The Rest Is History - 494. Evita: Birth of a Legend (Part 1)
Episode Date: September 15, 2024“Don’t cry for me Argentina, the truth is I never left you.” Few political figures have been both hailed as a saint and immortalised through an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical. The mythology of Ev...ita Perón continues to permeate through Argentinian society, but what’s the real history of her life? Eva and her siblings were born out of wedlock and subsequently shunned by the community in her rural village. Losing her father in a car crash at a young age, she grew up with a terrible sense of hurt and a desire for a better life. Cinema was a welcome distraction and soon had a significant influence on Eva. Despite not being the most talented actor, her emotive and monotone voice suited the hugely popular soap operas on the radio in Argentina. But she sought total stardom, and she was willing to move to the capital to find it… Join Dominic and Tom as they discuss Eva’s escape from a childhood of resentment to the bright lights of Buenos Aires with her sights set on making it as an actor. _______ *The Rest Is History LIVE in the U.S.A.* If you live in the States, we've got some great news: Tom and Dominic will be performing throughout America in November, with shows in San Francisco, L.A., Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Boston and New York. *The Rest Is History LIVE at the Royal Albert Hall* Tom and Dominic, accompanied by a live orchestra, take a deep dive into the lives and times of two of history’s greatest composers: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven. Tickets on sale now at TheRestIsHistory.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Thank you for listening to The Rest Is History. For weekly bonus episodes,
ad-free listening, early access to series, and membership of our much-loved chat community,
go to therestishistory.com and join the club. That is therestishistory.com. It won't be easy
You'll think it's strange
When I try to explain how I feel
That I still need your love to all that I've done
You won't believe me
All you will see is a girl you once knew
Although she's dressed up to the nines
At sixes and sevens with you.
I had to let it happen.
I had to change.
Couldn't stay all my life down at heel.
Looking out of the window,
staying out of the sun.
So I chose
freedom.
Running around, trying
everything new, but nothing impressed me at all.
I never expected it to.
Don't cry for me, Argentina.
The truth is I never left you.
Through my wild days. Mad existence.
I kept my promise.
Don't keep your distance.
Don't keep your distance.
So, Dominic, that was Madonna playing Evita in the Miami mix of Don't Cry For Me, Argentina,
written, of course, by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. Tom, what happened to Madonna's voice? Could you tell? It was actually
me. Was she singing in a Spanish accent? Is that deliberate? No, that was American. Oh really,
that was American? Yeah, it was an American accent. You could tell. Could you? Anyway,
so today we are looking at Eva Peron, aka Evita.
Yeah.
And she has a place in my heart.
And that particular track has a place in my heart.
Oh, that's nice.
Did you ever see the film?
I did.
So it came out just after Christmas.
And you may remember in the episode we did on disco.
Yes.
I mentioned that Sadie and I were great habituates of love muscle.
Yeah.
At the fridge in Brixton.
Yeah.
And the film Evita came out i think a
couple of days after christmas and there was a rumor that there was going to be a big evita night
to celebrate it coming out at the fridge at love muscle and the rumor was that madonna herself was
going to turn up cranky so we drove all the way back from where we'd been staying christmas to
go to it dressed up in our glad rags and went to the night what did you dress as evita yeah evita or colonel peron i can't remember one of the two i mean you would remember that tom so
that suggests that you did dress as a vita anyway let's move on and we went there and of course
madonna didn't turn up no but it was a brilliant brilliant evening you know they sang that they
sang all kinds of other stuff and they had people in the crowds with peronist slogans waving it around and i remember
thinking this is completely mad what other figure from south american history would inspire a night
like this i'd go to a simon bolivar night they don't hold it that in brixton they didn't have it
no and so as a result of that i didn't really know anything about evita but i read about her a lot
over the following year and of course the film and the musical opens with Evita's funeral, where everyone is terribly upset.
And of course, 1997, which is the year of Diana's death, was the perfect year to be
reading about Evita.
It's true. It's a good point. Tom, well, first of all, that is a lovely story.
Thank you.
And it gives us some wonderful insights, I think, into the cult of Evita and Argentine history.
Yeah.
But also, Tom, you're in very good company.
Because do you know who you remind me of?
Who also went out of their way to engage with the cult of Evita, to go to a performance that would be Evita-themed in London like you.
And somebody with whom you've often been compared, actually.
Would it be the Iron Lady by any chance?
It would be the Iron Lady.
