Libertad Lamarque
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Born: | November 24, 1908 Rosario Argentina |
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Died: | December 12, 2000 Mexico City |
Occupation: | Actress |
Libertad Lamarque (born November 24, 1908 in Rosario—died December 12, 2000 in Mexico City) was an iconic Argentine actress who became famous in Latin America while working in Mexican cinema.
[edit] Career
She started acting professionally at only seven years old. Her family them moved to Buenos Aires in 1922, where she worked in theatre, and years later recorded her first tango LP, with great success. She filmed Adiós, Argentina in 1930, and the first Argentine film with sound ¡Tango! in 1933.
Her fame crossed the boundaries of Argentina and expanded throughout Latin America to be known as La Novia de América (“The Bride of the Americas”). At her death in 2000, she had a list of 65 films (21 filmed in Argentina, 45 in Mexico and one in Spain), six soap operas, over 800 songs recorded and innumeral theatre presentations.
Legend holds that Lamarque left Argentina because she had been blacklisted by Argentine first lady Eva Peron. Marysa Navarro and Nicholas Frasier, authors of Evita: The Real Life of Eva Peron (ISBN 0-7366-3838-5), however, say that this is not likely. Rather, say the authors, Lamarque moved to Mexico because the Mexican cinema was in better condition during the 1940s and ’50s than was the Argentine cinema. The authors also point out that Lamarque traveled freely from Argentina to Mexico during the lifetime of Eva Peron and beyond, which does not support the blacklisting legend.
Even Lamarque herself denied during her lifetime certain aspects of the legend, specially the reports that she had slapped Eva on the set of La Cabalgata del Circo(1945). In her 1986 autobiography she flatly denied the allegations and explained that she was simply mortified by Eva's lack of discipline during production of the film. "She was constantly late"-wrote Lamarque- "and we all had to wait for hours, dressed in these uncomfortable period costumes, but sometimes she wouldn't even show up". Lamarque, who was the star of the film, complained bitterly to the director but "to no avail" -she remembered- "Eva did as she pleased and she had everyone charmed, even the director." After completion of the film Libertad went on tour and was offered to star in "Gran Casino" in Mexico. She struck a deal with the producers in which she declined monetary compensation for her work in exchange for the rights of the film's distribution in Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. Back in Buenos Aires, Libertad could not get any theater to show her film. She also noticed that former friends were now avoiding her and that the printed media was ignoring her. By now Evita Peron was firmly established at the Casa Rosada, the Presidential palace, and somebody told Lamarque "confidentially" that the ban came from there. Libertad and her husband took their case directly to Eva who received the complaints gracefully and denied any involvement.
However time passed and Lamarque films would go unreleased, her recordings would not play on the radio and her face would not appear in any magazines. This is when the actress-singer decided to settle in Mexico and avoided visiting her homeland except for spaced-out family visits. Lamarque was never formally persecuted or threatened by the Peron regime but was simply "non existing." She never worked in Argentina while the Perons were in power and her countrymen were never officially informed of how important she was in Latin America show business.
[edit] External links
- Libertad Lamarque at the Internet Movie Database
- Libertad Lamarque at cinenacional.com
- Libertad at TodoTango
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