). Music — Jacob Prigogine (1909). Plevitskaya was born Nadezhda Vasilievna Vinnikova to a peasant family in the village of Vinnikovo, near
Kursk. She loved to sing, and after two years in a religious chorus, she became a professional singer in
Kiev, where she married Edmund Plewicki, a Polish dancer. Soon, they moved to Moscow, where she began singing in the well-known
Yar restaurant, whose specialty was gypsy bands with beautiful female singers. While on tour, at a concert in 1909, at the
Nizhny Novgorod fair, she was heard by the great tenor
Leonid Sobinov. He brought her to the attention of a wider public, which soon included the tsar's family as well as the opera singer
Feodor Chaliapin. A Russian song site says: She later married a Lieutenant Shangin of the Cuirassiers, but he died in battle in January 1915. After the
October Revolution, she became a communist and sang for the troops of the
Red Army. In 1919, she was captured by a unit of the
White Army, commanded by General
Nikolai Skoblin, who married her in exile in
Turkey after the defeat of the White Army. ==Exile in Europe==