So in August 1978, Margaret Thatcher went to see Evita with
her speechwriter, Ronnie Miller. So the Andrew
Lord Webber musical. And after she
got back, she wrote Ronnie Miller a letter,
which is in her archive. And it says,
Dear Ronnie, it was a strangely
wondrous evening yesterday, leaving so
much to think about. I still find myself
rather disturbed by it.
Which is exactly how a lot of listeners to this
podcast would be feeling, Tom,
having listened to your singing.
And she says,
now, if they can do that without any ideals,
then if we apply the same perfection
and creativeness to our message,
we should provide good historic material
for an opera called Margaret in 30 years time.
So you are the Iron Lady of this podcast,
are you not? She's being harsh there i
think mrs thatcher on evita because i think evita did have ideals she did indeed but i mean i think
actually the parallels between evita and mrs thatcher on one level absolutely mad they're
opposite ends of the political spectrum yeah but on the other i'm looking forward to this the
devotion to i suppose to kind of taking center stage and playing the diva which is of course what the andrew lloyd weber musical is all about
it's kind of playing with riffs of opera the tragic heroine and all that kind of thing yeah
of course and both avita and mrs satchel were very good at playing the diva and also both of them
were simultaneously loved and hated they were and it's a perfect example of how a female politician or political figure
generally, I would say, elicits stronger reactions than a man does.
Extreme reactions.
Of course, but there have been lots of female leaders indeed in Argentina.
Yeah, Cristina Kirchner.
Yeah, but I think that Evita and Mrs. Thatcher are probably the most diva-esque
female political leaders since the war, wouldn't
you say?
Since the war of the 20th century, I would say, Tom, with no question. Evita is easily
one of the most famous female public figures of the 20th century, probably Mrs Thatcher
and Indira Gandhi, I guess, or Golda Meir in Israel.
But they haven't had a smash hit musical written about them.
No, and the fact that she had a musical written about her is very revealing she was a
creature of show business because she was an actress yes as we will discuss it's not just
her performance but her politics is enormously informed by the soap opera melodramas that she
embodied on the radio and in that sense i think there's actually a comparison with ronald reagan
in america when we did our reagan series we talked about how Reagan's worldview, his sense of himself, the message he took to American voters was really strongly informed by his time in Hollywood. The Hollywood thing wasn't a joke or an accident. It was really important. show business background in the 1930s and 1940s actually is her politics in a weird way and that
sort of cult of the spectacle and of performance and sentimentality has been at the heart of
argentine politics yeah ever since and there's also a further dimension which you don't get
with thatch and reagan which is the catholic dimension yeah because santa rivita as she's
hailed both in the musical and on the streets of
Buenos Aires when she was the star of the show, that is a genuine expression. When she died,
there were moves to have her canonised. There were, absolutely.
Which the Vatican rejected for reasons that we will explore. But obviously, the sense of drama
that public displays of Catholic ritual have is something else that is a part of the Evita mythos and just makes her an amazing, amazing subject.
Agreed, Tom.
So that's what we're going to do today.
It reminds me a little bit.
We did an episode about the Saint Catherine of Siena, who's suffering and who's sort of self-mortification, who's visible suffering.
The fact that she embraces people who are deeply deeply ill and all of that
kind of thing so there's a thing isn't there she kisses a leper avita kisses a leper yes and
someone rushes forward and tries to swab her lips with alcohol she smashes the bottle yes and she
says no you know these are my people you could say she's the link between katharine sienna and
diana who you mentioned she's also as i hope we will show, she's the link between Catherine of Siena and Donald Trump.
Her politics are not the same as Donald Trump's,
but we will see how...
She's all about the vibe, isn't she?
The vibe, the style.
Politics as style.
So, it's an amazing story,
and we'll be doing it in the course of this week.
Evita's background, her rise,
her relationship with Peron,
her extraordinary death,
and the way in which that becomes this public melodrama.
And then the even more bizarre story.
Yeah, that's really mad.
About what happens next to her body, to her reputation, to her ghost,
and the attempts of people to basically be Evita in the 1970s,
amid the chaos of Argentine sort of politics with terrorism and bombings.
And it is the most amazing story.
Let's start, obviously obviously with the woman and her
background. So we are in Argentina in the late 1910s and I think you know we can't spend ages
on all this but just to give you four things I think it's important to have in our heads about
Argentina. First of all Argentina is par excellence the country of immigrants so in her lifetime its
population almost quadrupled and these are people who are quite poor, often, coming from Italy,
Spain, and Germany. During her early years, probably a third of the Argentine population
had been born overseas. They had arrived in Argentina because it's the promised land.
