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Singer and actress. (November 24, 1908- December 12, 2000) |
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In the early part of her life a series of significant
events took place one after the other, so as to make us think that a
tragic fate was haunting her.
She was born in the city of Rosario, province of Santa
Fe, on November 24, 1908 and when she was eighteen she had already made
her professional debut at theater, on radio, recorded her first disc,
she had already married and given birth to her only daughter and was
about to breaking up with her husband. But later, and up to the present,
permanent work and a never-ending series of hits would mark her life.
Her father Gaudencio Lamarque, son of French parents,
married a widow with six children, and out of that union Libertad was
born. At home they listened to music, there was much reading, political
ideas and artistic trends circulated. Still a child, together with her
brothers and sisters, she participated in small theater companies, because
her father, of anarchist ideas, did not refrain from expressing his
thoughts through brief theater plays that enthusiast union activists
represented.
The young girl Libertad started to experience the fact
of being recognized and praised by people, because in subsequent years
during the Carnival season dances, she was awarded for her costumes,
in which her father, as tinsmith, and her mother, adorning her husband's
creations took part.
She toured nearby towns and many times she sang at the
plays. Due to the recognition she got she learnt fashionable songs by
heart and became the female singer of those performances.
By 1926 her parents agreed upon the possibility of her
chance in Buenos Aires. Not only did they accompany her but also the
tinsmith's shop was moved as well. They changed their residence to Buenos
Aires and settled on 258 Paraná street.
They carried a letter of introduction to the owner of
the famous Teatro Nacional, Mr. Pascual Carcavallo, written by a journalist
from Rosario. Already a grown-up girl, the small nice figure of Libertad
was admitted for the choir and for some little role. She was hired for
a year with 300 pesos a month as her wage.
The work was continuous, until 1926 when she debuted
in a play of the género chico –sainete- (one-act farce)
joining a vocal trio with the actresses Olinda Bozán and Antonia Volpe,
with the accompaniment of Rafael
Iriarte´s guitar. The play was "La muchacha de Montmartre" by José
Saldías.
His first singing interpretation was "Tanita de la proa",
in sailor's costume, together with the comic actress Olinda Bozán (who
had recorded some tunes accompanied by Francisco
Canaro). The "boss" was delighted at hearing her and offered her
to appear in the "end of party" singing the tango "Mocosita",
which was replaced the following week by "Tatuaje" and later by "Pato",
"La cumparsita",
"Langosta",
"El ciruja".
Two months later she made her debut on radio Prieto and
soon the Victor label hired her for 150 pesos per record, and she had
to record at least one a month and after thirty days her pay was raised
to 300 pesos. Her first disc, September 26, 1926: an estilo, "Gaucho
sol" (by Santiago
Rocca and Atilio
Supparo) and a tonada, "Chilenito" (by Agustín
Irusta). The recordings followed one another uninterruptedly; there
was only one interval between 1934 and 1936.
By that period she married a theater prompter, Emilio
Romero, with whom she had a daughter that was born in 1928. Quite soon
she realized this union was a mistake but it would take her twelve years
to get her divorce, not legal then, forming a new and definitive union
with the pianist Alfredo Malerba.
In 1929 she plays in a one-act farce by Alberto
Vaccarezza, "El conventillo de la Paloma", which was an outstanding
hit. She had the role of a girl called "Doce pesos". The already mentioned
"conventillo" (so were called the big boarding houses with numerous
rooms separated by several courtyards, where people of different origin
lived, especially immigrants from different parts of Europe) really
existed in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Villa Crespo.
When, after two years of performances, she reached her
1000 presentations, she split with the cast for not neglecting her career
as singer. Then she began a long tour throughout different provinces
of this country and the neighboring Republic of Paraguay. Three guitarists
accompanied her: Gregorio Rivero, Angel Las Heras and Nicolás Ferrari.
Her recordings are a boom and her records are everywhere.
She participated at a contest for female singers in a
festival held at the Teatro Colón singing the tangos La
cumparsita and Taconeando
(by Pedro Maffia and José
Horacio Staffolani), she was awarded the first prize and was honored
as the "Queen of Tango". The second award was for Rosita Montemar (the
first one to record the tango Recuerdo,
composed by Pugliese and Eduardo Moreno)
and the third prize was for Fedora Cabral.
She already was the first female star of tango.
In 1933 she was included in the cast of "Tango", which
is considered as the first Argentine movie with soundtrack. Although
her debut at the movies was in 1929 on a never premiered long-length.
The title of the frustrated film was "Adiós Argentina" and was shot
in only one day directed by the Italian Mario Parpagnoli.
The year 1935 presented difficult times for Libertad´s
life. Firstly a supposed attempt of committing suicide, while on tour
of Chile, where she might have jumped from her hotel window and an awning
might have stopped her fall. Later her husband "kidnapped" her daughter
and moved to the neighboring Republic of Uruguay with the girl. Libertad,
by means of a well-planned operation, helped and accompanied by several
friends (her new couple Alfredo Malerba, the musician Héctor María Artola
and others) and an attorney, went to Montevideo with the purpose of
recovering her daughter. Finally she succeeded in the girl's restitution
and her life went on then without such unwanted surprises.
She continued her successful artistic activity performing
at important musical works, such as "Tres valses", an adaptation of
Strauss's operetta (the female singer Choly Mur, Tania's daughter, who
died very young in Chile was in the cast).
She also stood out in the movies, for each film she was
paid the unusual amount, for that time, of 95,000 pesos. Over twenty
pictures starred her in Argentina, some titles: "El alma del bandoneón",
"Ayúdame a vivir", "Besos brujos", "La ley que olvidaron", "Madreselva",
"Puerta cerrada", "Caminito de la gloria", "La casa del recuerdo", "Cita
en la frontera", "Una vez en la vida", "Yo conocí a esa mujer", "En
el viejo Buenos Aires", "Eclipse de sol", "El fin de la noche", "La
cabalgata del circo" and many more. During the shooting of the one last
mentioned, a harsh argument arose between Libertad
and the actress Eva
Duarte, already linked with president Juan Perón, so difficulties
to go on with her career sprang up and she had to emigrate to Mexico.
A new age of hits awaited her.
Her bonds with that country are so strong that until
now she is still linked and working, mainly appearing in TV novels and
cinema, in spite of her old age.
Her cinema performances left her role of singer at a
secondary level to finally become a dramatic actress. Her debut in Mexico
took place in 1947 under the direction of Luis Buñuel, on "Gran Casino".
She was starred in more than 40 titles, some of the famous directors
that worked there with her were: Roberto Gavaldón, Tito Davison and
"Indio" Emilio Fernández.
Her comebacks to Buenos Aires took place after 1955 when
general Perón was no longer in charge. To tell you of her route would
be hard and tiring.
In Argentina she recorded about 241 numbers (there would
be probably more). She was accompanied by guitars at the beginning,
later by her husband's orchestra, Alfredo Malerba. Also by the ones
led by Mario Maurano, Héctor Stamponi, Víctor
Buchino, by Juan D´Arienzo on two numbers,
by the orchestra of Lucio Milena and by Tito Ribero's.
In Cuba she recorded four numbers, two in Spain in duet
with Joselito. In Mexico 183 recordings were identified, accompanied
by the local outfits of Ruiz Armengol, Chucho Zarzosa, Raúl Lavista,
Chucho Ferrer and others. She sang in duets with Pedro Vargas, Miguel
Aceves Mejía and with her daughter Mirta, on an opportunity.
Her over 400 recordings represent a number never reached
by any other Argentine female singer and give us an idea of the importance
of her art in the world of tango and our culture.
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