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Chapter
2
Elis
used to say that she arrived in Rio de Janeiro on March 31st 1964. It
was certainly not
on that date - some days before, actually - but it made for a good story
when she said that. Elis in Rio on March 31st, the day of the military
coup (1), with the added
colourful detail of her father having come with a letter of recommendation
from the PTB, the party of the deposed president, João Goulart.
They
moved into a tiny furnished apartment on Figueiredo Magalhães Street,
in Copacabana.
For the first time, Elis was venturing out from under her mother's apron.
She quit CBS and
contacted Armando Pittigliani of Philips, who kept his promise. Two months
later, she signed a
contract with TV Rio - she appeared on television and participated in
several Noites de Gala (Gala Night) shows, which were famous at the time
and one of the station's flagships. Elis really was working very hard.
In the end, she had to support the apartment and her father in Rio, as
well as the rest of the family in Porto Alegre.
Everything
happened very fast for her. Everyone was impressed with Elis. From the
studios
of TV Rio, she would go right away with the drummer Dom Um Romão
to the "Beco", the famous
Beco das Garrafas. A narrow street - Rodolfo Dantas - in the middle of
the buildings of
Copacabana. It was there that one found the bars of the Beco. The fame
of that spot began in the late 50's, when Brazil was living under a strongly
nationalistic government which favoured progress and economic expansion,
the government of Juscelino Kubitschek, the "bossa-nova president"
(2).
Brazil
did not look at itself as a poor, rachitic peasant anymore, and could
now smile at
itself. Its soccer team had won the World Cup in 1958, Maria Esther Bueno
was first at
Wimbledon, Eder Jofre was world bantam weight champion. Living its own
democracy, Brazil tore
down Belém-Brasília and built a new capital. Show business
was bringing forth new formulas.
Aloysio de Oliveira tested the so-called "pocket-shows" in the
club Au Bon Gourmet and wrote the musical Pobre menina rica (Poor Rich
Girl) with Carlos Lyra, Nara Leão and Vinícius de Morais.
In
1962, a bossa-nova group appeared at New-York's famous Carnegie Hall.
In 1964, when Elis arrived in Rio, the generation that was raised with
Juscelino was at its apogee. Bossa-nova was discarding the themes of love,
smiles and flowers in favour of social content. Cinema novo (new cinema):
a camera in the hand, an idea in the head. Glaúber Rocha (3),
the Centre of Popular Culture (CPC). Rural links, agrarian reform, University
of Brasília.
Jânio
Quadros, elected with 6 million votes, took office in Brasília.
It was the utopia of a democratic Brazil, which discovered the Brazil
of Pelé (4), Garrincha,
Antônio Maria (5),
Stanislaw Ponte Preta, Dolores Duran, Nelson Rodrigues. The National Student
Union paraded in the centre of Rio because the Light (6)
had increased mass transit fares. Few were aware of this from 64 to 68.
No one realized the dimension of the dictatorship that would have to be
confronted. No one imagined the explosion that would culminate with Tropicalismo
(7), Rei da
vela, Terra em transe, Roda-viva (8),
with the CCC (commando to hunt communists), with beaten artists, with
the fight between MacKenzie and USP in São Paulo (9).
Elis
at nineteen years old, facing the Brazil of 1964, was no longer timid
nor quiet. Either
she would take the reins, or she would be nothing. She started like a
wolf in sheep's clothing, then showed her true nature. She faced the Brazil
and Rio de Janeiro of 1964, aggressive and
suspicious. She was certain that she was playing in the arena and that
the lions could slaughter her at any time. For someone who, up to that
time, had sung boleros and versões (10),
the coolness of bossa-nova singing did not suit her style very well. In
fact, Elis Regina's voice clashed radically with the intimate character
of bossa-nova, where the verb "sing" was conjugated with softness,
in a feminine gender. Bossa-nova, in the language of jazz, was cool. Elis'
voice was hot. Different.
Like
water and wine.
"She
had a virile voice", in the definition of the journalist Nelson Motta
(Nelsinho) who, from
a young age, frequented bossa-nova sessions through his "godfather"
Ronaldo Bôscoli (11).
Nelsinho remembers having seen Elis on television. "She was a woman
who was terribly dressed, with long hair, who was singing at the top of
a staircase. An exquisite figure, singing to attract attention".
In Salvador (12), another
attentive spectator, who at the time was writing movie reviews in the
press, paid attention to Elis. Caetano Veloso (13)
also had a shock when he saw Elis on TV:
-
I thought that she was very talented although very rough around the edges.
I was
impressed. "This woman is incredible", I used to say. But she
made some gestures, some dances
that were remarkable. And, since I was into bossa-nova - a big fan of
João Gilberto, of things cool and of good taste, and of more discrete
colours - I found Elis tacky, but full of talent.
