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Carmen: The Unhappy Hollywood Life of Brazil's Shiniest Star Ever PDF Print E-mail
Written by Daniella Thompson   
Wednesday, 25 January 2006 19:48

Carmen Miranda on cover of Ruy Castro's bookCarmen Miranda died 50 years ago at the age of 46. The most celebrated Brazilian of all times, she had built a fabulous international career on a foundation of sparkling charisma and vivacity. Exceptional verve - an elusive and highly desirable quality - propelled the teenaged hatmaker onto the public stage and kept her in the limelight until her premature death.

But although the singer continued to wow audiences with unflagging energy until the very end, she was a spent woman during the last half dozen years of her life.

A disastrous marriage, alcoholism, an unshakable addiction to amphetamines (to marshal the energy for strenuous performances on grueling schedules) and barbiturates (to cancel the effect of the uppers so she could sleep) all took their toll while Carmen's money machine kept grinding unremittingly.

By the final years, it appears that nothing was left for the deeply depressed star but her stage life.

The tragic side of Carmen's life was exposed in Helena Solberg's documentary Carmen Miranda: Bananas Is My Business (1994). The film also examined the cartoonish and humiliating stereotype Carmen's American screen roles invariably conveyed: temperamental, childish, irrational Latin women, loose cannons who fired off rapid strings of malapropisms in heavily accented, stilted English.

This during WWII, when the State Department was leaning on Hollywood studios to portray Latin American nations in a flattering light in accordance with the U.S. Good Neighbor policy.

In his review of the film, New York Times critic Stephen Holden wrote:

"The film's clips of Miranda from the Hollywood years are like jolts of electricity, for she exudes an incandescent vitality along with a percussive vocal bravura. It is sad that Hollywood, after crowning her with bananas, couldn't think of anything else to do with her except to turn that image into a joke."

When Carmen arrived in the United States, she was 30. Behind her were ten years at the top of the Brazilian entertainment industry. Those ten years were decidedly happier than the following 16, but published information about them has been sketchy.

In 1978, Abel Cardoso Junior published the book Carmen Miranda, a Cantora do Brasil (São Paulo: Sorocaba), which, for all the valuable information it provided in the form of quotations and discography, never laid out the complete story of Carmen's life.

This task was left for Ruy Castro, biographer of Garrincha and Nelson Rodrigues, and Bossa Nova's chronicler supreme. Castro is nothing if not thorough.

Over a period of four years, he interviewed close to 200 people, among them Carmen's relatives, friends, colleagues, acquaintances, and their offspring.

His bibliography fills over four closely printed pages. Castro also read the complete transcripts of all the interviews made for Bananas Is My Business, including everything that hadn't been used in the final cut. He scoured the Carmen Miranda Museum in Rio de Janeiro and communicated with researchers and collectors around the globe.

The result is a monumental biography of 550 pages, which one doesn't want to set down until the very last page, if then. Castro's style is always seductive, and here he is very much in his element.

The book is replete with innumerable tidbits - some so minute that you wonder whether you really wanted to know about details like Darryl F. Zanuck's sexual predilections or the size of his (apparently not so) intimate anatomy.

On the other hand, Castro reveals for the first time the shady game that Wallace Downey played as both "representative" of Brazilian songwriters abroad and agent of Robbins Music, which published the songs while never paying those same songwriters a penny in royalties.

Where Carmen's life is concerned, we get as full an account as can be had today of her long-lasting (and sequential) romantic attachments with Mario Cunha, Carlos Alberto da Rocha Faria, and Aloysio de Oliveira, none of whom was ever ready to marry her.

The only man who did propose was David Sebastian, a leech whom she married after a brief acquaintance, without any investigation of his background, and, with no prenuptial agreement. It didn't take long for her to see the light, but she steadfastly refused to divorce him and effectively sealed her fate.

Why a strong and independent woman like Carmen allowed herself to sink passively into a ruinous marital and professional trap is still not perfectly clear.

Ruy Castro dug up as many original sources as are still available, and he gamely offers explanations for inexplicable behavior patterns, but one can't help feeling that Castro arrived too late.

Had he been there to ask the right questions several decades ago, the jigsaw puzzle that is Carmen's life would be more complete. At this point, we can just speculate and enjoy a rich and immensely absorbing yarn.

Daniella Thompson publishes the online magazine of Brazilian music and culture Daniella Thompson on Brazil - http://daniv.blogspot.com and the website Musica Brasiliensis - www.daniellathompson.com - where she can be contacted.

