CARMIN
MIRANDA - BIOGRAPHY
Carmen Miranda
(February 9, 1909 - August 5, 1955), born as Carmem Miranda
de Cunha. She was born in Portugal and died in Hollywood.
Miranda
reached her peak point of fame in the early 1940's. The expression
the Brazilian Bombshell captured her true spirit and the heart
of her Latin culture. Miranda's first Hollywood debut was Down
Argentine Way where she had the chance to work with Betty Grable.
Her last Hollywood movie was in 1953 in Scared Stiff with Jerry
Lewis and Dean Martin.
Miranda
was born in the small northern Portuguese town of Marco do Cananeses
and went to school at the Covenant of Saint Teresinha. Her very
Catholic parents did not approve of her dreams of pursuing show
business, so she hid it from them best she could. In her spare
time, she often sang at parties and festivals around the town
where she was discovered and received the chance to perform
on a local radio station. She was noted as a musical innovator
in Brazil, one of the first samba superstars. However, her roles
in US movies featured her as a stylized comic "South American"
singer and she was often shown wearing towering headdresses
made of fruit, becoming known as "the lady in the tutti-frutti
hat". This image was much satirized and taken up as camp
and is a popular turn for female impersonation and drag performance.
She was
well aware of the tensions in her career. Her song "Bananas
is my business" was based on a line in one her movies and
directly addressed her image. A sour welcome back to Brazil
in 1940 resulted in a response in Portuguese in a song called
"Disseram que eu voltei americanizada", or "They
say I've become Americanized". Helena Solberg made a documentary
of her life, Carmen Miranda: Bananas is My Business (1996).