradition, she is included in the list of most famous women of ancient and modern Ukraine.[3]

Early life and education

Solomiya Krushelnytska was born in 1872, in the village of Bielawińce, Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Biliavyntsi, Ukraine). After several years of moving from village to village, in 1878 her father, the Ukrainian Greek Catholic priest Ambrosiy Vasilyovych Krushelnytsky [uk] (Polish: Ambroży Kruszelnicki[4]), settled with his large family in the village of Bila [uk] on the outskirts of the regional metropolis of Ternopil. In addition to Solomiya, the noble-born family[5] included her mother Teodora Maria (née Savchynska, d. 1907), sisters Olha/Olga, Osypa, Hanna/Anna, Emilia and Maria, and brothers Anton and Volodymyr.[6] In her memoirs, Solomiya's niece Daria/Odarka Bandriwska writes that as a child, the future diva came to learn a fair number of Ukrainian folk songs from the residents of the various villages in which her family had lived.[7]

Studying in Ternopil

She started singing at a young age. She studied at the Ternopil school of Music. She received the basics of musical training at the Ternopil Classical Gymnasium, where she took external exams. Here she became close to the music group of high school students, a member of which was also Denis Sichinsky - later a famous composer, the first professional musician in Galicia.

In 1883, at the Shevchenko Concert in Ternopil, Solomiya, who sang in the choir of the Ukrainska Besida society, made her first public performance. At one of the choir's concerts on August 2, 1885, Ivan Franko was present.

Solomiya Krushelnytska met the theater for the first time in Ternopil. From time to time the Lviv theater of the Ruska Besida society performed here, the repertoire of which included operas by Semen Hulak-Artemovsky and Mykola Lysenko. The soprano had the opportunity to watch the play of dramatic actors Filomena Lopatynska, Antonina Osipovycheva, Stepan Yanovych, Andriy Muzhyk-Stechynsky, Mykhailo Olshansky, Karolina Klishevska.

Studying at the Lviv Conservatory

In 1891 Solomiya entered the Lviv Conservatory of the Galician Music Society.

The leadership of the conservatory praised the abilities of the young singer.

At the conservatory, her teacher was the then famous professor in Lviv, Valery Vysotsky [pl; uk], who raised a wide array of famous Ukrainian and Polish singers. During her studies at the conservatory, her first solo performance took place on April 13, 1892, the singer performed the main part in GF Handel's oratorio "Messiah". On June 5, 1892, another performance of the singer took place in the Lviv Boyana, where she performed Mykola Lysenko's song "Why do I have black eyebrows".

Solomiya Krushelnytska's first opera debut took place on April 15, 1893: she performed the part of Leonora in the opera "Favorite" by the Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti on the stage of the Lviv City Theater Skarbka. Then her partners were the famous Rudolf Bernhardt and Julian Jerome. Her performances in the role of Sanctuary in P. Mascagni's "Village Honor" were also very successful.

In 1893 Krushelnytska graduated from the Lviv Conservatory.

Career

Solomiya Krushelnytska followed her 1893 professional debut with additional performances at the Lviv Opera. On the advice of Gemma Bellincioni, who witnessed Solomiya's talents in Lviv that summer, the young Krushelnytska would travel to Italy in the fall of 1893 to pursue further vocal studies.[8] After her father took out a loan for her travels, Solomiya arrived in Milan where she would study under Fausta Crespi,[9] while living with Bellincioni's mother. It was under Crespi's tutelage that Solomiya transitioned from her previous training as a mezzo-soprano to a lyric-dramatic soprano. For the following 3 years, she would divide her time between Milan and Lviv, returning regularly for engagements with the Lviv Opera in order to pay for her ongoing studies in Italy.

Solomiya would go on to perform in Odessa (1896–1897), Warsaw (1898–1902),[10] St Petersburg (1901–1902), the Paris Grand Opera (1902), Naples (1903–4), Cairo and Alexandria (1904), and Rome (1904–5).[9]

In 1904, she famously became a savior of Puccini's Madama Butterfly. The opera had been booed by the audience at its premiere in Milan's La Scala, but three months later in Brescia, a revised version of the work, with Krushelnytska singing the leading role, was a major success.[10]

Her schedule, during her studies in Milan, included vocal lessons, acting lessons, learning new parts, learning new languages – for six hours every day. Her "leisure time" included visits to museums and historic sites, attendance at operatic and theatrical performances. She maintained active correspondence with friends and acquaintances, covering such issues as the fate of her native Ukraine, problems of culture, recently read books. In addition, Krushelnytska regularly appeared in performances of the music and drama school L'Armonia.

