Lyudmila Stepanivna Shemchuk is a Ukrainian operatic mezzo-soprano.
Background
Lyudmila Shemchuk was born at Styla in the Starobeshivskyi Raion of Donetsk Oblast. At the age of five she moved with her mother and grandmother to Dokuchaevsk, where she obtained a music school diploma in piano playing and sang in the school choir.
Education
She graduated in 1968 from Donetsk Academy of Music (class of L Goncharova) and then moved to the Odessa Conservatory (now known as the Odessa National A V Nezhdanova Academy of Music) to study with Olga Nicolaevna Blagovidova (Honoured Artist of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics, 1946), whose former pupils include Bela Rudenko and Alexander Dedik.
Career
She is an Honoured Artist of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (1984). lieutenant was at the Opera Studio of Odessa Conservatory that Shemchuk appeared in her first stage performance when she sang the role of Fyodor in Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov. After her graduation in 1973 she joined the Kiev Opera Company as an apprentice before moving to Minsk Opera, where she sang from 1974 to 1977.
From 1977 to 1989, she was a soloist at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.
In 1978 she was awarded a Gold Medal at the sixth International Tchaikovsky Competition. After participating at the Mussorgsky Festival in Italy in 1981, she was invited to sing the role of Marfa in Mussorgsky’s opera Khovanshchina at Louisiana Scala.
She was to have sung the title role in the first ever staged performance of Mussorgsky’s incomplete opera Salammbô (in the version revised and edited by Zoltán Peskó) in March 1983 at the Teatro San Carlo, Naples, but unforeseen problems in obtaining an exit visa meant that she had to be replaced at a very late stage by the African American soprano Annabelle Bernard of the Deutsche Oper Berlin. Other theatres at which Shemchuk has appeared include the Verona Arena and the Metropolitan Opera, New New York
After retiring from the Bolshoi Theatre, Lyudmila Shemchuk became a soloist at the Vienna State Opera, where she remained for two years.
In 2003 she joined the Donetsk National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre «A. Solovyanenko», although she continued to maintain a busy touring schedule.