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New
York, May 18, 1939. The mooring lines on the S.S. Uruguay had
barely been tied off when Brazil's Carmen Miranda swept down the
gang plank to a throng of waiting reporters. At 5' 2" and
listed only sixth on the playbill, she had arrived to play Broadway
with Abbott and Costello. But from those very first moments in
front of the media, America would quickly learn that she was already
larger than life:
"I
say 20 words in English. I say 'money, money, money'," she
began. "And I say 'hot dog'! I say 'yes', 'no' and I say
'money, money, money' and I say 'turkey sandwich' and I say 'grape
juice'."
Clearly,
when that cruise ship anchored down in New York harbor, Carmen
Miranda's career launched her on the way to international stardom.
Today
marks Carmen Miranda's birthday, and now, 50 years after her passing,
there's no doubt that Carmen Miranda remains larger than life.
Her fruit-topped turbans and yards of Brazilian bling have inspired
countless female impersonators and drag queens from San Francisco
to Copacabana, making her one of the most imitated celebrities
ever.
But
lest you think that the chronicle of charismatic Carmen's caricature
is completely camp, consider:
In
1939, Carmen Miranda was at the height of her popularity as a
singer and performer in Brazil when she arrived in the US as her
country's Ambassador of Good Will for the New York World's Fair.
Her
colorful costumes, with brightly laid laced skirts, heaps of jewelry,
platform shoes and a turban-like orchard atop her head, reflected
her love of the Afro-Brazilian Bahiana, and made the city of Bahia
famous overnight. The 'Bahian look' as it was called, took the
American fashion scene by storm, and she was chosen one of the
ten most outstanding women in 1939.
Her
first US film, Down Argentine Way, won an Academy Award nomination
in 1941, and was just the first of many more, including Weekend
in Havana, That Night in Rio, Copacabana with Groucho Marx, A
Date With Judy, Springtime In The Rockies, Four Jills in a Jeep,
and Scared Stiff with Dean Martin.
By
1945, Carmen Miranda made her way into America's Top Ten of highest
paid people, and by extraction was quite probably one of the wealthiest
female wage earners in the world.
And,
yes - even thought today Chiquita Banana has swayed decidedly
Latina, - that's Carmen Miranda, too.
Carmen's
story thoroughly Brazilian and a studio screenplay come to life.
From her Star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame to the recent exhibition
of her life at Rio's Museum of Contemporary Art, her role as a
cultural icon spanning the Americas is unique, not to be repeated
until Bossa Nova's seductive sway caught our attention in the
early 60's.
We've
selected excerpts from an unaccredited biography at to help you
learn more about Carmen Miranda. The Brazilian Bombshell. The
Lady with the Tutti Frutti Hat.
Enjoy
the ride!
Scott
Adams
Connectbrazil.com
THE BRAZILIAN BOMBSHELL
Although
she preferred to be known as a Brazilian, Maria do Carmo Miranda
da Cunha - her real name - was born on February 9, 1909, outside
the small town of Marco de Canavezes, near Porto, Portugal. She
came to Brazil with her mother, Dona Emilia, and her elder sister,
Ollinda, when she was only 18 months old. Her father, Jose Maria,
a barber, had come somewhat earlier to get settled. The couple
were to have four more children: Amaro, Cecilia, Aurora, and Oscar.
(Aurora would also become a famous singer.)
Once
in Brazil, father Cunhan established a very prosperous wholesale
produce business, and Carmen, the oldest of five children, was
enrolled at the Convent of Saint Teresinha (in Lapa, the Rio de
Janeiro neighborhood where the family lived), for her education
with the Sisters of Charity; the institution provided free schooling
for poor girls. Her liveliness set her off among the other children.
When the Nuncio visited the school, Carmen read one of his poems,
and, as a prize, was kissed on the forehead by the distinguished
visitor.
At
an early age, Carmen was forced to work as a clerk in a haberdasher's
and then at a ladies' fashion shop. Her ebullience, tact, and
friendliness always made her the best salesgirl. It was then that
she learned to make hats, a skill at which she became an expert;
later she owned a small milliner's business. In her artistic career,
her way with hats was to prove a major asset.
The
Miranda da Cunha family soon moved to the PraÇa Quinze
neighborhood. Travessa do Comercio n 13, upper floor, where Dona
Emilia, aided by her children, set up a boarding house patronized
by salespeople, in order to pay for the treatment Olinda was undergoing
in a sanatorium in Caramulo, Portugal.