At
the end of 1964, Elis found a boyfriend. Solano Ribeiro was twenty-five
years old - a
young politicized producer trying to make his way. He worked on the production
of the Bibi Ferreira Show on TV Excelsior, in São Paulo, and was
in Rio to sign up artists for a show called the Eduardo Spring Festival
of Bossa-Nova.
Solano
was Elis' first boyfriend since she had left Porto Alegre. "I was
enchanted with the
singer and wanted to marry her", Solano tells me today, at 48 years
old, having established his own production house, the VPI, and working
again on a festival, the Festival of Festivals of TV Globo (14),
twenty years after Excelsior (15)
and Arrastão (16).
-
There was a great political involvement at that time. I was coming from
the Arena Theatre
and was a radical 25 year old. I wouldn't allow her to sing Tom Jobim
(17), so you
can see how stupid I was when I arrived. I used to fight a lot with her,
and am under the impression that I exercised a great influence on her,
because she could be easily influenced. And she became somewhat political.
One
day, she sang a Tom Jobim song and I wrote her a letter talking about
the influence that this would have on people's heads, that is to say...
I didn't admit certain things. Our discussions were always like this.
She had an open mind toward cinema, literature. It was her that took me
to see Gláuber Rocha's Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol (God and
the Devil in the Land of the Sun) at the Metrópole Theatre in São
Paulo.
Forty
days after having settled in Rio, Elis and Romeu went to get dona Ercy
and Rogério.
All of them lived in the apartment at Figueirido Magalhães. It
was this scenario which started to
break up the relationship with Solano, who recalls:
-
I spent a carnaval (18) in
Rio with Elis, in that apartment. I lived right alongside her family and
I lived with her. From then on, things became complicated. Elis' relationship
with her parents was wickedly aggressive. She knew how financially dependent
they were on her. I was shocked with the aggressiveness with which she
dealt with the members of her family, and with her own
aggressiveness, which at once enchanted and frightened me. At times I
would be sitting and she would come from behind and pow, she would start
hitting me on the head with a magazine. With vigour. I don't know, she
always wanted to throw something. At times we would go somewhere and she
would be all charged up. Suddenly she would go in a corner and fall asleep.
She was energy. She was empty.
But
it wasn't because of this that Elis and Solano broke up. Elis became pregnant
and got
an abortion. According to Solano's version, it was then that everything
came apart:
-
She became pregnant, got an abortion and never told me anything about
it. She told me
after.
Solano
did not like the idea of assuming the role of the "singer's husband".
According to
him, she occupied all the space, and he couldn't bring himself to live
with someone who took up so much space. He also wanted to have his own:
-
I also had problems, I was also complex.
The
fact is that Elis, after a broken relationship, a first pregnancy and
an abortion, was also
fighting a battle at home. Romeu, unemployed, made of Elis' career an
occupation. He started to
look after her salary, take care of the contracts for her shows, welcome
people, as if he was a
manager. But Elis was starting to realize that she had economic control
over her family and was
feeling powerful. She demanded of her father - as she did of her brother
- that he change and start taking care of his own life. But at the same
time she fed this dependency by giving him money, as if she found it impossible
to put up with the guilt complex of living a comfortable life while her
parents lived in need.
On
this subject, Elis said years later: "I know that my mother couldn't
tolerate to see me
come home at three in the morning, tired, with no regular meals, etc.
I didn't enjoy being
constantly under observation, and neither did she, gravitating around
me. Of course, all kinds of
problems related to oppressive affection started".
But
on top of the fighting at home, Elis had other problems in the cariocan
nights. From an
initial appearance at the Little Club bar, she went on to be managed by
the boastful pair of that
time, Luís Carlos Mieli and Ronaldo Bôscoli. Both of them
worked exclusively for the Midas Agency, the office of Abrahão
Medina, known as the King of Voice because of a chain of appliance stores.
But
they couldn't resist the call of the Beco das Garaffas. They went there
to drink cuba-libre (19)
and worked there almost hidden in the production of pocket-shows for the
Beco. According to Ronaldo Bôscoli, the Beco was a mess. It didn't
even have spotlights. Light effects were done with cardboard tubes. The
pairs' slogan, at that time, was: "give us a room and we'll give
you a show".
Moreover,
Mieli and Bôscoli were familiar with super-productions like Dreams
of Broadway. But they had to put on shows in tiny spaces. When Mieli and
Bôscoli met Elis one Saturday night
for her first rehearsal, she was in a bad mood. Maybe thinking a bit too
much about having to
remain at the disposal of the directors' schedules. When Ronaldo Bôscoli
met Elis Regina, she was in love with Edu Lobo (20),
and together with him would later cause a great turnaround in popular
music. He has a nice memory:
-
She was getting on the telephone every hour, and kept asking me: can I
talk on the phone
for a minute, director? And she was talking to Edu.