On tours, she sang in four and five productions during a single week. She could learn a part in a new opera in two days, and develop the character of a role in another three or four. Her repertoire totaled 63 parts. In the history of music, Krushelnytska is known as an active promoter of the works of her contemporaries, and of Richard Wagner. In 1902 she starred in a successful production of Lohengrin in Paris. In 1906 she appeared to acclaim at Milan's La Scala in Richard Strauss's Salome, conducted by Arturo Toscanini. She also performed in other theatres across Europe, Egypt, Algeria, Argentina, Brazil, Chile and others.

In 1910, Krushelnytska married Italian attorney and the mayor of Viareggio, Alfredo Cesare Augusto Riccioni.[11] In 1920, at the height of her career, she left the opera world, and three years later started concert tours, performing in Western Europe, Canada and the USA. Her knowledge of eight languages allowed her to include in her concert programs songs of many nations. She was a fervent promoter of Ukrainian folk songs and works by Ukrainian composers.

Later life

 
Solomiya Krushelnytska's home in Lviv

Prior to the death of her mother Teodora in 1907, Solomiya's family convinced her to purchase a residence in Lviv, to use whenever she returned from touring, and to provide a comfortable living space for the rest of the family, especially for her mother towards the end of her life.[12] In 1903, Solomiya purchased a building located on what is now Krushelnytska Street [uk] (named in her honor in 1993), uphill from the campus of Lviv University. Built and designed by Jakub Kroch in 1884, the large building had several floors of living space, initially occupied by members of Krushelnytska's immediate family. Solomiya's brother-in-law Karl Bandriwsky was asked to oversee the management of the building once apartments began be rented out following the departure of her siblings after marriage. With a facade featuring heavy rustication decorated with ornamental statuary of lyrical muses by Leonard Marconi,[13] the building became known as Lviv's Stonehouse of Music (Ukrainian: Музикальнa кам’яниця),[12] a haven for intellectuals, visiting artists and impresarios engaged at the nearby opera house. In the latter years of his life, it would also serve as the home of writer and family friend, Ivan Franko.

In August 1939, after the death of her husband, Krushelnytska left Italy and returned to her home in Lviv, which during the interbellum period had become an important stronghold of the Second Polish Republic. Tragically, she would remain trapped in this city for the rest of her life, when only a few weeks following her arrival, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union colluded to invade Poland and divide its territory between them in September 1939. The two invading armies met at Lviv, and proceeded to lay siege to the city. The city would suffer under 10 days of shelling by Luftwaffe bombers, German panzer strikes and Red Army cavalry raids, incurring the loss of several thousand lives and the destruction of many historic buildings, including the complete leveling of the Church of the Holy Spirit [uk] one block away from the Krushelnytska residence. Following the surrender of Polish forces, Lviv was ceded to Soviet occupation, which swiftly enacted a brutal regime of repression. The home of Solomiya Krushelnytska, was seized by the authorities,[12] leaving her only one living quarters on the second floor to share with her sister, Hanna. For much of this period, Solomiya Krushelnytska remained confined to her house, due to a broken leg.[12]

Less than two years later, the German army invaded Ukraine again, and Lviv fell under Nazi occupation by July 1941. This time, it was the Wehrmacht that took over two floors of the Krushelnytska residence,[12] forcing all occupants to either move out or move in together on the upper floors. Solomiya would survive the years of ethnic cleansing her city would endure, until the return of Soviet troops in 1944 would transition her into the final stage of her life, as an artist trapped behind the Iron curtain. The formerly world-renowned artist began giving voice lessons and would return to her alma mater, the Lviv Conservatory, as a professor. In 1951, she was recognized as a Merited Artist of Ukraine. Solomiya Krushelnytska died on November 16, 1952, and was subsequently buried at Lviv's Lychakiv Cemetery, across from the gravesite of her friend, Ivan Franko.