Great hopes for this wonderful new life, this utopian world into which they are coming.
Which is a rich and prosperous country, isn't it?
It's a very rich and prosperous country. But of course, the thing is, you arrive somewhere with great ambitions, you are very easily
frustrated if it doesn't work out.
Yeah.
And you look for someone to blame.
Well, in the words of Jimmy Nail, Ava, beware of the city.
Jimmy Nail.
I didn't think we'd have Jimmy Nail on the podcast.
That's nice.
Our friend of the show, Dan Jackson, will enjoy that.
Number two, Argentina is a country dominated by one city buenos aires huge
port it looks out to the old world and particularly to britain actually it's integrated into british
imperial economic networks and behind it is this vast agricultural hinterland the pampas which is
where she comes from and a lot of the people who are kind of the ruling classes the oligarchic
classes are either brit British or very influenced
by Britain. I mean, that's how football becomes so huge.
Exactly. So football, polo, rugby, we'll discuss some of this later on. So it's important to sort
of remember that. The third thing, I think, is that Argentina, uniquely, even in Latin America,
it looks to Europe, it sees itself as a kind of a European country. It had a very small population of African
slaves who ended up being completely assimilated. The Indian indigenous population, so-called Indian,
largely extinct, but very few of them left. So they're very European. They're always looking
to Europe, but at the same time, they're very conscious of being out on the complete margins,
the very bottom of South America. And there's a sense, I think, lots of sort of political
scientists have written about this. There's a sense of a desire to emulate Europe and particularly Britain, but also a sense
of being snubbed and being forgotten and put down. And I think that's really important.
And then the fourth thing is that Argentina has always had a history of very deep division and
inequality. So throughout the 19th century, during its first century of independence,
it was torn apart by endless civil wars between Unitarians who were centralists in Buenos Aires
and Federalists, you know, the landowners
who wanted to keep their power out in the provinces.
And then later on, you have a great deal of tension
between the old landed elites that based the polo set
and this swelling mass of urban workers.
So that's all you need to know, really,
about the background to Argentine politics.
Well, it's not all you need to know, but it's all you need to know for the purposes of the podcast
there is more to say isn't there but yeah for now so ava perron as she becomes is born in this
nothing place called los tolos in the sort of middle of argentina 150 miles from buenos aires
in may 1990 and that means the tents doesn't it so it's a kind of an allusion to the kind of the native encampment that had once been there.
It is, exactly.
When she was growing up, there would have been a handful of native people living in hovels,
sort of shacks outside the village.
And you would see them at feast days kind of riding around in their ponchos and stuff.
But by and large, it's a village of farm workers, farm labourers.
There's not a lot to do there is there
there's nothing to do so the big sport is cockfighting so if you like cockfighting yeah
i mean maybe that's good but otherwise if you don't like cockfighting there's literally nothing
to do i think even if you like cockfighting there are better places to be yeah it gets a bit boring
after a while so her father is a man called juan duarte who's 43 and he comes from a town 20 miles away. And he works as an estate manager.
He's not married to her mother.
So he's in his 40s.
Her mother is a woman called Juana Ibarguren, who's a Basque.
Like Unai Emery, the manager of Aston Villa.
Oh, thanks.
That's nice.
Like Unai Emery.
Yeah.
Or the former Wolves manager, Julen Lopetegui.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, there's loads of Basques in the world.
Yeah. They're everywhere,etegui. Yeah. I mean, there's loads of Basques in the world. Yeah.
They're everywhere, the Basques.
Wonderful.
Her mother had met Duarte when she was probably about 15 and bore him four children.
This is not, unfortunately, the last time in this series that there will be relationships
with an alarmingly large age gap, I think it's fair to say.
Now, Duarte is actually married and has a family elsewhere.
He comes to this town, Los Toldos, to work as a sort of farm manager.
And as is very common in Argentina in those days, he basically has a second marriage.
Because he's a long way from his first wife.
He's a long way from his first.
And at first, the norm was this would be with an indigenous woman, a native woman.
But over time, it kind of evolves.
So he has Juana.
Interestingly, she's clearly a very proud,
ambitious and stubborn woman.
Well, that will be her Basque heritage, Dominic.
Oh, of course. They're very proud people, the Basques.
They are proud people. Proud and independent.
