She was loved and reviled in equal measure in Argentina: A saintly social justice warrior to some, a self-serving manipulator to others. But globally, Eva Peron remains a pop culture icon.
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How 'Evita' made Eva Peron a pop culture icon
Peron, Maria von Trapp, and Alexander Hamilton have all had their lives immortalized onstage or onscreen — creative liberties and embellishment included.
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Finding her true calling
This October 1950 photo shows President Juan Peron and wife Eva waving to crowds from the balcony of Casa Rosada, the office of the Argentinian president. In the musical "Evita," Eva sings "Don't Cry For Me Argentina" to the crowds from this balcony following her husband's presidential win. She reveals in song that she first wanted fame and glory but now only wants to serve her people.
Image: AP/picture alliance
Polarizing figure
"Evita" began as a rock opera concept album released in 1976 by British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and lyricist Tim Rice. It was later reconceptualized as a musical, debuting in London's West End in 1978 and winning the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Musical. Following its Broadway run in 1979, it became the first British musical to receive the Tony Award for Best Musical.
Image: Natacha Pisarenko/AP/picture alliance
Vocal lessons required
Michelle Pfeiffer, Meryl Streep, and Glenn Close were all considered to play Peron in Alan Parker's 1996 film musical. But he casted singer Madonna after receiving her heartfelt letter on why she'd be the best fit. Both Parker and Lloyd Webber insisted she attend vocal lessons. Madonna's diary entry on the filming of the iconic song says: "I felt her (Eva) enter my body like a heat missile."
Image: United Archives/Impress/picture alliance
A series of inspirations
The iconic opening scene of "The Sound of Music" where Maria (played by English actress Julie Andrews) sings the titular song against the breathtaking Austrian alps. Maria von Trapp wrote and published "The Trapp Family Singers" in 1949, which inspired the 1956 West German film "The Trapp Family," which then inspired the 1959 Broadway musical "The Sound of Music" and this 1965 film version.
Image: United Archives/picture alliance
The Sound of Music
This was the final collboration of legendary American musical duo Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. "The Sound of Music" premiered on Broadway nine months before Hammerstein's death. It is about a young, irrepressible governess with seven precocious children under her care, who falls for their widower father under the dark shadow of Nazi Germany's annexation of Austria.
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Not without embellishments
And while the musical ends with Maria, Captain von Trapp and the seven children resolutely "climbing every mountain" out of Salzburg to avoid the Captain’s imminent drafting into the German Navy, in reality they took a train. This 2008 picture shows three of the real life von Trapp children — Johannes, Maria and Erika — posing outside their former home, Villa Trapp, in Salzburg, Austria.
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'Et cetera et cetera et cetera!'
Famously uttered by the inimitable Yul Bryner, whose casting as King Mongkut of Siam in both the 1951 musical and 1956 film versions of "The King and I" might not have passed muster today. Another Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, it tells the story of an English governess who is hired to teach English to the king's children. Sparks fly when both strong-willed parties clash on culture.
Image: United Archives/picture alliance
More fanciful than reality?
"The King and I" was inspired by the memoirs of Anna Leonowens, who had spent several years as an English governess to the wives and children of the Siamese Royal Family. Historians have questioned many of Anna’s recollections, pointing to several striking irregularities that were found throughout Anna’s memoirs, including her own backstory and happenings at the royal court.
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Better representation decades later
Featuring an international cast from over 20 nations, 1999's "Anna and the King" starred Hong Kong actor Chow Yun-Fat as King Mongkut opposite Jodie Foster's Anna. The original story and earlier portrayals of King Mongkut as an "unkind and lecherous man" did not sit well with the royalty-revering Thais, and are therefore banned there. The film was shot in neighboring Malaysia instead.
Image: Enterpress 20th Century Fox/dpa/picture alliance
These boots were made for dancing
Inspired by Steve Pateman, who saved his family's traditional shoe factory by branching out into footwear for drag queens, the musical "Kinky Boots" made its Broadway debut in 2013. Based on a similarly named 2005 British film, the musical was also a hit for promoting respect and acceptance for the trans and LGBTIQ communities. Pateman, who even modeled his kinky boots, is now a firefighter.