Legacy

● The Lviv Theatre of Opera and Ballet is named after her (Lviv State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre of Solomiya Krushelnytska, Ukrainian: Львівський Державний академічний театр опери та балету імені Соломії Крушельницької).[citation needed] Lviv Secondary Specialized Music Boarding School named after Solomiya Krushelnytska is also named after her.[14]

● In 1982 at the Kyiv Studio of Feature Films named after O. Dovzhenko, director Fialko Oleh Borysovych created a historical and biographical film dedicated to the life and work of Solomiya Krushelnytska - "Return of the Butterfly", based on the novel of the same name by Valeria Vrublevska. The film is based on the real facts of the singer's life and is based on her memories. Solomiya's parts are performed by Gisela Tsipol. The role of Solomiya in the film was played by Yelena Safonova.

● In addition, documentaries have been made, including: "Solomiya Krushelnytska" (directed by I. Mudrak, Lviv, "Mist", 1994);

● "Solomiya Krushelnytska" (1994, Ukrtelefilm, authors: N. Davydovska, V. Kuznetsov, opera M. Markovsky; musicologist M. Golovashchenko takes part in the film);

● "Two Lives of Solomiya" (directed by O. Frolov, Kyiv, "Contact", 1997); prepared a TV show from the series "Names" (2004);

● Documentary "Solo-mea" from the series "Game of Fate" (directed by V. Obraz, VIATEL studio, 2008).

● In 1995, the premiere of the play "Solomiya Krushelnytska" (author B. Melnychuk, I. Lyakhovsky) took place at the Ternopil Regional Drama Theater (now the Academic Theater). Since 1987, the Solomiya Krushelnytska Competition has been held in Ternopil. Every year an international competition named after Krushelnytska takes place in Lviv; opera festivals have become traditional.

● In 1997, the National Bank of Ukraine issued a commemorative coin with a face value of 2 hryvnias, dedicated to the 125th anniversary of the singer's birth.

● March 18, 2006 on the stage of the Lviv National Academic Opera and Ballet Theater. S. Krushelnytska hosted the premiere of Myroslav Skoryk's ballet "Return of the Butterfly", based on facts from the life of Solomiya Krushelnytska. The ballet uses music by Giacomo Puccini.

● 1963 in the village. A memorial plaque and a memorial museum-manor of Solomiya Krushelnytska were opened in Bila Ternopil district, a room-museum (Bilyavyntsi village of Buchach district) and a music-memorial museum in Lviv operate sculptor T. Bryzh, architect L. Skoryk), a stamp and an envelope dedicated to the 125th anniversary of his birth (1997) and a commemorative coin (1997) were issued.

● In 2010 a monument to SA Krushelnytska was unveiled in Ternopil.

● Also in her honor are named 14 huts of the UPU named after Solomiya Krushelnytska.

● On October 1, 1989, the music and memorial museum was opened in the singer's apartment. In 1993, the street where she lived in the last years of her life was named after S. Krushelnytska in Lviv.

● A street in Darnytskyi district of Kyiv is also named after Solomiya Krushelnytska.

Gallery

Notes

Footnotes

  1. ^ Her name is sometimes spelt as Solomiya Ambrosiyivna Krushelnytska, Salomea Krusceniski, Krushel'nytska or Kruszelnicka.