THE
SINGING STAR OF SOUTH AMERICA
But
Carmen's dream was to become an entertainer. Now and then she
got her photo published in a magazine, though anonymously. She
began singing on local radio stations at 20. Her first real break
came in 1929, when Anibal Duarte, a native of Bahia, got her to
take part in a charity festival at the National Institute of Music,
where the famous composer Ernesto Nazare worked. Carmen sang tangos,
which were then all the rage, and impressed another baiano there,
the guitar player, Josue de Barros, who became her mentor and
took her to sing in radio programs a few times. A few months later,
Barros got her to cut a record at Brunswick, which was then beginning
to operate in Brazil. But Brunswick delayed the release of the
disc, so that Barros took her to RCA Victor, which was also beginning
to record Brazilian performers.
At
Victor, Carmen was given an audition, was approved and began recording;
her first song came out in January 1930. The Brunswick recording
also appeared then, but it went largely unnoticed. Her third Victor
release broke the record for Brazilian sales: 36,000 copies. The
song was "Pra voce gostar de mim (Tai)," a marcha by
Joubert de Carvalho. Overnight, Carmen became a nationwide celebrity.
It was during this time with RCA Victor that she assumed the theatrical
name,"Carmen Miranda".
Then
came an unending string of hits. She became the sensation of Brazil
- known as "The Wonderful Girl" - and her father became
her business manager. On the basis of her unique personality,
she developed a style that was widely imitated. Her records were
absolute best-sellers. In a period of only ten years, she cut
more 78-rpm records than anyone else; one record at Brunswick,
77 at RCA Victor, 65 (129 songs) at Odeon and 16 at American Decca,
totaling 313 songs.
Such
was her gracefulness and vitality, as apparent in her recordings
as in her live performances, that she was immediately dubbed "The
Singer with the Fascinating Voice and Gestures;" later she
became "The Smiling Dictatress of Samba," and then,
in 1933, the radio announcer Cesar Ladeira gave her a lasting
moniker: "The Great Little Girl."
She
had become the leading woman in Brazilian radio, working at Radio
Mayrink Veiga, the most popular station in the 30's (though for
a year - 1937 - she moved over to Radio Tupi).
She
was the also the top star in Carnival movies, in which her performance
was usually limited to singing: "Carnaval de 1932" (a
semi-documentary), "A Voz do Carnaval" (1933), "Alo,
Alo Brasil" (1935), "Estudantes" (1935) - the only
movie in which she played a part - "Alo, Alo Carnaval"
(1936) and "Banana da Terra" (1939).
In 1935, Odeon finally got her to sign a contract. This was to
result in a number of hits, many of which are now classics of
Brazilian pop.
Throughout
her singing career, Carmen was an innovator. Though middle-class
herself, she delighted in being a pioneer of the black slum music
now famous as "samba".
DISCOVERED
BY THE UNITED STATES
Thanks
to American movies, Carmen - who had arrived in New York in 1939,
a complete unknown, risking a solid career in Brazil and South
America - became a star, even though she had none of the physical
traits valued by most Americans: She was short (less than five
feet), dark, a Latin, and knew no more than a few heavily accented
words in English.
Carmen
had appeared in four Brazilian films, and while appearing at the
Casino Urqua nightclub, was spotted by playwright Marc Connelly,
impresario Lee Shubert and his date, Sonja Henie. A U.S. manager,
Shubert saw her act and hired her, urged by Henie. Shubert was
interested in importing Carmen to Broadway, if she would learn
English. He was somewhat hesitant; though he had no doubts about
Carmen's talent, he did not know how the U.S. public would respond
to a dark Latin type. The fiery Latin told Shubert "the public
likes my songs in Portuguese, and if you want me, it will be on
those terms." Shubert placed her under a three-year contract,
and the toast of Brazil was on her way to success in the United
States. He hired the six-man Bando da Lua at Carmen's request,
but only after she agreed to pay the wages of three of the members
out of her own money.
At
that point in Carmen's life, her ten-year-long career in Brazil,
the fact that she was the most beloved woman in her country, and
her prestige in Argentina - where she was known as the "Ambassadress
of Samba" - none of this meant much to Shubert or the United
States audiences to whom she would play. Nor did it make any difference
that her departure in Rio's harbor had been attended by a huge
crowd, and had been assigned the mission of conquering one more
province for the Empire of Samba.
Carmen
made her U.S. debut at the Broadhurst Theatre with Bobby Clark
in a Broadway revue, "Streets of Paris", opening in
June, 1939. Also in the cast were ex-burlesque comedians, Abbott
and Costello, Luella Bear and Gower Champion, in the chorus. The
plotless, two-act conglomeration of songs, sketches, and comedy
patter was compared to "Hellzapoppin" by most critics.