Yes. She takes his name, which is unusual. She calls herself Duarte. People in the village
don't like her. It's not clear whether they think she's sleeping with a big man,
so they envy her, or whether they despise her for doing this. Maybe a bit of both.
She's kind of upwardly mobile, isn't she? And with more than a hint of snobbery.
Yeah.
And so the fact that she's simultaneously looking down on people who have reason to
look down on her, and there's nothing to do except cockfighting. I mean,
it's an absolute nightmare, isn't it?
It is.
I mean, essentially, people are going to bitch about her.
They are indeed.
And they do.
Yes. Now, Ava's birth certificate will come a little bit later in a subsequent episode to the very complicated issue of the birth certificate.
What it seems pretty clear is that her birth certificate was later destroyed for reasons that we will explain.
But at the time, people who saw it said that her surname was not given as Duarte, her father's surname, but as her mother's surname, Ibargirin.
And there was a lot of gossip in the village.
There had been a massive row about this between the two of them,
which is why there'd been a big delay in registering Ava's birth.
She's the fourth child.
She's got two elder sisters and one elder brother, Juan.
And what is clear is that the children and the mother
insisted that they would continue using Juan Duarte's name,
even though he didn't want them to,
and they weren't kind of legally entitled to. So right from the start, there's a sort of a taint,
I suppose. Her parents are unmarried, but then she's using a name that is not her own.
But also a sense of moving up, of aspiring, of wanting something better than what you were born
into. Exactly, yeah. There's also, I think, a sense of resentment and humiliation
because when Eva is not even one,
Duarte says, I've had enough of my time working in this pathetic little town.
I'm actually going back to my real family.
And back he goes to his real family, which is in a place called Chivilcoy.
And is that a family middle class, Dominic?
If he's a farm manager, it's not elite by any stretch of the imagination,
but it's certainly more middle class than the Ibargueran family.
And so it would inspire Evita to cry, screw the middle classes. I will never accept them. My
father's other family were middle class and we were kept out of sight, hidden from view
at his funeral. So that's a moving rendition from the musical.
If you're going to consistently recite things in the musical, it will become tiresome.
I'm speaking for the audience.
No, but that is an important aspect, isn't it?
The fact that he dies.
Yeah.
And by custom, they should not be allowed to go to the funeral.
Exactly.
Although I do think it would be an editorial error to sing too much.
I think you are right to mention it.
Thank you very much.
And kudos to Tim Rice for summing it up so well.
Well done, Tim Rice. Because I think
this is probably the single most influential thing that ever
happened to her in the first 10,
15 years of her life. When she's
about six, her father is killed
in a car crash. And Juana,
her mother, says, I will go to
the funeral. We will all go.
Now, she dresses the children in mourning.
They all go to Chivilcoy. The wake is in
progress. And everybody is absolutely horrified to see them.
It's not that they don't know they exist.
I think they know they exist, but they just, they do not want this basically second family
turning up.
Spectres at the feast.
Yeah.
And there's a lot of arguing and eventually the compromise is made that the hearse will
proceed to the graveyard and they can walk but right at the back,
not with the real family, in averted commas.
You know, there'll be a spectacle.
They will be publicly humiliated.
I mean, everybody's humiliated by this scene.
It's a reminder of the kind of the hierarchical character
of Argentine rural society.
Right, it is.
So Ava must know at that point,
six, you're old enough to remember this
and for this to have an impact on you, to be aware at the very, that there are people who despise you and who despise your mother. And it is clear that for the rest of her life, Ava, like her sisters would just make these sort of coded references to her
outrage against injustice. From as far as I can remember, the existence of injustice has hurt my
soul as if a nail was being driven into it. From every period of my life, I retain the memory of
some injustice tormenting me and tearing me apart. And I think this undoubtedly lies at the heart of
it all. So they go back to Los Tolos anyway.
She is a very skinny, small little girl.
They call her skinny, la flaca, the thin one.
They end up moving eventually when she's about 10, 11,
to a slightly bigger place called Junin, which is a kind of railway junction.
It apparently, Dominic, derives from the Quecha word for plains.
Oh, that's nice.
So it's kind of flat, isn't it?
Not a lot to do.
Dusty, sort of scruffy, unpaved roads.
It's Wild West.
Yeah, a little bit Wild West.
She goes to school in Hunin.
