Does the name Carmen Miranda sound familiar? What about “the lady in the tutti-frutti hat?” If not, do not feel ashamed, for many have forgotten the excellent Brazilian performer. No Brazilian artist, however, has achieved the international recognition that Carmen Miranda has, especially in Latin America and the States. She was one of the highest-paid women in Hollywood during the 1940’s.1 Yet she is today something of an unknown figure. Why is that?
Well, it dates back to the day she was born. Carmen Miranda was born Maria do Carmo Miranda da Cunha in a village in Portugal on February 9, 1909. She migrated to Brazil with her family in 1910, before turning two years old.2 Though she remained a Portuguese citizen, she was at home in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. She began performing at a very early age, winning over her family and friends with her talent, and soon she had become a samba sensation. She was cutting records and was a star nearly a whole decade before coming to the United States. One night in 1939, while performing at the famous Cassino da Urca (in a neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro), New York producer Lee Shubert signed her for his show The Streets of Paris on Broadway, and away she went to take the world by surprise.3 While on Broadway, she enchanted everyone with her vibrant singing, dancing, and “Brazilian bombshell” beauty.
At 38 years old she married; however, given the huge persona she was, it is strange that there is not much known about her personal life. The extent of it is that she was raised Catholic, and this may be the reason she married at a mature age. It was rumored that she and her husband, David Sebastian, had a troubled marriage.
It was 1940 when she returned from Broadway to her homeland Brazil, but she was devastated by the way she was received. At the same Casino where Shubert had snatched her from less than a year earlier, Miranda performed to a crowd in awkward silence; only when she began to sing in English did the crowd make some noise, booing. She stopped the show and was so upset that she burst into tears. This incident sent her fleeing from the country, and for about fifteen years she did not return.4
Meanwhile, Miranda spent her time on Broadway and in Hollywood, Las Vegas, and London starring in movies, performing in casinos and clubs, expanding her fame and reputation. She was the tropical beauty from Brazil and there was no one to change her mind about it. Yes, she was a European woman with pale skin and green eyes, but these features are what made her unique, and people found it interesting that a woman like her sang black music. Her unique style gave her the recognition she has acquired as an iconic Latin American. Carmen Miranda was well-known for her outrageously colorful costumes, which called for high platform heels, lots of jewelry, flamboyant dresses, and most famously the turbans with fake fruit stacked so high that it added height to her short stature of 5’0’’. 5 “In Brazil in Bahia, the girls carry the basket with the fruits on her head, and they have big bracelets and big necklaces and they sell fruits in the streets and I take it [my style] from the girls,” Miranda explained as the source of her image.6
For years people have attacked Carmen Miranda on racial grounds. Critics say she had returned to Brazil americanizada. In response, she wrote a song in their mother tongue—the only country in Latin America to speak Portuguese—whose title translates to “They Say I Came Back Americanized.”7 It was also said that she was a sellout and was not truly a native, having been born in Portugal. Some say she was simply portraying the “Brazilian Bombshell” image and embodied the typical stereotype the U.S. public wanted to see in Brazilians, and Latin Americans more generally, where women are highly sexualized. Others argued that her style had created a distorted view of the country, as being sexually exposed, extravagantly colorful, and fruity. They argued that the turbans she wore were not even Brazilian customs and were only used to make fun of her.8 She was even mocked on a Bugs Bunny cartoon. To make matters worse, some said she had no right to sing samba, a music inherited in Brazilian black slums.
