Olga Serhiivna Kulchynska (Ukrainian: Ольга Сергіївна Кульчинська) (July 12, 1990, Rivne, Rivne Oblast, Ukraine) is a Ukrainian soprano opera singer.
Olga Kulchynska was born into a family of musicians. Her grandfather, Yaroslav Kulchynskyi, is an Honored Artist of Ukraine and a singer in the Rivne Philharmonic. Her grandmother Hanna was a contralto, her mother Alina is a cellist, and her father Serhiy is a pianist and worked as the artistic director of the Rivne Philharmonic. Both Olga and her sister Khrystyna became involved with music from an early age; Khrystyna is now a cellist.[1]
At the age of five, Kulchynska began studying at a music school, learning piano and singing in the children's choir. She did not enjoy performing as a pianist as much as she enjoyed singing, and by the time she was thirteen, she had begun to dream of singing solo and had already received her first solo singing lessons from her grandfather, who was teaching at the Rivne Institute of Culture.
Kulchynska later entered the Rivne Music School in the theoretical faculty, as there was no vocal faculty. As a third-year student, she then transferred to the R. Glier Kyiv Institute of Music and graduated as a theorist.
She then entered the vocal faculty of the Pyotr Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine, studying with Mariia Stefiuk. In 2011, Kulchynska studied with Dmitry Hvorostovsky in a master class held by the National Philharmonic of Ukraine as part of the "Descents to Heaven" festival.[2]
Kulchynska pursued her passion for theater, rather than solely chamber performances, and was accepted to the Youth Program of the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow. After a year of studies with the program, she was designated the third soloist for the part of Marfa in The Tsar's Bride; three days before the first performance, Kulchynska was chosen to sing the premier. She became a full-time soloist for the theater (from 2014 to 2017) and was the first performer to do so after having only one year of studies with the program.
Kulchynska has performed at Opernhaus Zürich, the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona, Bayerische Staatsoper in Munich, Opera Bastille in Paris, and the Metropolitan Opera in New York, as well as many other notable theaters across Europe.[3]