One of the teachers remembers her later and says,
a very beautiful little girl with dark hair, skin like porcelain,
a very self-absorbed child with an intense inner life,
great sensitivity and great vulnerability. Of course, you never know with this how much this is back projection do you i
mean maybe that teacher doesn't even remember at all it seems that they again were you know there's
no husband no father there's a slight sort of cloud hanging over them some girls are told you
don't talk to their duartes as they're calling themselves so the mother is calling herself the
widow duarte exactly and she's still very keen on kind of projecting respectability.
And she's raising her girls and her son Juan to think of themselves as respectable.
Yeah.
But there's the challenge, obviously, of how do you maintain that facade if you don't actually
have any money?
No, which they don't.
So the mother, she sews a lot, doesn't she?
And sewing machines will become a kind of important icon for Evita later on.
Yeah.
And she takes in lodgers.
She takes in lodgers and she cooks for them.
And this will provide a lot of scope for anti-Evita propagandists later on.
Yeah.
Because the story, and it's one that Jorge Luis Borges, the great writer who we've already
mentioned, he says that she was running a brothel
and that she was pimping out the girls. I mean, this is simply not true at all, is it?
No, it's not true.
There is no foundation for that whatsoever. It's the opposite.
I mean, big spoiler. Ava Perron, I think, was never a prostitute. I think it's often
claimed that she was, but I don't think she was. I think they are actually quite the opposite. As
you say, I think they are obsessed with respectability.
Yeah.
It is something that is always out of reach and they're desperate to reach it.
The thing that I think Ava thinks about more than anything when she's growing up, like a lot of people, is, you know, where are we?
We are in the 1930s.
This is the age of the cinema.
So there's a cinema.
There were multiple cinemas actually in Hunin.
The great biography of Ava Perron by Nicholas Fraser and Marisa Navarro. She says, you know, every week they go and see these films.
And on the films are images of a European or North American life, depictions of wealth and power, visions of great and glittering cities, and most of all, of love.
Love across class barriers, love and money, love and furs, love and destiny.
Yeah, it is by this point chiefly American films.
Yeah. Because the Argentine film industry has basically been decimated by the rise of speakeas.
And the Americans have kind of imposed a ban on the sale of cine film.
Well, also, I think the Argentine film industry, those people who are sort of historians of Argentine cinema may object to this.
But I think there's a sense that in the 1930s, actually, it's not very good.
Yeah.
I mean, it's in decline at this point.
Now, Ava is like a lot of girls.
She loves the cinema.
She loves music and dancing.
She dreams of a life in show business.
And ultimately, when she's 15 years old, she persuades her mother to let her move to Buenos
Aires to seek her fortune in this world.
Because you mentioned her love of dancing.
And of course, the famous Argentine dance
is the tango. Yeah. And the story is that it's not her mother who takes her to Buenos Aires,
but a tango singer. Isn't that right? Yes. Agustin Magaldi, who was actually one of the biggest
tango singers in Argentina. A.K.A. Jimmy Nail. Of course, it's Jimmy Nail in the film. It's
Jimmy Nail in the film. Yeah. So Magaldi looked nothing like Jimmy Nail in reality. No,K.A. Jimmy Nail. Of course, it's Jimmy Nail in the film. It's Jimmy Nail in the film. Yeah.
So, Mugaldi looked nothing like Jimmy Nail in reality.
No, he didn't.
But also, he's not a kind of classic tango singer, is he? Because he's much more concerned with social issues.
He's very passionate about social justice.
And I always wondered whether this story emerges because the themes of his songs are seen to
kind of map onto Ava's later concerns. I don't know what you think about that.
No, I think that's a fair point because his music, his lyrics echo the themes of her rhetoric.
Yeah.
So you'll see this a lot. It's definitely a thing in the musical,
the Andrew Lloyd Webber music, Tim Rice musical. There's a story that Agustin Magaldi came to
Junín to perform. He's a great hit. And then he takes her back with him to Buenos Aires,
effectively as his mistress. But her biographers say this is rubbish. First of all, there's actually
no evidence he ever came to Hunin at all. But also, he travels with his wife. His wife comes
on tour. It is highly implausible that his wife would approve of him with this very skinny,
and she's not exactly a bombshell, young ava that his wife would smile meekly while
he brings her back with them to the capital i think that's very unlikely yeah what it actually
obviously expresses is one that suspicion that you've already said that basically the family are
all prostitutes and that she only advances because of her sexuality which i don't think is right at
all and secondly i totally agree with you the sense in some mysterious way her life and career
must be bound up with the tango which is the one thing that people know about argentine culture in
the early 20th century tango of course is born in brothels in the port of buenos aires then it
becomes a bit more respectable goes to paris and so on the tango is melancholy its themes are kind
of generally love and suffering and sacrifice.
