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Evita: woman and myth, beloved in death,
her legend in Argentina lives on
On Sept. 23,
1971, in the iron Gate suburb of Madrid, a van delivered a black
wooden coffin to the mansion where Juan Peron, Argentina's exiled
dictator, lived in bitter exile with Isabel, his third wife. In
it lay the body of his second wife, Eva Duarte Peron. Missing for
almost two decades but perfectly preserved, the embalmed corpse
had been spirited out of Argentina by the generals who had ousted
Peron and buried anonymously in an Italian grave. Now the generals
had returned the body to Peron.He had Evita's coffin set up on the
dining table. As Peron plotted his return to power, Isabel lovingly
combed her predecessor's long blond hair.
Thus it is with Eva Peron: The stories that have attached themselves
to her name--the true stories, like the one above, and the baroque
fantasies composed by friend and enemy alike--all have the feel
of a dreamlike narrative in which truth and myth are combined. In
most tellings, the Evita saga hews to one of two principal themes:
She was either a saint who loved the common people--or a calculating
whore who slept her way to power and exploited everyone she met.
Evita, the movie (opening Christmas Day) based on the Andrew Lloyd
Webber-Tim Rice stage musical and starring Madonna in the title
role, tries to reconcile these two conflicting spirits.
To tell Eva's story involves sifting through mounds of propaganda--much
of it generated by Evita herself. In her ghostwritten 1952 autobiography,
she said she had been born in Junin, a town on the Pampas, in 1922.
In fact, she was born three years earlier in Los Toldos, a desolate
little village in Buenos Aires Province, one of five children of
Don Juan Duarte, a married rancher, and his mistress, Juana Ibarguren.
A cook and seamstress, Juana had been traded to Duarte by her mother,
according to family legend, for a horse and carriage.
After the death of Don Juan in 1926, Juana and her children moved
to Junin, the town Evita would later claim as her birthplace, where
Juana ran a boardinghouse for the town's bachelor gentlemen. Evita,
the dreamer, the budding actress who haunted the local movie theater
and idolized Norma Shearer, set her sights higher. She told her
sister Erminda that she would marry only a prince or a president.
As a teenager, Evita, with a friend, was sexually assaulted by two
young aristocrats, landowners' sons, who left the girls naked on
the side of the road, to be rescued by a trucker. The tale goes
far, say her supporters, in explaining why Evita became a sworn
enemy of Argentina's wealthy and a champion of the poor. When she
was 15, Evita left Junin forever. Here the stories diverge, depending
on the teller's politics. One version says she traveled to Buenos
Aires with her mother to audition for a radio soap opera. The other
maintains that she went to the dressing room of a touring tango
singer, gave herself to him and then accompanied him to Buenos Aires,
where she led a life of casual debauchery and calculated ambition.
Evita didn't exactly take the big city by storm--at first. Uneducated
and unpolished, she wasn't a great beauty. "Her only assets,"
writes Alicia Dujovne Ortiz in Eva Peron, her 1995 biography, "were
her transparent skin and her vivid eyes." But she persisted,
and over the next 10 years gradually forged a career as an actress
onstage, on the radio and in the movies. According to the rumors
that were spread about her after she attained power, she used the
bedroom ruthlessly to get what she wanted.
By the time she met Juan Peron in 1943, she was, at 24, a well-known
radio actress and a celebrity in her own right. Peron was a 48-year-old
widower, a career army officer and an admirer of Fascism, which
he had seen firsthand during officer training in Italy in the 1930s.
After another in the dreary round of military coups that mark Argentine
history, he was named Minister for Labor. He and Evita met at a
festival for earthquake victims. "She literally elbowed her
way through the crowd to be able to meet him and sit next to him,"
says Ortiz. Evita became Peron's mistress, and in 1945, the year
before he was elected president, they were married. "Through
Peron," says Tomas Eloy Martinez, an Argentine journalist and
author whose 1996 novel Santa Evita traces the strange journey of
Evita's corpse, "Evita acquired self-confidence; he granted
her legitimacy, being a military man marrying a woman who was both
an actress and of bad reputation and illegitimate. When she realized
how much power there was, she wanted to use that power to avenge
the humiliations she had suffered."
Peron, calculating but almost devoid of personality, unleashed Evita
on a dazzled nation, and for five years she blazed like a meteor.
As the only person Peron trusted completely, Eva, who held no office
of her own, served as his political hatchet person, driving out
high officials he wanted to oust. She was also his link to the masses.
The poor people of Argentina--the descamisados, or shirtless ones--embraced
her as one of their own.
To Evita, charity was a personal thing. It wasn't enough that she
administered millions of dollars in health and welfare benefits
through the Social Aid Foundation, which she founded after the wealthy
women of Buenos Aires blackballed her from the country's foremost
charity. She also visited lepers, harangued the rich and opened
her doors to the poor, giving away sewing machines, bridal gowns,
false teeth or whatever might be needed. Women supplicants, no matter
how disheveled, were greeted with a kiss.A man who worked with her
told of throwing himself between Evita and a woman with a syphilitic
sore on her mouth. Evita insisted on kissing the woman. "Never
do that again," she told the man afterward. "It's the
price I have to pay." Under Peron, and with Eva's advocacy,
Argentine women got the vote for the first time in 1950.
This was the Evita of legend--the poor girl who redistributed the
nation's wealth from the rich to the downtrodden. The legend does
not, of course, detail the wealth the Perons distributed to themselves.
With Argentina running trade surpluses achieved through beef and
grain shipments during World War II, the Perons systematically looted
the treasury. Evita stocked her wardrobes, jewelry cases and a Swiss
bank account. As corruption and mismanagement and Juan Peron's political
strong-arm tactics triggered an economic slump that would last 30
years, Evita used her considerable power over the police, the unions
and the press to cow and punish her opponents.
Always frail, Evita underwent an emergency appendectomy in 1950.
By some accounts, her surgeon later said that she refused to submit
to a life-saving hysterectomy after tests revealed she had uterine
cancer, claiming the surgery would have interrupted her work. Evita's
final appearance was at Juan Peron's second inauguration on June
4, 1952.Filled with painkillers and weighing about 80 pounds, she
rode in an open car, held up by a plaster support under a long fur
coat. She died seven weeks later at 33.
Remarkably, Evita grew more potent dead than alive. Her grief-stricken
followers petitioned the Vatican to have her canonized--to no avail.
After Peron was overthrown in 1955, the new regime, fearful that
her body would become a shrine for the Peronists, had it removed
from the Ministry of Labour, where it was on display. It was stashed
in various unlikely places--a military base, a truck parked on the
street, someone's attic--until it was shipped to Italy and buried,
to be exhumed in 1971 and returned to Peron. The act of reconciliation
was not without political motive. In the absence of Juan and Evita,
Peronism--a cult of personality that accommodated a wide and often
mutually exclusive range of ideologies --flourished in Argentina
as never before.
The government realized it was time to make overtures to Peron.
In 1973, Peron returned to power but died the next year at 78. His
third wife, Isabel, who governed disastrously, was ousted by the
military in 1976. After a futile war with Britain over the Falkland
Islands in 1982 and a vicious civil war, the generals turned the
country over to civilian control in 1983. Today, President Carlos
Saul Menem, who is leading Argentina along a path of democracy and
free trade, is proud to call himself a Peronist.
And Evita? Her itinerant body is finally at peace, buried beneath
three layers of steel plate in the Duarte family vault in Recoleta
Cemetery in Buenos Aires. Her neighbors are the very oligarchs she
so despised.
People
Weekly.Dec 16, 1996. By Michael Neill
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