In
baiana costume, Carmen sang a few passages from four songs - three
Brazilian and one American - in a Carnival rhythm (marcha); the
American song was sung in a mixture of Portuguese and fractured
English. Altogether the songs lasted only six minutes. But these
were the longest six minutes in American show business; a veritable
earthquake of beads and trinkets, colors and gaiety, hands and
eyes, her whole body beating time to the frenetic rhythms of unheard-of
music. None of Carmen's three solo numbers (including "South
American Way") was listed in the program, but critics and
audiences alike were unanimous in their praise. One Big Apple
critic wrote: "Her face is too heavy to be beautiful, her
figure is nothing to write home about, and she sings in a foreign
language. Yet she is the biggest theatrical sensation of the season."
Life
Magazine echoed these sentiments, declaring: "Partly because
their unusual melody and heavy accented rhythms are unlike anything
ever heard in a Manhattan revue before, partly because there is
not a clue to their meaning except the gay rolling of Carmen Miranda's
insinuating eyes, these songs and Miranda herself, are the outstanding
hit of the show."
"Skewering
the audience with merry, mischievous eyes, Carmen Miranda performs
only once, but she stops the show", wrote Time Magazine.
During
an otherwise forgettable theatrical season, further dampened by
the presence of the New York World's Fair (Carmen also danced
at the Brazilian pavilion, accompanied by the Bando da Lua), it
was Carmen, with her incomparable grace and rhythm, who brought
life back to Broadway: she saved Broadway from the World's Fair.
Top stars flocked to the trend-setting show, which was more popular
than the city's mayor.
Carmen's
energy was boundless. While still in "Streets," she
also did a supper show at the Waldorf's Sert Room and an after-the-theatre
show at the Versailles.
Soon, a Hollywood studio carried its equipment to Broadway largely
to film her act - something that had never happened before in
the history of American film - because with her five daily performances
in various places, she was unable to travel to Hollywood. So it
was that Hollywood came to Carmen instead.
CARMEN
IN HOLLYWOOD
The
war in Europe caused the closure of the rich Continental market
and film studios were trying to attract the strong Latin America
market. In 1940, when 20th Century Fox entered the bandwagon of
political patriotic expediency to help foster Latin American-U.S.
friendship, Darryl F. Zanuck set Carmen to guest star in "Down
Argentine Way" (1940), with Don Ameche and a "rediscovered"
Betty Grable. Although the musical was set in Buenos Aires, Carmen's
number, a repeat of "South American Way," was filmed
at the Movietone Studios in Manhattan.
The
volatile 31-year old was an immediate success with theatergoers
in "Down Argentine Way", which cemented her reputation
as 1940's most unique new personality. It was a tremendous film
debut! Observed the New York Times: "Miss Miranda sings 'South
American Way' and a few Spanish trifles scorchily, but we don't
see enough of her".
Carmen's
song style illustrated her enthusiastic method of delivering tunes,
with dynamics of her flashing green eyes, rambling hips, and the
facile hand movements of her speed-flowing broken English. Coupled
with oversized jewelry, platform shoes, bold colorful costumes,
bare midriffs, and tropical fruit. Her flamboyant headgear compensated
for her size. Carmen was only five feet two inches tall and weighed
only about 100 pounds. She was cleverly exploited by directors
like Walter Lang, Irving Cummings, and Busby Berkley, ultimately
proving she was more than a strictly camp icon.
In
"Weekend in Havana" (1941), Alice Faye lands in Havana,
torn between John Payne and Cesar Romero, with Carmen a nightclub
performer (her usual role) with the hots for Romero. Because of
her new screen popularity, the brothers Shubert were eager to
have Carmen back on Broadway. She joined Olsen and Johnson, Ella
Logan, the Blackburn Twins and Joe Besser in "Sons O' Fun,"
which opened at the Winter Garden Theatre in December 1941. She
performed five numbers, including the show-stopping "Thank
You, North America."
She
left the show six months later to film "Springtime in the
Rockies" (1942), which critic Leonard Maltin describes as
the near-definitive 1940's Fox musical." With Betty Grable,
John Payne and Cesar Romero, Carmen was in top form doing a Brazilian
"Chattanooga Choo Choo."
