Snegurochka

[4] In another story, she is the daughter of Spring the Beauty (Весна-Красна) and Ded Moroz, and yearns for the companionship of mortal humans.

This version of the story was made into a play The Snow Maiden by Aleksandr Ostrovsky, with incidental music by Tchaikovsky in 1873.

[6] In the late Russian Empire Snegurochka was part of Christmas celebrations, in the form of figurines to decorate the fir tree and as a character in children's pieces.

During the usual scripts of New Year celebrations for children, Snegurochka's appearance is preceded by the audience screaming "Sne-gu-roch-ka" while waiting for her.

[10][11] Nowadays, Snegurochka is a strongly capitalized figure in Russia, being an important part of the New Year's celebrations, culture and almost always used as the companion of the Ded Moroz.

[12][13] In 2020, a man from Russia tried to sue Coca Cola for bringing Santa Claus into their Russian ad instead of Ded Moroz and Snegurochka.

Snow Maiden (1899) by Victor Vasnetsov
Sculptures of Ded Moroz and Snegurochka
Russian folk tale book cover of Snegurochka (1916)
Ded Moroz with a little girl looking like Snegurochka, pre-Soviet postcard
Snegurochka alongside Ded Moroz, at the 2017 New Year's celebration in the Kremlin
Snegurochka and Ded Moroz in Belovezhskaya Pushcha , Belarus