Eva Perón and Willa Ford: Difference between pages

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[[image:evitaperon.jpg|frame|right|Evita's image appeared on a wide variety of products, including stamps, coins, postcards and calendars. This 1954 postage stamp commemorated the second anniversary of her "passing into immortality".]]
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'''Willa Ford''' (born '''Amanda Lee Williford''' on [[January 22]], [[1981]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[pop singer]].
'''María Eva Duarte de Perón''' (commonly known by the affectionate diminutive '''Evita'''<!--she wasn't known as María Eva Ibarguren: from her beginnings she used his father's last name (maybe unlawfully)-->) ([[May 7]], [[1919]] – [[July 26]], [[1952]]) was the [[First Lady]] of [[Argentina]] and the second wife of President [[Juan Domingo Perón]] ([[1895]]–[[1974]]). She has been described by Maryssa Navarro and Nicholas Fraser as being the most mythologized public figure of modern times.
 
[[Image:Willaford.jpeg|right|thumbnail|Willa Ford]]
==Eva's childhood==
 
==Biography==
María Eva Duarte was born in [[Los Toldos]], a [[Buenos Aires Province]]. She was one of five illegitimate but recognized children born to an unwed cook, Juana Ibarguren (1894&ndash;1971), ranch owner Juan Duarte (1872-1926). As a child, Eva Perón and was reared in nearby [[Junín, Buenos Aires|Junín]].
Willa was born and raised in [[Ruskin, Florida]]. She began pursuing her dream of becoming a singer at the age of 8, when she started singing with the ''Tampa Bay Children's Choir''. By the time she reached age 11, she had moved on from the children’s choir to the Tampa-based children’s performing arts troupe, ''Entertainment Revue''. This group consisted of 20 girls ages 5-16. The tour the area and sang at such places as, [[Walt Disney World]] and Busch Gardens. Willa worked hard in the group and moved her way up from a chorus member to the role of featured soloist. When Willa was 15, she left the troupe and landed spot with a local foursome ''FLA''. She didn’t stay long with the group before deciding to head out to Los Angeles.
 
In 1999 Willa while performing under the stage name '''Mandah''', she was signed to [[MCA]]. While with MCA she released a song on the double-platinum soundtrack ‘''Pokémon The First Movie’'' called ‘''Lullaby''’. She also landed a spot as an opening act for the [[Backstreet Boys]]. Which managed to attract a lot of attention, for her performances as well as her relationship with one of its members. Soon Willa’s label changed her stage name from Mandah, to avoid confusion with another female singer, to Willa Ford and tried to promote a beautiful singer with a good-girl image. After some negative publicity that tainted their clean-cut image for Willa, MCA decided to drop her, letting her move on to a label that would embrace her bad-girl image.
==Eva moves to Buenos Aires==
 
It wasn’t long before [[Lava/Atlantic]] would give Willa a deal and put her in to studio with a diverse variety of writers and producers. Although she had many talented writers working with her, Willa was determined to write most of the lyrics herself, which was unlike other teen singers at the time. She would use her life for material or make up a character that she would want to be.
At age 15, Eva Duarte travelled to [[Buenos Aires]]. There is some contoversy about how she arrived, with the most popular version being that she was brought to the big city by Augostin Magaldi (this is the version put forth in the [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]] musical "[[Evita]]"), and with others saying that there is indication that she arrived in Buenos Aires by aid of her mother.
 
On July 17, 2001 Willa released her debut album ‘''Willa Was Here''’. The album contained the single (with a hyper link to the sexy video), ‘''I Wanna Be Bad''’. The album used smooth pop/R&B grooves, hot dance beats and vocoders. Although Willa has the beauty and talent mixed in with a hit single, her album only reached #56 on the [[Billboard Charts]].
Upon arrival in Buenos Aires, Eva Duarte was faced with the difficulties of surviving without formal education and without connections. After years of struggle, she eventually found work as a [[radio]] and [[film]] [[actor|actress]], eventually starring in [[B-Movie|B-grade movie]] melodramas and Radio El Mundo [[soap opera]]s. She eventually came to co-own the radio company and she was considered to be a talented radio actress. She regularly appeared on a popular historical-drama programme ''Great Women of History'' in which she played [[Elizabeth I of England]], [[Sarah Bernhardt]] and [[Alexandra of Hesse|the last Tsarina of Russia]]. Her personal favourite movie was the [[1938]] epic ''[[Marie Antoinette]],'' starring [[Norma Shearer]].
 