On the contrary, Carmen Miranda put Rio de Janeiro on the map of spectacular. She was the most successful person Brazil had produced. In a way, she served as an unofficial ambassador for her country, and it is heavily reflected in her movie roles.9 Everything that was Latin American was a hybrid presented in her performances, her style, her songs, friends and fans. She was everything, and nothing at once: Brazilian, Mexican, Argentinian, Cuban. Hollywood productions during this time period would touch on different cultures, but never fully embrace one, and this may have been what happened to Miranda. She became involved in Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Good Neighbor Policy, which was a program determined to improve relations with the nations of Central and South America.10 She still is the only South American to be immortalized in concrete at Sid Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, “To Sid, VIVA! in the South American Way. Carmen Miranda. March 24th 1941,” neighboring none other than Frank Sinatra. 11 Rio’s Museum of Modern Art welcomed Carmen Miranda with a major retrospective; “Carmen Miranda Forever,” where clips from her movies were shown, and gowns and turbans were showcased. She even had a museum in Rio dedicated to her, the Carmen Miranda Museum. Here, there was a wide variety of arrangements, gowns, costumes, shoes, and anything you can think of that she had performed in. The building itself was not lavish and fabulous as she was. Therefore it did not suit the gems hidden inside. Due to lack of maintenance and funds, it was closed down. It was agreed that Miranda deserved better.12 On the bright side, the museum is being relocated to Rio de Janeiro Museum of Image and Sound, expecting to open anytime soon. 13
It is a difficult task to relate to Carmen Miranda’s plight. She took many chances in leaving Brazil: that of being lost in translation, the crossing of geographical and cultural borders, sounding like herself in a different language, being in a sustained condition of exile. One person could not possibly represent an entire continent, especially one as diverse as that of Latin America with its many rich cultures. Today, it is not rare to be a Brazilian in the United States, in contrast to the way it once was. With that in mind, there is no Brazilian artist that has coped with these issues on the scale that Miranda had to in her prime. A director for a play on Carmen Miranda’s life said it better than anyone: “Carmen hasn’t been forgotten, but she’s been kind of ignored or neglected in recent years.”14 There are people today who have become interested in her, that have opened their minds to who she really was and why she has become an obsolete figure. They will learn that she was a charming, charismatic, comical, and extravagant person, a figure to inspire.15
- Larry Rohter, “Arts Abroad: The Real Carmen Miranda Under the Crown of Fruit,” New York Times, Dec. 13, 2001. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/theater/arts-abroad-the-real-carmen-miranda-under-the-crown-of-fruit.html. ↵
- Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, 2008, s.v. “Miranda, Carmen (1909-1955),” by John Cohassey. ↵
- Larry Rohter, “Arts Abroad; The Real Carmen Miranda Under the Crown of Fruit,” New York Times, Dec. 13, 2001. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/theater/arts-abroad-the-real-carmen-miranda-under-the-crown-of-fruit.html. ↵
- Larry Rohter, “Arts Abroad; The Real Carmen Miranda Under the Crown of Fruit,” New York Times, Dec. 13, 2001. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/theater/arts-abroad-the-real-carmen-miranda-under-the-crown-of-fruit.html. ↵
- Maria Rubia Macedo, “Images of Latin America In the Body and Costumes of Carmen Miranda’s Stylized Baiana: Social Memory and Identity,” Comunicação e Sociedade 24, (2013): 186-209. ↵
- Lulu Garcia-Navarro, “Of Fruit Hats and ‘Happy Tropics,’ A Renaissance for Carmen Miranda,” NPR Parallels, April 22, 2015. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2015/04/22/401467980/of-fruit-hats-and-happy-tropics-a-renaissance-for-carmen-miranda. ↵
- Lulu Garcia-Navarro, “Of Fruit Hats and ‘Happy Tropics,’ A Renaissance for Carmen Miranda,” NPR Parallels, April 22, 2015. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2015/04/22/401467980/of-fruit-hats-and-happy-tropics-a-renaissance-for-carmen-miranda. ↵
- Larry Rohter, “Arts Abroad; The Real Carmen Miranda Under the Crown of Fruit,” New York Times, Dec. 13, 2001. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/theater/arts-abroad-the-real-carmen-miranda-under-the-crown-of-fruit.html. ↵
- Lulu Garcia-Navarro, “Of Fruit Hats and ‘Happy Tropics,’ A Renaissance for Carmen Miranda,” NPR Parallels, April 22, 2015. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2015/04/22/401467980/of-fruit-hats-and-happy-tropics-a-renaissance-for-carmen-miranda. ↵
- “Good Neighbor Policy,” Office of the Historian, April 13, 2017, https://history.state.gov/milestones/1921-1936/good-neighbor. ↵
- Ralph Morris, “Carmen Miranda, Grauman’s Chinese Theater,” Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection, Accessed April 13, 2017, https://calisphere.org/item/d381f8bd9fd414dd5661ab0aeeffa4a7/. ↵
- Mac Margnolis, “We Still Have Bananas,” Newsweek (Atlantic Edition) 147, no. 4 (January 23, 2006): 55. ↵
- Lulu Garcia-Navarro, “Of Fruit Hats and ‘Happy Tropics,’ A Renaissance for Carmen Miranda,” NPR Parallels. April 22, 2015. April 13, 2017. http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2015/04/22/401467980/of-fruit-hats-and-happy-tropics-a-renaissance-for-carmen-miranda. ↵
- Larry Rohter, “Arts Abroad; The Real Carmen Miranda Under the Crown of Fruit,” New York Times, Dec. 13, 2001. Accessed April 13, 2017, http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/theater/arts-abroad-the-real-carmen-miranda-under-the-crown-of-fruit.html. ↵
- Film clip “Carmen Miranda: ‘Rebola a Bola’ (1941),” from Week-End in Havana, film directed by Walter Lang, 20th Century Fox, 1941. Music by Aloysio de Oliveira and Nestor Amaral, lyrics by Francisco Eugenio Brant Horta, sung in Portuguese by Carmen Miranda. ↵
83 comments
Francisco Cruzado
Carmen Miranda reminds me of a famous Peruvian soprano named Yma Sumac (world-wide famous in the 50s and the only Peruvian female to have her name in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She was also pointed at her lack of truthful connection to the country, and how she did not represent a culture, but rather the adaptation of it accordingly to what others wanted to see. To some extent, it is fair to ponder on whether some of the claims and accusations made by Brazilians in regards to Carmen had some truth and reasoning. It is unfortunate that stereotypes still persist when referring to Brazilian women: it would be interesting to look deeper into whether the figure of Carmen had anything to do with such a misconception
Engelbert Madrid
It’s unfortunate to know that many white Americans during that time could racially criticize and boo a talented woman like Carmen Miranda for not being white. Also, I feel sorry for Miranda for seeing how her own people would criticize her for being “Americanized”; however, that made her stronger to keep moving forward in her career. Fortunately, she is still remember and she became a successful actress in the United States and Brazil.
