Olga Bronstein was born in Yanovka, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire, a small village 15 miles from the nearest post office. She was one of two daughters of a wealthy but illiterate farmer, David Leontyevich Bronstein, a Jewishcolonist, and Anna Lvovna . Although the family was of Jewish extraction, they were not religious and the languages spoken at home were Russian and Ukrainian, not Yiddish. Olga Bronstein joined the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party in 1902 and soon married Lev Kamenev, a fellow Marxist revolutionary. In 1908, after Lev Kamenev's release from prison, the Kamenevs left Russia for Geneva and then Paris, where Lev Kamenev became one of Vladimir Lenin's two deputies. The couple helped Lenin edit the main Bolshevik magazine Proletariy. In January 1914, the Kamenevs moved to St. Petersburg so that Lev could be in immediate control of the Bolsheviks' legal newspaper Pravda and their Duma faction.
Theater and CPSU's Women's Section (1918–1920)
In early 1918, after the October Revolution of 1917, Kameneva was put in charge of the Theater Division of the People's Commissariat for Education. Working with theatrical director and theorist Vsevolod Meyerhold, she tried to radicalize Russian theaters, effectively nationalizing them under Bolshevik control. However, Meyerhold came down with tuberculosis in May 1919 and had to leave for the south. In his absence, the head of the Commissariat, Anatoly Lunacharsky, secured Lenin's permission to revise government policy in favor of more traditional theaters and dismissed Kameneva in June. From the time it was organized in October 1919, Kameneva was a member of the board of directors of the Soviet Communist Party's Women's Section. In 1920, she supported People's Commissar of Public Health Nikolai Semashko's opinion that contraception was "unquestionably harmful" and should not be advocated.
Managing Soviet contacts with the West (1921-1928)
Between 1921 and 1923, Kameneva was a leading member of the Central Commission for Fighting the After-Effects of the Famine and oversaw a propaganda campaign against the American Relief Administration under Herbert Hoover in the Soviet press. Between 1923 and 1925, she was the head of the short-lived Commission for Foreign Relief, a Soviet governmental commission that regulated and then liquidated remaining Western charities in the Soviet Union. From 1926 to 1928, Kameneva served as chairman of the USSR Society for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries In that capacity she greeted many prominent Western visitors to the Soviet Union, e.g. Le Corbusier and Theodore Dreiser, and represented the Soviet Union at the festivities in Vienna commemorating the centennial of Ludwig van Beethoven's death in March–April 1927. Throughout the 1920s, she also ran a leading literary salon in Moscow. In the early 1920s, Kameneva's family life began to disintegrate, starting with Lev Kamenev's reputed affair with the BritishsculptorClare Sheridan in 1920. In the late 1920s, he left Olga Kameneva for Tatiana Glebova, with whom he had a son, Vladimir Glebov. and Olga Kameneva 1927