While promoting her album, Willa did a Mall tour for ''Nautica Kids'', served as the spokesperson for ''Pantene Pro-V’s ‘Pro-Voice’'' campaign, and appeared on the in-concert cable special, ''Teensation''. Also [[MTV]] got Willa to host their reality series ‘''I Bet You Will''’. MTV was impressed by Willa’s hosting they got her to also host their Spring Break series, which included ‘''The Morning After''’. Willa’s song ‘''I Wanna Be Bad''’ became the theme song for ''Six-Flags'' theme parks and was also use by ''7-UP'' for one of their campaigns. Willa also became a model for ''Bongo'' Ads. In 2002 Willa co-wrote and sang a duet with [[Koreans|Korean]] Pop star [[Park Ji Yoon]] intitled ‘''Nastified''’, which was on Park's 5th album ''Man''.
==Relationship with Juan Peron==
 
In 2003 Willa came back with a hot dance song that forever immortalized a sorority chant, ‘''A Toast To Men''’, which featured a special guest rapper [[Lady May]]. The single was from her unreleased sophomore album ‘''Sexysexobsessive''’. The single did well, but cause of some legalities at her label her album wasn’t released. This also caused Willa to leave the label and go in search for a new one.
Eva Duarte met Colonel [[Juan Perón]] at a [[charity]] event to raise funds for the victims of [[San Juan Province, Argentina|San Juan]] earthquake. She and Perón married on [[October 21]], [[1945]]. After her marriage to Juan Perón, all of Eva's movies were banned from being shown in Argentina. During this period in Argentine history, politicians were not expected to socialize with entertainers -- particularly entertainers born out-of-wedlock and who worked in soap operas.
 
While fans wait for a her sophomore release, Willa has made some appearances. In 2005 Willa was chosen from many candidates to host the fighting competition reality show ‘''The Ultimate Fighter''’. After the show’s finale Willa got a shot at being the summers guest doll, for the Vegas ''Pussy Cat Dolls'' show. As well as being one of the celebrity quarterbacks in the upcoming ''2006 Lingerie Bowl III''. Which will air during the ''Super Bowl'' halftime.
Shortly after his marrige to Eva, Juan Perón was arrested by his opponents within the government who feared that due to the strong support of the [[Shirtless Ones|''descamisados'']], the workers and the poor of the nation, Perón's popularity might eclipse that of the sitting president.
 
==Discography==
Eva has often been credited with organizing the rally of thousands that freed Juan Perón from prison on [[October 17]], [[1945]]. This version of events was popularized in the [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]] musical "[[Evita]]". Most historians, however, agree that this is not likely. At the time of Perón's imprisonment, Eva was still merely an actress, she had no political clout with the various unions that supported Perón, and she was not well liked within Perón's inner circle nor was she liked by many within the film and radio business at this point. When Juan Perón was imprisoned, Eva Perón was suddenly without support from most. (Letters between the two during Juan Perón's imprisonment indicate that the two actually considered leaving the country after Perón's release, if indeed he were to be released at all. The two feared that Peron may actually be killed while in prison.)
 
===Albums===
In reality, the massive rally that freed Perón from prison on October 17, 1945, was organized by the various unions, such as [[Confederacion General del Trabajo]], or "CGT" as they came to be known. To this day, the date of October 17th is something of a holiday for the Peronist party in Argentina.
 