And actually, as we will see, those are the themes of Eva Peron's politics.
They are rhetorical themes that she goes on about.
Yeah.
So she's undoubtedly steeped in the world of the tango.
I mean, that music is playing all the time.
I mean, it is the sound of Buenos Aires.
And the realm of film is also that of great cities like Buenos Aires.
So obviously, if you are the kind of girl who doesn't want to be stuck in Hicksville,
who dreams of the bright lights and you are in the middle of Argentina,
Buenos Aires is the only place to go.
So I think we should take a break at this point. And when we come back, we will follow Ava to the Big Apple.
Very good. I'm Marina Hyde.
And I'm Richard Osman.
And together we host The Rest Is Entertainment.
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What's new a Buenos Aires?
As Evita famously sang when arriving in the streets of the great Argentine capital city.
And Dominic, she's 15.
Yeah.
She has no money.
She has no particular education or aptitudes.
What is life like for someone with no particular skills turning up in this massive city?
Overwhelming, Tom.
Terrifying, actually.
So Ava is one of many, many people who are at this point arriving in Buenos Aires from
the interior of Argentina and moving off the land and into the city.
So Buenos Aires in the 19th century
had been quite a small place.
It has expanded massively.
It's a city of immigrants.
So its population is about 2.5 million,
rising towards 3 million,
full of Italians and Basques
who have come across the Atlantic
in the last couple of decades.
I guess a way to think about it,
especially for American and Canadian listeners,
it's basically a combination of New York and Chicago. So it's's meat packing i know you love meat packing tom and speakeasies
yeah two things very close to your heart it's the center of the railway network so it's full of
trains and stations it's full of kind of abattoirs this is where they freeze the meat this is the
meat on which argentina's got rich and they send it across the Atlantic. It's full of banks, there's a stock
exchange, there are opera houses, all built in a kind of European baron houseman, late 19th century
Parisian style. So it looks like, in some ways, a sort of alternative universe version of Paris
in which the elite behave as though they're on Bond Street in London. Now, obviously, most people
are not part of that elite.
So there's a huge working class, largely immigrant.
The Italians and the Basques came at the turn of the century.
Now there are lots of people like Evita coming from the interior,
and they are working in factories and shops on the outskirts of Buenos Aires,
and they're often living in very, very poor, cramped, insalubrious conditions.
So that is her milieu.
She will be spending the next few years drifting around these kind of pensiones, these like,
you know, boarding houses, lodging houses, you know, crowded, miserable, probably frightening,
frankly, for a girl in her teens. But at the same time, kind of exciting. Oh, totally. Yeah, definitely.
And she has got away from the controlling presence of her mother as well.
Yeah.
Which must also, I mean, if you're independently minded, which Ava clearly is, that must also
be a factor, don't you think?
And must have steeled her to continue to remain in the city, to not kind of give up, to not
go back.
Yeah, most people would go back though.
So as our biographers say, everybody dreams of a life in the big city and life and showbiz and being on
the stage and being in front of a camera.
Except for you,
Dominic.
Well,
maybe I have my dreams too,
Tom.
You know,
I still dream of that little,
you know,
the Hollywood agent getting in touch.
Yeah,
I suppose.
Yeah.
You know,
Eurovision is not closed off to me entirely.
So, you know, most people dream of that, but settle down in their little town.
There's something in her, the drive.
There is undoubtedly a drive because there are no sources about this time.
We don't have evidence for it, but the evidence is her life, I guess.
I think what she sees in Buenos Aires is the possibility of another life.
So I mentioned the elite.
The elite are impossibly rich, even by European standards.
So there's an amazing statistic that in 1930, the top 2,000 people in Argentina owned land
that was the equivalent to Holland, Belgium, and Switzerland put together.
I don't know why you'd put those three countries together.
But anyway, that's the equivalent of the land holdings of this elite.
And these are people who made the money in the 19th century.
They're the old families.
They live like English country gentlemen and ladies.
They play polo.
They play croquet.
They shop at Harrods, which has a branch in Buenos Aires.
They go to the Opera House, the Teatro Colón.
They go to the Jockey Club, which is the gentleman's club.
Yeah, the watering holes of the well-to-do.