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From pop anthems to musicals
Originally opening to lukewarm response, "Kinky Boots" later earned 13 Tony Award nominations and won six, including Best Musical and Best Score for 80s popstar Cyndi Lauper in her first outing as a Broadway songwriter. In 2016, it won three Laurence Olivier Awards, including Best New Musical.
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'America then, as told by America now'
Having taken seven years to compose, Lin-Manuel Miranda's sung-and-rapped musical "Hamilton" features a cast of non-whites playing the roles of America's founding fathers. Miranda, who himself plays the titular role, said that he was inspired to write the multiple-award winning musical after reading the 2004 biography of Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. It won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
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Saved by a musical
A line in the opening song of "Hamilton" goes: " ... the ten-dollar founding father without a father." Hamilton was the US' first Treasury Secretary and is one of three non-presidents to grace an American dollar note. In 2015, the Treasury Department had planned to replace his portrait with that of a woman but dropped the idea due to the widespread renewed interest in Hamilton after the musical.
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Mention the name Eva Peron her fellow Argentines will likely differ on the legacy of the former Argentinian First Lady who died on this day 70 years ago.
Mention Evita to older generations in Europe or the United States and they might burst into a dramatic rendition of "Don't Cry For Me Argentina," the chart-topping torch song from the 1978 Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice hit musical.
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From poor girl to first lady
The musical was based on Peron's rags-to-riches biography, though her storied life seemed predestined for recounting in books, films and on the stage.
Born into poverty on May 7, 1919, Maria Eva Duarte — nicknamed "Evita" or little Eva in Spanish — left her rural village of Los Toldos to pursue an acting career in Buenos Aires. There, the struggling actress met the soon-to-be Argentinian President Juan Domingo Peron.
Her life would be forever transformed.
Married soon after their meeting, Eva's husband was elected president the following year in 1946, making her the First Lady of Argentina at only the age of 27.
In the following six years, Evita, as she was known, championed labor rights and female suffrage. Besides running the Ministries of Labor and Health, she also founded and ran both the charitable Eva Peron Foundation as well as Argentina's first large-scale female political party, the Female Peronist Party.
A report by Australia's Special Broadcasting Service commemorating her 100th birthday in 2019, described Peron as having been "hated and loved with intensity in equal parts."
"Some saw her as a saint, a benefactress, a revolutionary, a woman determined to bring social justice to every corner of the country," the report added. "Others judged her as ambitious, adventurous, resentful, selfish and false, full of hatred and hypocritical."
Peron eventually succumbed to uterine cancer on July 26, 1952. She was only 33.
Canonized in popular culture
Peron is among those cult real-life figures whose stories continue to be immortalized through song and dance, both on stage and screen.
In the 1940s and 1950s, the prodigious American theater-writing team of composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist-dramatist Oscar Hammerstein II also produced a series of hit musicals for Broadway.
Two of their productions "The King and I" and "The Sound of Music" are based on the lives and reminiscence of Anna Leonowens and Maria von Trapp respectively.
Both were coincidentally governesses: Leonowens was an English governess to Thai King Mongkut's children in the early 1860s, while von Trapp, who originally planned to become a nun, ended up marrying the widowed Austrian Captain Georg von Trapp, whose seven children she had cared for.
While some creative liberties were taken with both stories, they boasted hit songs that are still popular.
Meanwhile, some recent musicals have also focused on diversity and inclusivity.
The 2013 Broadway adaptation of "Kinky Boots," the music and lyrics for which was written by 80s pop legend Cyndi Lauper, is based on the true story of Steve Pateman, who, inspired by drag queen Lola, tried to save his family-run shoe factory in Northamptonshire from closure by creating "Divine"-branded fetish footwear for men.
The film was a hit, for giving a platform to the LGBTIQ community and the biases they face.