OUTRAGEOUSLY UNIQUE COSTUMES AND STYLE
The
"lady in the tutti-fruitti hat" brought to American
wartime audiences an extravagantly seductive surface: the exoticism
of her native country, a sensuality tempered by caricature, and
outlandish costumes and fruit-laden "hats" that have
an unsuspected origin in the black slums of Brazil.
The
gaudy turbans, bangles, and exposed midriffs were based on the
costumes of the Baiana, the poor black women who sold fruit in
Bahia. Although, even before coming to the United States, in many
of her songs, as well as in her outrageous costumes, there were
Bahian elements from the beginning, it was only in late 1938 that
she actually incorporated full Bahian regalia, in "Banana
da Terra." It was as a baiana that she performed at Cassino
da Urca, with the Bando da Lua.
By
1942, even though she spoke perfect English, Carmen was careful
to retain the illusion of the original accent which made her famous.
Fans began to copy her style innovations, and she was imitated
everywhere, both seriously and in fun.
Mickey
Rooney appeared in full Miranda drag, launching into her hit song,
"Mama Yo Quiero" in "Babes on Broadway". In
later years, Cass Daley would mimic the Miranda mystique in "Ladies
Man," while Milton Berle and Carol Burnett on their television
shows, would often camp it up in Miranda-like drag. Still later,
in nightclub acts, Mitzi Gaynor, Suzanne Somers, and Raquel Welch
would parody renditions of Miranda-type songs in their acts while
gussied up to fit the image.
Carmen's
younger sister, Aurora was tested by MGM, had a few club dates,
but could never equal Carmen's popularity. Aurora was a less dynamic
version of her famous sister, eventually landing roles in "Brazil,
The Three Caballeros" and "Tel It To A Star." In
"Phantom Lady", a film noir classic, Aurora was quite
effective as a temperamental singer.
In
Busby Berkley's lavish "The Gang's All Here" (1943),
Carmen was a fiery Broadway entertainer who helped chorus girl
Alice Faye put on a bond-selling variety show at serviceman, James
Ellison's family estate. Berkeley's kaleidoscopic production numbers
included Carmen's very Freudian, "The Lady in the Tutti Fruitti
Hat." Carmen then made a brief guest spot in the patriotic
"Four Jills in a Jeep" (1944), in which she appears
in a radio broadcast sequence.
"Greenwich
Village" (1944) saw Carmen top-billed over Don Ameche and
Vivian Blaine. The silly but amiable musical set in the 1920's,
was a showcase for Blaine, who Zanuck hoped would replace the
departing Alice Faye. Carmen's final Technicolor splash was the
Broadway musical, "Something for the Boys" (1944). Carmen
was a singer, involved with Vivian Blaine, heiress of a broken
down Southern plantation, who turns the mansion into a retreat
for army wives. In a hilarious comedy routine, it's discovered
that the Carborundum in one of Carmen's tooth fillings acts as
a radio transmitter.
In
1945, Carmen bought out her Fox contract and attempted more serious
roles - including playing a dual role in a Marx Brothers movie
- with limited success. Newsreel clips of the time reveal her
to be an accomplished painter - Carmen was truly a woman of many
talents.
LOVE
LIFE
Over
the years, Carmen met, worked with, and played with many men.
Here is a list of her known (or reputed) spouses, lovers, and
infatuations.
David
Sebastian (husband)
Don Ameche (infatuation)
John Payne (infatuation)
John Wayne
Arturo de Cordova (Mexican actor)
Mário Cunha
Assis Valente
Mário Reis
Ary Barroso
César Ladeira
Carlos Alberto Rocha Farias
Getúlio Vargas (President)
Aloysio de Oliveira
THE HIGHEST SALARIED WOMAN IN THE U.S.
In
1945, Carmen was making more than $200,000 annually, making her
the highest salaried woman in the U.S. - the result of her combined
Fox salary, radio, nightclub and recording careers. The Miranda
craze continued - Paramount had their own Miranda clone, 18-year
old Olga San Juan, refreshingly partnered with Fred Astaire in
"Blue Skies." MGM had the sparkling Lina Romay. And
even Republic was grooming Herbert J. Yates protégée,
Estelita Rodriquez.
Ironically,
Carmen's movie career began its descent around this time in two
lackluster black and white B's, "Doll Face" (1945) and
"If I'm Lucky" (1946), both with Vivian Blaine and Perry
Como. It was certainly a comedown for the once top-level star.
Said Blaine about their four films together to writer Stuart Oderman:
"We both had our separate images. I sat in the picture window,
sang the song and kissed the pretty boy, and she was the lady
with the fruit on the top of her head. I don't know if she minded
doing that type of thing. Maybe that was all she could do and
maybe she knew it. But I'll say this for Carmen Miranda: she was
a marvelous person with a great sense of humor and she supported
her family back home. She was very good to all of them."
