Born December 16, 1929 in the city of Semipalatinsk, (now - East Kazakhstan region, Kazakhstan) in a family where music often sounded, my father loved to play the violin, the mother of the Tatar singing well. But in 1937 his father was arrested in Katon-Karagai and he disappeared forever. Young Tulegenova, studying in the seventh grade of evening school, went to work at a meat-packing plant, where she could sing in a circle of amateur performances. The well-known Soviet writer Galina Serebryakova, the author of novels about Karl Marx, who was in exile in Semipalatinsk, drew attention to the young singer. She took Tulegenova's tutelage, gave her first music lessons. Then, at the insistence of Serebryakova Tulegenova, she went to the city of Alma-Ata (now Almaty), then the capital of the Kazakh SSR, to study at the local conservatory in the vocal choir department. While studying in 1951, a student of the Alma-Ata Conservatory was invited to work as a soloist of the Kazakh radio, where she performed popular folk and variety songs. In 1954, Tulegenova graduated from the Alma-Ata Conservatoire. Bibigul was enlisted in the troupe of the Abai State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater in Alma-Ata, and two years later the singer was invited to the Kurmangazy Folk Instruments Orchestra. Until 1971, together with the troupe of the Tulegenov Orchestra, traveled all over Kazakhstan and the Soviet Union. In 1958 she became a laureate of the All-Union Contest of Variety Artists. Since 1971 - again the soloist KazGATOB named Abay. Since 1980 and up to the present time he has been conducting a vocal class at the Kazakh National Conservatoire named after. Kurmangazy, professor (1982). Member of the Armed Forces of the Kazakh SSR 7-9-th convocation (1968 - 1982). Artistic director and chairman of the jury of the International State Vocalists' Competition Bibigul Tulegenova (Almaty, 2001, Astana, 2004). A family The singer was married three times. Daughters - Guzel and Maryamgul, son - Tulegen. Creation Voice Tulegenova - silvery original sound, the performance differs spontaneity and depth. Famous parties: Kyz Zhibek in the eponymous opera by E. Brusilovsky, Azhar ("Abai" A. Zhubanov and L. Hamidi), Enlik ("Enlik - Kebek" G. Zhubanova), Gulbarshin (Alpamys E. Rakhmadieva), Violetta (La Traviata by G. Verdi), Gilda ("Rigoletto" by G. Verdi), Rosina ("The Barber of Seville" by G. Rossini), Norina (Don Pasquale by G. Donizetti), Zerlina (Don Giovanni by W. Mozart) The Snow Maiden in the opera of Rimsky-Korsakov.