*2001: Willa Was Here
==Juan Perón's campaign for presidency==
 
===Singles===
Eva Perón campaigned heavily for her husband during his [[1946]] presidential bid. Using her weekly radio show she delivered powerful speeches with heavy [[populist]] rhetoric urging the poor to align themselves with Perón's movement. Although she became quite wealthy from her radio and modeling successes, she would highlight her own humble upbringings as a way of showing solidarity with the impoverished classes.
 
*2001: I Wanna Be Bad (feat. Royce Da 5'9)
Eva campaigned with her husband, visiting every corner of the country of Argentina. She became the first woman in Argentine history to appear in public on the campaign trail with her husband. (Incidentally, she was also the first woman in Argentine public life to wear pants.) Eva's appearance alongside her husband often offended the establishment of the wealthy, the military, and those in political life. However, she was very popular with the public, who knew her from her radio and motion picture appearances, and was therefore an excellent means of getting attention from the poor and working class voters of Argentina. It was during this phase of her life that she first encouraged the Argentine population to refer to her not as "Eva Perón" but simply as "Evita," which is a Spanish nickname meaning "Little Eva."
*2001: Did Ya Understand That
*2001: Santa Baby (Gimme, Gimme, Gimme)
*2003: A Toast To Men (feat. Lady May)
 
===Soundtracks/Others===
==Juan Perón elected president, Evita becomes politically active==
 
*1999: Pokémon: The First Movie [Soundtrack]
[[image:evitacrowd.jpg|frame|right|Eva and Juan Perón with a crowd of supporters (note their portraits in the background).]]
*2001: Pantene Pro Voice Vol 1
*2001: Spyder Games [Soundtrack]
*2001: Totally Hits 2001
*2001: MTV: TRL Christams
*2002: Park Ji Yoon - Man
*2002: MTV-The Best Of Trl Pop
*2002: Undercover Brother [Soundtrack]
*2003: What A Girl Wants [Soundtrack]
*2003: Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star [Soundtrack]
*2004: Gay.com: Winter 2004 Hits
 
==Filmography==
After Juan Perón's first election to the presidency in [[1946]], Evita gradually took a prominent political role in the government, eventually overshadowing even the vice president of the nation in all but military affairs. It has often been said that she became more powerful than her husband, but this is an exaggeration. Nor did she ever truly become more popular than her husband. Only for a brief time, the last few months of her life and the public mourning of her death, did Evita's popularity match that of her husband's.
 
===Music Videos===
In reality, Evita's main role within the Peronist government was to create a personality cult around her husband whom she elevated to nearly divine status, often comparing him to [[Christ]] and saying that all Peronists must be ready to die for Perón. Nicholas Fraser and Maryssa Navarro say that this elevation of Juan Perón to divine status was what ultimately corrupted Peronism and debased the Peronist movement. In light of Evita's often verbose praise for her husband, the slightest criticism of Juan Perón was easily interpreted as unpatriotic.
 
*2001 I Wanna Be Bad
:"''Perón is the heart, the soul, the nerve, and the reality of the Argentine people. We all know that there is only one man in our movement with his own source of light. We all feed off of that light. And that man is Perón!''" -- [[1951]] speech by Eva Perón
*2001 Did Ya Understand That
*2001 Santa Baby (Gimme, Gimme, Gimme)
*2002 Uncle Kracker's: In A Little While -"Girlfriend"
*2003 A Toast To Men
 
===TV===
In [[1947]], Evita embarked on a much-publicized "Rainbow Tour" of Europe, meeting with numerous heads of state, including [[Francisco Franco]]. It was aimed at being a massive [[public relations]] coup for the Perón regime, which in the post-[[World War II]] world was increasingly being viewed as [[fascist]]. She was well-received in [[Spain]], where she visited the tombs of Spain's first absolutist monarchs, [[Ferdinand II of Aragon|Ferdinand]] and [[Isabella I of Castile|Isabella]], and handed 100-peseta notes to every poor child she met on her journey. She later met with the Pope in [[Rome]], and then travelled to [[Paris]]. Only in Spain was Evita welcomed with an overwhelmingly positive response. In France and Italy she received mixed reactions.
 