FINAL FILMS
The
war was over, and the south-of-the border neighbor policy had
melted away. 20th Century Fox was switching to other musical formats
which did not require Carmen's special brand of performing. She
moved over to Universal, but with the studio's merger into Universal
International, the contract was terminated. On March 17th, 1947,
she married film producer David Sebastian at the Church of Good
Shepard in Beverly Hills. They met on the set of "Copacabana"
(1947), in which Sebastian was one of the associate producers.
When agent Groucho Marx negotiates a deal requiring a pair of
nightclub entertainers, he prevailed upon Carmen to accept both
jobs, as a veiled blond chanteuse, and as a spirited spitfire.
Carmen exuded her usual bushels of energy.
Carmen
kept busy with club and PR tours until MGM's "A Date With
Judy" (1948) with Jane Powell and Elizabeth Taylor as teen
sisters involved in family shenanigans. Dance instructress Carmen
innocently causes their father, Wallace Beery, some marital problems.
MGM
dusted off "Nancy Goes to Rio" (1950), a zestful remake
of a Deanna Durbin-Kay Francis vehicle, "It's a Date."
It co-starred Jane Powell and Ann Sothern, with Carmen providing
the local color in the Rio sequences. She then turned to more
café dates, including the London Palladium, the El Rancho
Vegas, and New York's Copacabana.
Carmen's
final film covered familiar ground again, a Dean Martin-Jerry
Lewis entry, Paramount's "Scared Stiff" (1953), set
in a haunted Cuban mansion. It was an inferior rehash of the Bob
Hope-Paulette Goddard starrer, "The Ghost Breakers."
The story was given a slight overhaul with Carmen caught up in
the comics' antics. The only bright spot was Lewis' impersonation
of her.
CARMEN'S HOLLYWOOD LEGACY
In
1941, Carmen Miranda was invited to leave her hand and high-heeled
foot prints at Hollywood's Chinese Theatre; she was the first
Latin-American to do so. In 1946, no woman paid more in income
tax than Carmen. In 1951, she became the highest-paid entertainer.
In 1960, her name was to be posthumously inscribed in a sidewalk
star on Hollywood Boulevard's Walk of Fame.
GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
Late
in 1954, after 14 years abroad, she went back to Brazil for reasons
of health. She had been married to the American, David Sebastian,
since 1947; the couple had no children and more than their share
of marital strife. In Brazil, she was give a warm welcome and
honored by many tributes. Four months later, she returned to the
U.S. to work.
On
August 4th, 1955, while taping a strenuous mambo number on Jimmy
Durante's television show, Carmen slipped to one foot during the
final sequence and reportedly said, "I'm all out of breath."
Later that evening after attending a party with husband, Sebastian,
she returned to their Beverly Hills home, where she fainted and
died of a massive heart attack.
The
shock was enormous. A physician who had been treating her for
a slight case of bronchitis since her recent return from Brazil
(after an absence of fifteen years) said she had seemed in good
health. Following a Catholic service in Hollywood, Sebastian and
Carmen's mother (who lived with them) accompanied her body to
Rio for burial.
News
of her death made headlines around the world; it struck Brazilians
like a bolt out of the blue. Over 100,000 mourners came to see
her embalmed body in Rio de Janeiro's City Hall. More than one
million heart-broken fans came to her funeral in Rio's Sao Joao
Batista Cemetary. Though she had not performed in Brazil since
1940, she had not been forgotten.
CARMEN MIRANDA'S INFLUENCE
To
date, only two Brazilians have unquestionably and durably attained
the status of world-scale icons, famous beyond the boundaries
of specific nations and groups: Carmen Miranda and Pele.
Over
forty years after her death, Carmen remains an icon and a landmark
presence; time has only added to her stature. So it was that when,
in the Carnival of 1995, Bidu Sayao - Brazil's only opera singer
of international fame - was honored by the Beija Flor Samba School,
she made a point of riding her triumphal float in baiana dress,
to pay tribute to her unforgettable friend, Carmen Miranda.
The
dynamic Carmen Miranda was the forerunner for the eccentric female
singer so popular with international audiences. It's a trend presently
popularized by the styles of Bette Midler, Madonna, and Cyndi
Lauper.
The
effervescent Carmen was great fun, and never ceased to share with
us her dynamic personality. The most adored good will ambassador
Latin America ever exported to Hollywood will be fondly remembered.
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