It
was at the Beco that Elis met Lennie Dale (21)
and with him, learned to use her body more
when she sang. That business of laia-ladaia-sabatana-ave-maria (22)
was certainly her creation, but motivated by the lessons of the american
dancer. This was the motive of her first disagreement with Ronaldo Bôscoli.
He found that swimming motion a little ridiculous. He went to talk to
Mieli about it, who responded with a declaration that became legendary:
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Never mind, Bôscoli, it's her way of burying bossa-nova for good.
Elis'
show at Bottles Bar (23),
directed by Mieli and Bôscoli, featured the participation of the
group Dom Um Romão, the dancer Marly Tavares and the tambourim-player
Gaguinho. It was a success.
There
are many versions of the story of what happened after that. Elis began
to miss going to
some of the shows at the Beco. And always on Saturdays. According to Ronaldo
Bôscoli, she was forced by Romeu to do shows on the side in order
to earn more money. I find it difficult to believe that Elis Regina could
be forced to do anything, that she would do something against her will.
But there is a basis for it. According to Elis, those shows did take place,
but she was only absent from the Beco once. Bôscoli counters: "There
were many times". Romeu always gave the excuse that Elis was sick.
The
third time she missed going to the Beco, Bôscoli spoke to her:
-
Elis was already talking: "Say what you want to say!" And I
said that this wasn't a place
of total confusion, that it wasn't a whorehouse and that I demanded an
explanation. She insisted on the story that she was stressed-out and tired.
I said that I knew about shows which she was giving in other places at
the same time. And the discussion continued until she started doing a
Joan-of-Arc imitation, crying and saying that she was being unfairly accused.
The
fact is that Elis was keeping her eye on São Paulo. More precisely,
on the new movement stimulated by university students of the time: to
bring popular music into the theatres.
Do
live shows with new people. Horácio Berlink, Eduardo Muylaert,
Antônio Carlos Calil, João
Evangelista Leão organized the first one, which took place in the
August 11 Academic Centre of the Law Faculty of São Paulo, at the
Paramount Theatre. The name of the show: The Best of Bossa.
Elis
Regina was invited to participate in the second show of the series, on
August 31st
1964, the show Good Bossa. It was an enormous success, so much that the
journalist Walter
Silva, host of the famous program O Pick-up do Pica-Pau, decided to lease
the Paramount Theatre and do there more or less what Solano Ribeiro was
doing on the little stage of the Opinião Theatre.
Walter
Silva was thinking of popular music shows for large audiences, and a large
audience at that time meant the Paramount Theatre, with two thousand seats.
Elis was already attracted by the São Paulo salaries and was earning
more per show than she would earn in a month at the Beco. The choice was
evident.
But before abandoning the Beco das Garrafas, and burying it in the process,
Elis picked a
fight with Ronaldo Bôscoli, because he had ordered that a black
line be painted above her name on the poster beside the door at Bottles.
"I asked that the line be painted in order that people could see
her name underneath".
That
was it. They became mortal enemies from that moment on.
In
São Paulo, Walter Silva and Solano Ribeiro presented Elis to Marcos
Lázaro, an up-andcoming
argentine impresario. In February 1965, she was already living in São
Paulo. She went there alone and stayed in Marcos Lázaro's house,
a little four-room apartment on Rio Branco Avenue, which crossed Ipiranga
Avenue, in the centre of São Paulo. The Lázaro family -
Elisa and two sons, put up Elis on the living room sofa, where a little
privacy at night was provided by a
makeshift curtain in the middle of the room. Dona Ercy, Romeu and Rogério
remained in Rio, and
later returned to Porto Alegre.
Elis
Regina, humble guest of the Lázaro family, managed by the patriarch.
She was his first
exclusive brazilian artist - he normally managed circus artists and nightclub
singers. In exchange for 20% of the artists' fees, Marcus Lázaro
started to grow. Elis, who left and returned home escorted by the impresario,
played cards on her nights off. "I remember that sometimes she played
cards loudly, ran to the window and started to sing and sing", Eliza
Lázaro told me.
Shortly after arriving in São Paulo, Elis declared to journalists
that she had been treated
unfairly in Rio de Janeiro. She claimed to have been discriminated against
for being gauchá and that she had been involved in a real war at
the Beco das Garrafas. Bôscoli denies this version, of course, but
it's possible that Elis had really felt this way. A war. She found it
necessary to create stories in which she portrayed herself as the heroine,
and was motivated by competition. In her own way of singing, she demonstrated
athletic manners, and she would get deeply involved in disputes between
musicians, entering into the fray with sharpened teeth and nails, ready
to take the first bite.