References

  1. ^ "Solomiya Krushelnytska. Voice that belongs to the mankind". See You In Ukraine. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Solomiya Krushelnytska. Voice that belongs to the mankind | See you in Ukraine!". see-you.in.ua. Retrieved 2021-03-05.
  3. ^ "Найвідоміші жінки давньої та сучасної України". Україна для українців (in Ukrainian). 2017-08-29. Retrieved 2021-03-05.
  4. ^ Gazeta Lwowska, 14.12.1854, no. 285, p. 1137.
  5. ^ John-Paul Himka. (1988).Galician Villagers and the Ukrainian National Movement in the Nineteenth Century. MacMillan Press in Association with the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta, pg.284
  6. ^ "Родовід Теодори Марії Савчинської". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  7. ^ O. K. Bandrivska, Memories about S. Krushelnytska
  8. ^ Wynnyckyj-Yusypovych, Oksana A. "Italian Opera Singers: 3 Amazing Female Operatic Voices". Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  9. ^ a b Historical Dictionary of Ukraine (2nd ed.). United Kingdom: The Scarecrow Press. 2013. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-8108-7847-1.
  10. ^ a b "Krusceniski, Salomea". Andrea's Cantabile – Subito. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Solomia Krushelnytska and Italy". The Day. 21 November 2006. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  12. ^ a b c d e "Давні мелодії "Музикальної кам'яниці"". Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  13. ^ Бірюльов, Юрій Олександрович (2007). Leonard Marconi i jego pracownia. Warsaw: Neriton. ISBN 978-83-7543-009-7.
  14. ^ "Львівська середня спеціалізована музична школа-інтернат ім. С. Крушельницької". www.akolada.org.ua. Retrieved 2021-03-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Sources