And in the Argentine winter, which is our summer, they would go to Europe, to the Côte d'Azur,
to summer on the Italian lakes, to go to the races in England. And people would say,
oh my God, Argentines are so rich. They're not country cousins. They're nouveau riche,
I suppose. So in Paris, there was an expression at the time to be as rich as an Argentine.
So these are the people that she is looking up to, I think.
Well, she's not looking up to them, though, is she? She despises them.
She hates them precisely because she is looking up to them, though, surely.
That's why she hates them, because they are at the top of that pyramid.
Yeah, but looking up to them implies that they provide her with the standard.
No, you're right. She wants to displace them.
She absolutely does.
Yeah.
But, I mean, important to say that at this point, she's not politically minded at all, is she? No, not at all. her with the standard no you're right she wants to displace them she absolutely does yeah but i
mean important to say that at this point she's not politically minded at all is she no not at all she
has no real interest in um kind of social issues and she's entirely focused on making her way as
an actress she is and to begin with i mean she's not a very good actress is part of the problem
no and her earliest roles even on stage she's part of the lower classes she's always
playing maids or secretaries rather than queens or anything she is she's in terrible plays that
run for two weeks and are never heard of again and we only get like fragmentary glimpses of her life
so she's in a play about a girl school and somebody says young very pretty dark eyes the
personification of innocence she seems very pure that's her
persona at this point of course because she's 15 16 yeah there's also a glimpse we have of her
she goes to some friends at some point to the beach in montevideo montevideo the capital of
uruguay and there are boys who see her on the beach upper class boys and one of them said later
i remember her she seemed neither stupid nor intelligent perfectly unremarkable and rather
lower class and that rather lower class, that's the tone.
So is that the place that she's gone with this rather sinister sounding guy, Pablo Suero,
aka the Toad?
Yes.
Yeah.
And it's said of him that she is sleeping with him.
Which she probably was.
Because we've said that she's not a prostitute.
Yeah.
But anyone listening and thinking, you know know attractive young girl wanting to make her way as an actress in a very very predatory and masculine dominated world
i mean it seems improbable that the directors with the power would not have leveraged their
control of course and i don't think even the most sympathetic biographer would doubt that in a way
that we undoubtedly would find repellent now in the kind of Me Too era.
Well, because there's this famous kind of, so after Suero and Evita split up, she goes to ask him for another part.
That's right.
And he keeps her sitting outside, you know, the office for hours and hours.
And then he kind of bounds out of the office and yells at her.
Do you think that because I slept with you, I'm always obliged to give you work?
Very publicly in front of all the other actresses.
Yes.
There are loads of other actresses there.
And the person who sees it says her voice became softer and softer.
She became whiter and whiter with humiliation again.
A terrible scene.
And even if that one incident didn't happen,
there must have been many such incidents.
Yeah.
And you can see why in due course,
she will want to erase the record of her career as an actress as well as her origins completely from the record.
Yes, absolutely. Absolutely.
Which obviously then makes it difficult to know what was going on.
Exactly. We do have a sense, I think, of what was going on because people have dug into the listings and things.
We know that she was in a terrible radio science fiction program in a tiny part we know that she entered a beauty
contest and lost it that she was the mc of a kind of tango competition that she was an extra in a
film about boxing and we know that she's she's listed in stage programs but you know she's in
the chorus or she has no lines or she has one line she must have been very very poor i don't mean a
poor actress i mean you know no money i
mean one point of contact that she does have is her brother juan who is in buenos aires as well
yeah and he's kind of he's a slightly shady character isn't he he is and later on he will
be accused of gross corruption i think not entirely unfairly so she does have her brother
but that avails her very little one of the actresses who she worked with, the lead actress in a play, a woman called Pierina D'Alessi, she took her under her wing a bit.
And she later said, I remember her.
She was hungry, unhappy, careless about herself.
Her hands were cold and sweaty.
She would come to the theatre early because it was warmer than her room and she had nowhere else to go.
A sad scene, but one that you can completely imagine.
You know, such a common story.
And there's another record, I can't remember who it is, who is saying to her,
why don't you improve your elocution?
Because she has a very working class accent, very provincial accent.
She mispronounces a lot of words.
And the friend is saying, why don't you try and improve your ability to speak
so that you will get better parts?
And she kind of says, I just, I can't.