Elis
was like this when she was asked by her ex-boyfriend Solano Ribeiro to
interpret two
songs at the First Festival of Brazilian Popular Music, put on by TV Excelsior.
This festival coincided with the decline of TV Record, which beefed up
its programming with foreign artists. TV Record contracted and presented
names like Ella Fitzgerald, Sammy Davis Jr., Dizzie Gillespie, Rita Pavone,
Chubby Checker, Brenda Lee. In the midst of a financial crisis, it was
impossible to maintain the same level. In spite of this, TV Excelsior
entered with its music festival. Elis entered this festival on her guard.
She didn't trust the producer Solano Ribeiro, after everything that had
happened while they had been together. Of the two songs that she received
- Por um amor maior (For a better love) by Francis Hime and Ruy Guerra,
and Arrastão (Trawling net) by Edu Lobo and Vinícius de
Morais, Solano remembers that she preferred the former. When that song
was disqualified, she thought that someone was pulling a dirty move, more
specifically, that Solano Ribeiro was up to dirty tricks.
"She didn't even look at me, it was an exquisite climate".
According
to the recollections of this important festival's producer, however, the
story
wasn't quite like that. There was a plot articulated by the impresario
Lívio Rangan, now deceased, then the head of Rhodia. Solano recalls:
-
Rangan wanted the winning song to be the one written by Vinhas and Bôscoli,
and
defended by Simonal (24).
He argued that if this song didn't win, no other winner would work on
his show. Moreover, he bribed the jury with presents. And part of the
jury were not politicized, were alienated,
and resented songs that included social messages. Eumir Deodato (25)
was one of those. It was a delicate moment. With the addition of the coup
of 1964, people wanted an outlet. The censorship. All of this contributed
to Arrastão almost losing.
But it didn't lose, according to Solano, because he himself promoted a
counter-attack for the
jury, with the help of Walter Silva in the Folha de São Paulo (26).
In the end, Elis won, Arrastão won, and for whoever remembers,
it was an unforgettable moment on Brazilian television.
Elis
Regina gave a formal farewell to bossa-nova. A cycle was completed by
the athletic
singing style with which she defended the song. National success. Elis
Regina wins Excelsior's
First Festival of Popular Music.
Olha
a arrastão entrando num mar sem fim / É, meu irmão,
me traz Iemanjá pra mim (I see a trawling net entering an endless
sea / And, my brother, it brings Iemanjá (27)
for me). Elis, black wig, black tube dress, open arms like the Cristo
Redentor (28). Arms rotating
like a helicopter, and a voice released with force, hunger, and the will
to win. The winner of the competition. Gold medal. The good girl finds
success. Facing backwards, tears in her eyes. For me ... I see the trawling
net ... Tears and a smile consecrated on that face.
Too
much for a poor heart.
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(1)
The military took power on that day. They were to remain
in power until 1982 [?].
(2)
He is responsible for the construction of the trans-amazonian
highway, Brasília, etc.. and died in a
mysterious auto accident in 1976.
(3)
A famous film-maker of that period.
(4)
The greatest brazilian soccer player of that time (and, some
would argue, of all time).
(5)
A journalist and bossa-nova lyricist of that time.
(6)
Light S.A. was the electric company in Rio at the time.
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(7)
A revolutionary musical genre that appeared in the late 60's.
(8)
A song by Chico Buarque.
(9)
Two rival universities in São Paulo.
(10)
Brazilian renditions of foreign songs.
(11)
An important figure in the musical world of Rio.
(12)
A city on the coast in Bahia State.
(13)
One of the key figures in brazilian popular music (MPB), a
co-founder of the Tropicalismo (Tropicalia).
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(14)
The largest TV station in Brazil.
(15) The First Festival of brazilian popular music,
put on by TV Excelsior (see later).
(16)
Elis' first great success.
(17)
Another one of the founders of bossa-nova, some of his songs
have become favourites around the world (e.g. The Girl From
Ipanema, Wave, How Insensitive)
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Yearly celebration in February, featuring singing, dancing in
the streets. |
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(19)
Rum and coke (free coke, the literal translation, is a pun
on the fact that coca-cola was banned in Cuba at the time).
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(20)
A very influential songwriter in the 60's and early 70's.
(21)
An american dancer and choreographer.
(22)
A reference to Elis' energetic body movements on stage.
(23)
A nightclub in Rio.
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(24)
A very popular male singer of that time.
(25)
A keyboardist and musical arranger.
(26)
Daily newspaper in which Silva wrote a column.
(27)
Afro-Brazilian Godess of the Sea
(28)
Statue of Christ which overlooks Rio de Janeiro with open
arms.
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