Russian playwright and screenwriter. In 2009 she graduated from the Yekaterinburg State Theater Institute (Dramaturgy Department of Nikolai Kolyada).
Scholarship holder of the Union of Theater Workers. Author of the plays "Carnival of cherished desires" (included in the short list of the drama festival "Eurasia - 2005"), "Chemistry teacher" (finalist of the literary award "Debut", winner of the "Voice of Generation" award from the Ministry of Culture and Cinematography), "Washers" (winner of the drama festival "Eurasia - 2007", shortlist of the festival "New Drama"), "Natasha's Dream" (winner of the "Debut" award) and others.
The plays of Yaroslava Pulinovich were published in the Ural magazine and the collections Everything Will Be Fine, The Theater in the Boiler Room, Plays in Shchelykovo, in books of the Debut Prize and other publications, were staged in more than forty theaters in Russia, and besides moreover in the theaters of England, Poland, Ukraine, Estonia, USA[2]. Winner of the awards "Voice of a Generation", "Debut", "Eurasia", "New Play" (as part of the "Golden Mask"), "Harlequin", "Texture", "Debt. Honour. Dignity” and others. According to the newspaper “Moscow times”, the play “Natasha's Dream” is among the ten best Russian plays of the beginning of the XXI century.
The film, based on her script, "I'm not coming back" received a special mention at the 2014 Tribeca Festival in New York, received the main prize of the Film by the Sea festival (Dutch) (Vlissingen, the Netherlands, 2014), as well as the prize of the President of Belarus "For Humanism and Spirituality in Cinema" at the XXI Minsk International Film Festival "Listapad" (Minsk, 2014). At the international film festival of films about human rights "Stalker" (Moscow, 2014), the script "I will not return" received the prize named after playwright Valery Frid for the best script.
In 2018, she received the Bazhov Prize in the nomination “Master. Prose" for the collection of plays "I won"
Lives in Yekaterinburg. Married to Russian prose writer and critic Roman Senchin.
Since 2018, he has been a full-time playwright at the Russian Theater of Estonia.