*2001 Pantene Pro-Voice Featuring Jewel - Herself
The tour was originally intended to include a trip to [[England]] to visit the royal family. When it was announced that the royal family was not able to meet Evita when she wanted, and that Evita's visit would not be treated by the royal family as being as important as the official state visit of US first lady [[Eleanor Roosevelt]], Evita called off the trip to England, citing exhaustion.
*2001 The Mind of the Married Man - Herself
*2002 Six Flags Commercial - Herself
*2002 Rasing Dad - Edie "Bully"
*2002 I Bet You Will - Herself
*2002 The Miss Teen USA Pageant - Co-host
*2003 Morning After - Herself
*2004 VH1's 100 Most Outrageous Celebrity Moments - Herself "commentator"
*2004 VH1's My Coolest Years: Bad Girls - Herself "featured"
*2005 VH1's 100 Greatest Kids Stars - Herself "commentator"
*2005 WB Morning Show - Herself "featured"
*2005 The Ultimate Fighter - Host
*2005 My Fair Brady: Episode 3 - Herself "model"
*2005 The Fabulous Life Of: Las Vegas - Herself "featured"
*2005 ESPN Hollywood: Lingerie Bowl - Herself "featured"
*2005 Last Call With Carson Daly: Lingerie Bowl Event - Herself "featured"
 
==References==
After returning to Argentina from Europe, Evita would never again appear in public with the complicated hairdos of her movie star days. She would henceforth appear with her hair pulled back into a bun. Additionally, her sytle of clothing became more simple after the tour. No longer would she wear the elaborate [[couture]] of the European fashion houses. Perhaps in an attempt to make herself appear as more of a serious political figure, Evita would henceforth appear in public wearing modest business dress suit combinations.
 
===Biography===
The change of image coincided with a focused on charity work, or "social aide," as Evita called it. She eventually created the Eva Perón Foundation, an institution to assist the poor. It was incredibly popular and made valuable contributions to Argentine life. The hospitals and orphanages that the Foundation established endured long after Evita's own premature death. The Foundation also increased her political power within Argentina and soon she organized the women's branch of the Justicialist Party. By [[1949]], Evita was the second most influential figure in Argentina.
 
*http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/ford_willa/bio.jhtml
Eventually, Evita became the center of a vast [[personality cult]] and her image and name soon appeared everywhere, with train stations, a city ("Ciudad Evita") [http://www.cdadevita.com.ar/historia_Principal.htm], and even a star in the sky being named after her. Despite her dominance and political power, Evita was always careful to never undermine the important symbolic role of her husband. Evita was always careful to justify her actions by claiming they were "inspired" or "encouraged" by the wisdom and passion of Perón. And though she has often been interpreted has having been singularly ambitious in her own right, Maryssa Navarro and Nicholas Fraser claim in their book "Evita: The Real Life of Eva Peron" that everything Evita did was ultimately subordinate to the larger goals and aims of her husband's political agenda.
*http://www.spiketv.com/shows/series/ultimatefighter/
*http://www.lingeriebowl.com/
*http://www.scopemag.com/2005/06/30/pussycats.html
 
===Albums===
Though Evita was worshipped by her working-class followers, she was bitterly hated by a vast number of Argentina's middle class and also by the wealthy Anglophile elite. They detested her humble roots. Many felt that as a woman she was far too active in politics. Evita herself referred to them disparagingly as "The Oligarchs." She was known to be extremely vengeful as well, often expelling from the Peronist inner circle anyone who had shown the slightest indication of not being completely loyal to what the mandates Evita and her husband set forth. The slightest act of "disloyalty" was grounds for dismissal from the inner circle.
 