Comments (6)Add Comment
Carmen miranda was portuguese
written by Guest, January 29, 2006
Carmen miranda was not Brasilian
"The most celebrated Brazilian of all times"
Carmen miranda was born in Portugal


Bulls**t
written by Guest, February 02, 2006
She was portuguese, but portrayed herself as brazilian, used the brazilian accent, and of course had a brazilian heart! Sho is IS brazilian. And you shutup!
Not \"most celebrated Brazilian of all t
written by Guest, February 05, 2006
Very few people under the age of 50 outside Latin America know who she is - there are many more celebrated Brazilians such as Pele, Ronaldo and a dozen other footballers. Most people wouldn't know Carmen Miranda from Carmina Burana!
A Unique Human Being
written by Guest, February 09, 2006
I have just finished watching the DVD "Bananas Is My Business" and feel very sad about the way Carmen was treated. Her Portuguese heritage was always acknowledged but she was a Brasilian and never denied that.

The critical Brasilian journalists of her time were just whingers and represented the sentiments of the wealthy who despised the samba and other musical influences of the poor.

Recently Ivete Sangalo sang a Carmen Miranda song in her Bahia concert (recorded on DVD) and I doubt if more than a handful of the youth in the audience of thousands that night knew who she was even talking about as she introduced "Chica Chica Boom Chic".
Pele, Ronaldo, Ronalinho? Yes - all famous. But great footballers are a dime a dozen in Brasil and Brasil will always churn out these sport stars in the future.

But only one Brasilian entertained was courageous enough to conquer the western world with her unique talents and enthusiasm. She was also a great ambassador for Brasil and brought Brasil and Latin America to the attention and interest of the western world at a time when it was virtually unknown.

Famous Brasilian artists are famous only within Brasil and virtually unknown outside of Brasil. I have tried in vain to describe to my english-speaking friends the incredible musicians of Brasil. "I have never heard of them" is a standard response. Ivete Sangalo, Ana Carolina and others could never do what Carmen did. Caetano Veloso, brilliant as he is, has had limited appeal in the west and has succeeded in upsetting foreign audiences with his song choices and languages he sings in. Carmen enthralled American audiences who loved the portuguese language in her songs - even though they could not understand a word. Ask any foreigner who the famous Brasilian singers or actors are? You will get a blank look in reply. This tells you much about the Brasilian mentality about other countries. Brasil is so large that it is a world within itself. Why would I ever need to learn English? Why would I eever need to travel to another country. I have all I need in Brasil. Such isolationist thinking! Yet Brasilians are critical of their own who succeed overseas if they fail to acknowledge Brasil publically each day and periodically with return visits! My goodness! Poor Carmen had hope of pleasing only one sector of Brasilian society - the poorer sector. The arrogant upper class and the intellectual journalists were to too snobbish and committed to journalistic criticism.

The history of Carmen needs to be re-written for this generations of Brasilians to appreciate the truth of Carmen´s life. Wonderful, Incredible, Adventurous and Tragic are just a few words to describe her life.

Her personality portrayed the true Brasilian - one who has a life of constant inner suffering - but who resolutely maintains a smile and positive thinking through songs and friendship.
...
written by Guest, February 10, 2006
I agree with a lot of what you say, but not to know how much Brazilian music is appreciated all over the world is very surprising to say the least. New York's background music is bossa nova and everybody loves Tom, Joao Gilberto and all the bossa icons. Many people today know Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and Milton Nascimento. Anyone with a minimal knowledge of music will agree that American and Brazilian are the most sophisticated and appreciated music in the world today, maybe because of the similar multicultural heritage and the predominant African influence.
I Love Carmen Miranda!
written by Guest, February 13, 2006
I am a 45 year old African American woman who grew up watching Carmen Miranda in films and think that the Chiquita Banana slogan was based on her persona. I even have a vintage ceramic vase of Carmen Miranda that I purchased for $250.00 in 1989 from some guys in San Francisco who design movie sets. Carmen was a wonderful performer and person and she had a tragic life as did most minority performers during her time such as Dorothy Dandridge,Lena Horne,Sammy Davis Jr.,Harry Belafonte and Sidney Poitier. White audiences didn't always know how to respond to non-white characters in cinema and often relagated them to maids or entertainment figures that were written out of the script. Of course a lot of white actresses weren't appreciated either and a lot of them like Marilyn Monroe burned out before even Dorothy Dandrige did.

I think the younger generation needs to know more about performers like Carmen Miranda who opened doors in Hollywood and made it possible for other Latin or South American actors to have more opportunities than she herself did due to the fact that she came along at a much racist time. Halle Berry did a great job in bringing the accomplishments of Dorothy Dandrige to a younger Black audience so that they could know who she was and appreciate Dorothy's talents. Also, a lot of African American performers and Latin performers formed close bonds and friendships with each other in racist Hollywood. Carmen,herself always loved and visited the Nicholas brothers frequently as she stated in her biography that she could share a good meal and discuss the racism that existed in Hollywood since they could relate to her. Desi Arnaz often had Dorothy Dandrige sing in his band when his own singer got sick paving the way for Dorothy to perform in posh nightclubs like the Wardolf Astoria and the Mocambo.

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