External links

solomiya, krushelnytska, solomiya, amvrosiivna, krushelnytska, ukrainian, Соломія, Амвро, сіївна, Крушельницька, september, 1872, november, 1952, ukrainian, soprano, considered, brightest, opera, stars, first, half, 20th, century, Соломія, Амвросіївна, Крушель. Solomiya Amvrosiivna Krushelnytska N 1 Ukrainian Solomiya Amvro siyivna Krushelnicka September 23 11 1872 November 16 1952 was a Ukrainian soprano considered to be one of the brightest opera stars of the first half of the 20th century 1 Solomiya KrushelnytskaSolomiya Amvrosiyivna KrushelnickaBorn 1872 09 23 September 23 1872Bielawince Galicia Austria Hungary now Biliavyntsi Ukraine DiedNovember 16 1952 1952 11 16 aged 80 Lviv Ukrainian SSR Soviet Union now Ukraine Resting placeLychakiv CemeteryNationalityUkrainianEducationValery Wysocki pl Fausta CrespiAlma materLviv ConservatoryKnown forOperatic sopranoSpouseAlfredo Cesare Augusto RiccioniAwards1951 Merited Artist of UkraineMemorial s Solomiya Krushelnytska Musical Memorial Museum uk in Lviv Solomiya Krushelnytska Museum uk in Ternopil Oblast the Solomiya Krushelnytska Lviv State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre Krushelnytska Monument uk in Ternopil Solomiya Krushelnytska Streets in Kremenchuk uk Kiev uk Lviv uk and Ternopil uk Websitesalomeamuseum wbr lviv wbr ua wbr enSolomiya Krushelnytska and her husband Cesare Riccioni During her life Solomiya Krushelnytska was recognized as the most outstanding singer in the world 2 Among her numerous awards and distinctions in particular the title of Wagner s diva of the 20th century Singing with her on the same stage was considered an honor for Enrico Caruso Titta Ruffo Fedor Chaliapin Italian composer Giacomo Puccini presented the singer with his portrait with the inscription The most beautiful and charming Butterfly In the modern Ukrainian tradition she is included in the list of most famous women of ancient and modern Ukraine 3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Studying in Ternopil 3 Studying at the Lviv Conservatory 4 Career 5 Later life 6 Legacy 7 Gallery 8 Notes 9 External linksEarly life and education EditSolomiya Krushelnytska was born in 1872 in the village of Bielawince Galicia Austria Hungary now Biliavyntsi Ukraine After several years of moving from village to village in 1878 her father the Ukrainian Greek Catholic priest Ambrosiy Vasilyovych Krushelnytsky uk Polish Ambrozy Kruszelnicki 4 settled with his large family in the village of Bila uk on the outskirts of the regional metropolis of Ternopil In addition to Solomiya the noble born family 5 included her mother Teodora Maria nee Savchynska d 1907 sisters Olha Olga Osypa Hanna Anna Emilia and Maria and brothers Anton and Volodymyr 6 In her memoirs Solomiya s niece Daria Odarka Bandriwska writes that as a child the future diva came to learn a fair number of Ukrainian folk songs from the residents of the various villages in which her family had lived 7 Studying in Ternopil EditShe started singing at a young age She studied at the Ternopil school of Music She received the basics of musical training at the Ternopil Classical Gymnasium where she took external exams Here she became close to the music group of high school students a member of which was also Denis Sichinsky later a famous composer the first professional musician in Galicia In 1883 at the Shevchenko Concert in Ternopil Solomiya who sang in the choir of the Ukrainska Besida society made her first public performance At one of the choir s concerts on August 2 1885 Ivan Franko was present Solomiya Krushelnytska met the theater for the first time in Ternopil From time to time the Lviv theater of the Ruska Besida society performed here the repertoire of which included operas by Semen Hulak Artemovsky and Mykola Lysenko The soprano had the opportunity to watch the play of dramatic actors Filomena Lopatynska Antonina Osipovycheva Stepan Yanovych Andriy Muzhyk Stechynsky Mykhailo Olshansky Karolina Klishevska Studying at the Lviv Conservatory EditIn 1891 Solomiya entered the Lviv Conservatory of the Galician Music Society The leadership of the conservatory praised the abilities of the young singer At the conservatory her teacher was the then famous professor in Lviv Valery Vysotsky pl uk who raised a wide array of famous Ukrainian and Polish singers During her studies at the conservatory her first solo performance took place on April 13 1892 the singer performed the main part in GF Handel s oratorio Messiah On June 5 1892 another performance of the singer took place in the Lviv Boyana where she performed Mykola Lysenko s song Why do I have black eyebrows Solomiya Krushelnytska s first opera debut took place on April 15 1893 she performed the part of Leonora in the opera Favorite by the Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti on the stage of the Lviv City Theater Skarbka Then her partners were the famous Rudolf Bernhardt and Julian Jerome Her performances in the role of Sanctuary in P Mascagni s Village Honor were also very successful In 1893 Krushelnytska graduated from the Lviv Conservatory Career EditSolomiya Krushelnytska followed her 1893 professional debut with additional performances at the Lviv Opera On the advice of Gemma Bellincioni who witnessed Solomiya s talents in Lviv that summer the young Krushelnytska would travel to Italy in the fall of 1893 to pursue further vocal studies 8 After her father took out a loan for her travels Solomiya arrived in Milan where she would study under Fausta Crespi 9 while living with