I just haven't
got the energy for it yeah she's always hungry always tired yeah she's too tired too hungry
even to do that and actually also tom let us be honest she's not actually very good she's not a
great actress she's not stunningly beautiful although her style of acting actually turns out
to be quite effective on the radio yes and this is really
the making of her isn't it it is completely you're absolutely right so in 1939 i mean she would be
hanging around all the time outside the offices of agents and producers and things and she seems
to have got in with a group who were going to produce a whole series of plays by this playwright
called hector blomberg and she actually manages to land a role
as one of the stars of this series.
She's about 19, and the first thing they're going to do
is this love story in 19th century,
late 19th century, Belle Epoque kind of Paris.
And it's the first time that she really gets any publicity,
and she is going to become a bit of a radio star.
Now, I think that this is absolutely central in the making of her, not just as a show business
personality, but as a political personality.
Argentine radio is not nothing.
It's the second biggest commercial network in the world.
So the biggest is the US.
And in this vast country, far bigger than any European country and incredibly underpopulated.
So people are living gigantic distances from each other.
The radio has this almost supernatural power over people and particularly soap operas, which are broadcast every evening at 530 to women preparing the dinner for their husbands to come home.
And they're called soap operas because basically they're sponsored by soap manufacturers.
Yes.
And you mentioned Reagan earlier.
I mean, there's an echo there.
Reagan kind of cuts his political teeth, doesn't he?
By selling fridges, essentially.
Yeah, General Electric.
And there's a sense in which Ava's ability to act effectively as a radio star is also
about selling stuff.
I mean, she's selling soap as well.
Yeah, she is.
And so that idea of broadcasting messages is something like Reagan,
that she is learning by doing this. It's the intersection of capitalism and acting, I guess.
It is. When we did the Reagan series, I remember we were talking a lot about Reagan and Hollywood.
And I said, I always thought, like Lou Cannon, Reagan's great biographer,
that it's bonkers that people would say of Reagan, he's just an actor. Because being an actor is brilliant preparation for
politics. Saying the lines, wearing the makeup, standing in the right place, meeting the fans,
all of that. And I think radio ditto with politics in Argentina. So the way it would
work in Argentina is because there are lots of people who are very poor in these far-flung
villages, the radio manufacturers would get trucks and they would send them to these villages
and they would have loudspeakers and they would play the soap operas to the people in the village.
And the soap operas, as her biographers, Fraser and Navarro, say,
the soap operas, they were more recitals of a script than they were dramas.
So the script would have been written just beforehand.
The entire thing is at an absolute kind of pitch of emotion
yeah histrionic almost histrionic from the start to the end and it's always about love
disappointment sacrifice the lead characters are young women who are always being betrayed or
sacrificing themselves for their husbands or whatever but. But who, in the long run, finish up in the arms of a handsome and dashing hero.
Yes.
And these are the roles that Ava is playing.
The girl who is poor, who suffers, who endures, but who does, in the long run, get a man.
And it's the only role, really, she ever plays.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's not like this is one role among many.
This is all she can do.
People said of her voice, I mean, we were talking were talking weren't we about her voice before we started recording
her voice is unbelievably monotonous and all she can do is to sort of emote plaintively about duty
love sacrifice blah blah martyrdom but she does it incredibly well yeah so that what by 1943 she's
earning a fair amount of money and she's able to buy a place. I think she also helped out Juan, who's got gambling debts. Yes. So she's starting to get a degree of security in a way that she had never before in her life had. And she's doing it by playing this role of, you know, the girl who suffers, who then gets her man. And Dominic, would it be fair to say that reality maps onto art?
It does indeed.
It's extraordinary how in this story, again and again, the soap operas anticipate what
is to follow.
Because in January 1944, she goes to a gala event where she meets the man with whom her
life will be forever entwined. And this is the rising star of Argentine politics,
matinee idol, Colonel Juan Domingo Perón.
Perón.
So I think on that thrilling soap opera-esque moment,
we should stop this episode
and we will come back next time
with the seismic meeting of Eva and Perón.
And you can either wait for it if you are a de camisado, if you are one of the suffering
poor of Argentina.
Don't be mad.
But if you want to be a member of the Buenos Aires elite, part of the snooty country clubs,
you can, of course, hear it on therstishistory.com by going there and signing
up or if you already remember, brilliant. So we will see you whenever. I hope you've enjoyed it
and hasta luego. Bye-bye. I'm Marina Hyde. And I'm Richard Osman. And together we host The Rest Is Entertainment. It's your weekly fix of entertainment news, reviews,
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