Emily Velazquez
I have seen this amazing women many times before but I had never known her by name. Now that I have read this article, I will forever remember her name as Carmen Miranda. I will even know her story now. It was a very interesting one. She represented so many great countries, it was marvelous. I agree with the article, she did have it rough considering the time at which she became famous because people were harsh and Brazilians living in America was not as common as today.
Christopher Hohman
Nice article. I have never heard of Carmen Miranda before although I believe that her fruit hats and style are familiar to me. She sounds like she was quite a performer and an artist. It is sad that she was rejected by some in her own country for what they saw as misrepresenting Brazil or for just not being truly Brazilian. It is sad that that happened to her. It is very cool that she has her own museum
Christopher Metta Bexar
My favorite image of Carmen Miranda is singing in a motion picture in front of Xavier Cugat’s Orchestra. Like Cugat’s most famous wife Charo, Ms. Miranda was an original, a woman of her own design with many talents.
She had everything needed to succeed in 1940s musicals, including something I read recently the legendary Judy Garland didn’t have–beauty. Like Dolly Parton or Bette Midler she never let her short stature keep her from being the center of the audience attention. Nor like Charo was she ever afraid to showcase her talent. As the article states , for many she was the introduction to South American women before the great Evita Peron became famous.
Her image today remains a trademark for good reason.
Bianca-Rhae Jacquez
Carmen’s career was so amazing in that she paved that way for many women for Latin countries. I feel as if many people made fun of her because of the fact she embraced being extrinsic and she wasn’t afraid to be herself. She changed the views that many people saw the Brazilian music and the culture. I think that article really highlighted a figure in Latin that many didn’t know about.
Gabriela Ochoa
Growing up I always heard about the lady with the fruit on her head and tried to do it myself but never knew that she was an actual person. To read that Brazil didn’t respect her and made comments about who she had become is sad because she did great things and represented Brazil and gave them a good name. Though it is common is Hispanic cultures for someone to come to America and those back home to believe they changed. She is an inspirational women in the fact that she never let others affect her and the way she lived her life but lived it fuller each time she went on stage.
Alexander Manibusan
I’ve only seen Carmen Miranda once, and I think one of her shows was briefly seen in the Guillermo del Toro film The Shape of Water. The song the movie showed was quite catchy I must admit. I find it so sad to return to your home and be treated so bad, where the people believe you are not one of them anymore.
Aneesa Zubair
Carmen Miranda was a talented performer. I did not know that she was one of the highest-paid women in Hollywood, and I think many people wouldn’t know that today because, sadly, she has mostly been forgotten. It is also quite sad that Hollywood at the time (and sometimes even today) failed to truly represent outside cultures, and as a result, hired people like her to represent all of Latin America. Miranda was still an excellent performer, though, and she did so many amazing things, from working on Broadway to in movies like You’re the One For Me. You did a great job showcasing her career and charismatic personality.
Fumei Pinger
Today I learned that the lady with the fruit in her hair is real, and her name is Carmen Miranda. I would have to say that she is definitely an icon because when the author described her style I immediately had her image in my mind, and I never knew her name until today. I watched the YouTube video at the end, she is clearly a very talented artist and her performance was entertaining, it’s too bad the Brazillian people shunned her when she came back to perform.