Bellincioni s mother It was under Crespi s tutelage that Solomiya transitioned from her previous training as a mezzo soprano to a lyric dramatic soprano For the following 3 years she would divide her time between Milan and Lviv returning regularly for engagements with the Lviv Opera in order to pay for her ongoing studies in Italy Solomiya would go on to perform in Odessa 1896 1897 Warsaw 1898 1902 10 St Petersburg 1901 1902 the Paris Grand Opera 1902 Naples 1903 4 Cairo and Alexandria 1904 and Rome 1904 5 9 In 1904 she famously became a savior of Puccini s Madama Butterfly The opera had been booed by the audience at its premiere in Milan s La Scala but three months later in Brescia a revised version of the work with Krushelnytska singing the leading role was a major success 10 Her schedule during her studies in Milan included vocal lessons acting lessons learning new parts learning new languages for six hours every day Her leisure time included visits to museums and historic sites attendance at operatic and theatrical performances She maintained active correspondence with friends and acquaintances covering such issues as the fate of her native Ukraine problems of culture recently read books In addition Krushelnytska regularly appeared in performances of the music and drama school L Armonia On tours she sang in four and five productions during a single week She could learn a part in a new opera in two days and develop the character of a role in another three or four Her repertoire totaled 63 parts In the history of music Krushelnytska is known as an active promoter of the works of her contemporaries and of Richard Wagner In 1902 she starred in a successful production of Lohengrin in Paris In 1906 she appeared to acclaim at Milan s La Scala in Richard Strauss s Salome conducted by Arturo Toscanini She also performed in other theatres across Europe Egypt Algeria Argentina Brazil Chile and others In 1910 Krushelnytska married Italian attorney and the mayor of Viareggio Alfredo Cesare Augusto Riccioni 11 In 1920 at the height of her career she left the opera world and three years later started concert tours performing in Western Europe Canada and the USA Her knowledge of eight languages allowed her to include in her concert programs songs of many nations She was a fervent promoter of Ukrainian folk songs and works by Ukrainian composers Later life Edit Solomiya Krushelnytska s home in Lviv Prior to the death of her mother Teodora in 1907 Solomiya s family convinced her to purchase a residence in Lviv to use whenever she returned from touring and to provide a comfortable living space for the rest of the family especially for her mother towards the end of her life 12 In 1903 Solomiya purchased a building located on what is now Krushelnytska Street uk named in her honor in 1993 uphill from the campus of Lviv University Built and designed by Jakub Kroch in 1884 the large building had several floors of living space initially occupied by members of Krushelnytska s immediate family Solomiya s brother in law Karl Bandriwsky was asked to oversee the management of the building once apartments began be rented out following the departure of her siblings after marriage With a facade featuring heavy rustication decorated with ornamental statuary of lyrical muses by Leonard Marconi 13 the building became known as Lviv s Stonehouse of Music Ukrainian Muzikalna kam yanicya 12 a haven for intellectuals visiting artists and impresarios engaged at the nearby opera house In the latter years of his life it would also serve as the home of writer and family friend Ivan Franko In August 1939 after the death of her husband Krushelnytska left Italy and returned to her home in Lviv which during the interbellum period had become an important stronghold of the Second Polish Republic Tragically she would remain trapped in this city for the rest of her life when only a few weeks following her arrival Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union colluded to invade Poland and divide its territory between them in September 1939 The two invading armies met at Lviv and proceeded to lay siege to the city The city would suffer under 10 days of shelling by Luftwaffe bombers German panzer strikes and Red Army cavalry raids incurring the loss of several thousand lives and the destruction of many historic buildings including the complete leveling of the Church of the Holy Spirit uk one block away from the Krushelnytska residence Following the surrender of Polish forces Lviv was ceded to Soviet occupation which swiftly enacted a brutal regime of repression The home of Solomiya Krushelnytska was seized by the authorities 12 leaving her only one living quarters on the second floor to share with her sister Hanna For much of this period Solomiya Krushelnytska remained confined to her house due to a broken leg 12 Less than two years later the German army invaded Ukraine again and Lviv fell under Nazi occupation by July 1941 This time it was the Wehrmacht that took over two floors of the Krushelnytska residence 12 forcing all occupants to either move out or move in together on the upper floors Solomiya would survive the years of ethnic cleansing her city would endure until the return of Soviet troops in 1944 would transition her into the final stage of her life as an artist trapped behind the Iron curtain The formerly world renowned artist began giving voice lessons and would return to her alma mater the Lviv Conservatory as a professor In 1951 she was recognized as a Merited Artist of Ukraine Solomiya