Meanwhile, Lin-Manuel Miranda's multiple-award winning 2015 rap musical "Hamilton" tells the story of American founding father and first Treasury Secretary, Alexander Hamilton, whose face graces the country's $10 note.
By casting non-white actors as the founding fathers, Miranda described the musical as being about "America then, as told by America now."
"Evita" remains a crowd-pleaser to this day, with productions being staged in various European countries, including Germany.
Berlin Pride: 'Against hate, war and discrimination'
Also known as Christopher Street Day, this year's annual Pride parade happening July 23 in Berlin is themed "United in Love." DW takes a look back at its colorful history.
Image: Reuters/F. Bensch
Why 'Christopher Street Day'?
In many German cities, Pride is also known as Christopher Street Day, or CSD for short. Christopher Street is the New York location of the Stonewall Inn, where in the early hours of July 28, 1969, police led a brutal raid inside the famous gay bar. The ensuing violent demonstrations of gay and lesbian New Yorkers against the excessive force used by police became known as the Stonewall Riots.
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Confronting biases
Berlin Pride was founded by Bernd Gaiser, a longtime rights activist, in 1979. "Only when we, as gay men and lesbians, go out in public and confront society... can we force them to change their attitudes towards us," Gaiser told Die Zeit newspaper in 2018. About 500 people attended that first celebration in a city divided into East and West.
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Annual themes to fight for rights
Each year, Berlin Pride has a different theme that is determined via a public forum. In 1998, for the first time, the party got political with the theme, "We demand equal rights." The theme for 2022 is "United in Love — Against Hate, War and Discrimination." The organizers demand quicker investigations into hate crimes against LGBTIQ people and for zero tolerance against discrimination.
Image: Emmanuele Contini/imago images
Always political
The causes championed each year at Christopher Street Day are not only aimed at LGBTIQ communities, but promotes human rights and fights discrimination on behalf of all people. CSD is also eco-friendly. Here, a participant holds up an environmental awareness sign: "Avoid plastic waste!"
Image: Getty Images/C. Koall
Mainstream support
In February 2001, same-sex civil unions were legalized in Germany, due largely to the efforts of the center-left Social Democrat (SPD) government, who were able to pass the law in spite of protests from the center-right Christian Democrats (CDU). SPD Bundestag President Wolfgang Thierse (left) attended Berlin Pride that year in a sign of solidarity.
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Solidarity in all (uni)forms
In 2014, Potsdam Police Commissioner, Marko Klingberg (center), risked disciplinary action by marching in his uniform — considered official clothing — at that year's parade. Klingberg, who was then deputy federal chairman of the Association of Lesbian and Gay Police Officers, found the no-uniform rule discriminatory and ignored it. Besides a phone call with his superior, he faced no consequences.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Carstensen
That's MISS*ter CSD for you!
Every year since 1991, a personality whose character, political opinion, charisma and persuasiveness wowed the audience was crowned Miss CSD. The candidate's gender, sexual preference, age or origin were not relevant. In moving with the times, and in the spirit of diversity and tolerance, the title was renamed MISS*ter CSD in 2016.
Image: Getty Images/C. Koall
Marriage for all
The 2017 parade was the last before gay marriage was legalized in Germany on October 1 that year. In the lead-up to the vote on the same-sex marriage bill, Chancellor Angela Merkel famously told parliamentary representatives to "vote based on their individual conscience." A move that did not alienate her conservative voter base, she was able to ensure passage of the marriage for all law.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Jensen
Masked but not muted
After being canceled in 2020 due to pandemic lockdown, the Christopher Street Day parade resumed in 2021. It was divided into two demonstrations with much smaller crowds compared to previous years, the event having attracted around one million people in 2012. Those who attended were not deterred from pursuing their message of equality and tolerance for all.
Image: Emmanuele Contini/imago images
Cautious revelry
This year's CSD participants will not only have to deal with COVID, but also the emerging risk of monkeypox. Berlin has registered more than 1000 cases, however a new study has shown that 95% of these cases are transmitted through sexual activity. US health officials are concerned that it could become an endemic STD like gonorrhea, herpes or HIV.