Krushelnytska died on November 16 1952 and was subsequently buried at Lviv s Lychakiv Cemetery across from the gravesite of her friend Ivan Franko Legacy Edit The Lviv Theatre of Opera and Ballet is named after her Lviv State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre of Solomiya Krushelnytska Ukrainian Lvivskij Derzhavnij akademichnij teatr operi ta baletu imeni Solomiyi Krushelnickoyi citation needed Lviv Secondary Specialized Music Boarding School named after Solomiya Krushelnytska is also named after her 14 In 1982 at the Kyiv Studio of Feature Films named after O Dovzhenko director Fialko Oleh Borysovych created a historical and biographical film dedicated to the life and work of Solomiya Krushelnytska Return of the Butterfly based on the novel of the same name by Valeria Vrublevska The film is based on the real facts of the singer s life and is based on her memories Solomiya s parts are performed by Gisela Tsipol The role of Solomiya in the film was played by Yelena Safonova In addition documentaries have been made including Solomiya Krushelnytska directed by I Mudrak Lviv Mist 1994 Solomiya Krushelnytska 1994 Ukrtelefilm authors N Davydovska V Kuznetsov opera M Markovsky musicologist M Golovashchenko takes part in the film Two Lives of Solomiya directed by O Frolov Kyiv Contact 1997 prepared a TV show from the series Names 2004 Documentary Solo mea from the series Game of Fate directed by V Obraz VIATEL studio 2008 In 1995 the premiere of the play Solomiya Krushelnytska author B Melnychuk I Lyakhovsky took place at the Ternopil Regional Drama Theater now the Academic Theater Since 1987 the Solomiya Krushelnytska Competition has been held in Ternopil Every year an international competition named after Krushelnytska takes place in Lviv opera festivals have become traditional In 1997 the National Bank of Ukraine issued a commemorative coin with a face value of 2 hryvnias dedicated to the 125th anniversary of the singer s birth March 18 2006 on the stage of the Lviv National Academic Opera and Ballet Theater S Krushelnytska hosted the premiere of Myroslav Skoryk s ballet Return of the Butterfly based on facts from the life of Solomiya Krushelnytska The ballet uses music by Giacomo Puccini 1963 in the village A memorial plaque and a memorial museum manor of Solomiya Krushelnytska were opened in Bila Ternopil district a room museum Bilyavyntsi village of Buchach district and a music memorial museum in Lviv operate sculptor T Bryzh architect L Skoryk a stamp and an envelope dedicated to the 125th anniversary of his birth 1997 and a commemorative coin 1997 were issued In 2010 a monument to SA Krushelnytska was unveiled in Ternopil Also in her honor are named 14 huts of the UPU named after Solomiya Krushelnytska On October 1 1989 the music and memorial museum was opened in the singer s apartment In 1993 the street where she lived in the last years of her life was named after S Krushelnytska in Lviv A street in Darnytskyi district of Kyiv is also named after Solomiya Krushelnytska Gallery Edit Signed card of Solomiya Krushelnytska as Livia in Livia Quintilla by Zygmunt Noskowski Soviet envelope featuring Solomiya Krushelnytska in 1987 Stamp of Ukraine Solomiya Krushelnytska 1997 Michel 219 Board of memory stay of Solomiya Krushelnytska in the village Dubyna Stamp of Ukraine Solomiya Krushelnytska statue in Ternopil 2015Notes EditFootnotes Her name is sometimes spelt as Solomiya Ambrosiyivna Krushelnytska Salomea Krusceniski Krushel nytska or Kruszelnicka References Solomiya Krushelnytska Voice that belongs to the mankind See You In Ukraine Retrieved 20 July 2016 Solomiya Krushelnytska Voice that belongs to the mankind See you in Ukraine see you in ua Retrieved 2021 03 05 Najvidomishi zhinki davnoyi ta suchasnoyi Ukrayini Ukrayina dlya ukrayinciv in Ukrainian 2017 08 29 Retrieved 2021 03 05 Gazeta Lwowska 14 12 1854 no 285 p 1137 John Paul Himka 1988 Galician Villagers and the Ukrainian National Movement in the Nineteenth Century MacMillan Press in Association with the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta pg 284 Rodovid Teodori Mariyi Savchinskoyi Retrieved 20 July 2016 O K Bandrivska Memories about S Krushelnytska Wynnyckyj Yusypovych Oksana A Italian Opera Singers 3 Amazing Female Operatic Voices Retrieved 21 July 2016 a b Historical Dictionary of Ukraine 2nd ed United Kingdom The Scarecrow Press 2013 p 288 ISBN 978 0 8108 7847 1 a b Krusceniski Salomea Andrea s Cantabile Subito Retrieved 20 July 2016 Solomia Krushelnytska and Italy The Day 21 November 2006 Retrieved 20 July 2016 a b c d e Davni melodiyi Muzikalnoyi kam yanici Retrieved 19 July 2016 Biryulov Yurij Oleksandrovich 2007 Leonard Marconi i jego pracownia Warsaw Neriton ISBN 978 83 7543 009 7 Lvivska serednya specializovana muzichna shkola internat im S Krushelnickoyi www akolada org ua Retrieved 2021 03 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sources Celletti Rodolfo 1992 Kruscelnitska Salomea in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera ed Stanley Sadie London ISBN 0 333 73432 7 Biography photoalbum sound clip of Ukrainian Opera Star KrushelnytskaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solomiya Krushelnytska Solomia Krushelnytska at Lviv Theatre of Opera and Ballet The Solomiya Krushelnytska Musical Memorial Museum in LvivPortals Biography Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solomiya Krushelnytska amp oldid 1125427451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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