*http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-form/103-3054812-9291015
It has often been said that Evita blacklisted the artists [[Libertad Lamarque]] and [[Nini Marshall]]. But this is unlikely. Lamarque, who had starred in the movie "Cabalgata del Circo" ("The Circus Cavalcade") with Evita, moved to [[Mexico]] shortly after Juan Perón was elected president. It is more likely that, rather than moving because of a blacklisting, Lamarque moved to Mexico because the Mexican cinema was in better condition during this period than was the Argentine cinema. Additionally, Lamarque often returned to Argentina to visit her family during Perón's reign.
 
===Singles===
==Evita seeks the vice-presidency==
 
*http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-form/103-3054812-9291015
In [[1951]], Evita set her sights on earning a place on the ballot as candidate for vice president. This move angered many military leaders who despised Evita and her increasing powers within the government. In an attempt to convince her Juan Perón that he should allow Evita to run for vice president, the unions organized a mass rally of two million people called "Cabildo Abierto." The Peróns addressed the historic crowd as they often had in the past, from the balcony of the [[Casa Rosada]], or "Pink House," the official government house of Argentina. It has been claimed that "Cabildo Abierto" was was the largest public display of support in history for a female political figure.
 
===Soundtracks/Others===
At the mass rally, the crowd demanded that Evita publicly announce her official candidacy as vice president. Evita pleaded for more time to make her decision. The exchange between Evita and the crowd of two million became, for a time, a genuine and spontaneous dialogue, with the crowd chanting, "Evita, Vice-Presidente!" When Evita asked for more time so she could make up her mind, the crowd demanded, "Ahora - Evita - Ahora!" ("Now - Evita - Now!") Eventally, they came to a compromise. Evita told the audience that she would announce her decision over the radio a few days later.
 
*http://us.yesasia.com/gb/PrdDept.aspx/pid-1001822521/aid-561/section-music/code-k/version-all
Eventually, Evita announced her decision over the radio. She declined the invitation to run for vice president, saying her only ambition was that in the large chapter of history that would be written about her husband, she hoped that in the footnotes there would be mention of a woman who brought the "hopes and dreams of the people to the president," who eventually turned those hopes and dreams into "glorious reality." In Peronist rhetoric, this event has come to be referred to as "The Renouncement," portraying Evita as having been a selfless woman in line with the Hispanic myth of [[marianismo]]. Most biographers, however, now agree that Evita did not so much renounce her ambition but rather caved to pressure from her husband, the military, and the wealthy, who would not have liked her to run. (There is evidence that the military said they would overthrow the government if Evita were elected vice president, as the thought of being under the command of a woman in light of the president's death would not be acceptable to them.) By this stage in her life it had also become evident that her health was rapidly worsening and a bid for the vice presidency was not ultimately practical in light of her condition.
 
===Music Videos===
On [[June 4]], [[1952]] Evita rode with Juan Perón in parade through Buenos Aires in celebration of his re-election as President of Argentina. (This was the first election Argentine women had been allowed to vote in. Evita had organized women voters into the first truly powerful female political party in the country's history.) Evita was by this point so ill that she was unable to stand without support. Underneath her oversized fur coat was a frame made of plaster and wire that allowed her stand. She had taken a tripple dose of pain killers before the parade, and had to take a double dose when she returned home.
 
*http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/ford_willa/audvid.jhtml
==Evita's death in 1952 at age 33==
*http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/uncle_kracker/audvid.jhtml
 
===TV===
Like her husband's first wife, Eva Perón died of [[cervical cancer]] (although some sources claim it was [[leukemia]]), at the age of 33. Upon her death, the Argentine public was told that Evita was only 30. The discrepency was meant to dovetail with Evita's earlier tampering with her birth certificate. After she became the first lady in 1946, Evita had her birth records altered to read that she had been born to parents that had been married. At the same time, she had her birth certificate altered to make her three years younger.
 
Dr. George T. Pack, a [[New York]] [[surgery|surgeon]] had performed a [[hysterectomy]] on Eva in [[November]] of 1951 and found that the [[cancer]] had spread to adjacent pelvic organs. Consequently, her life could not be saved and she died on [[July 26]] [[1952]]. Her body was embalmed and kept on display until a military [[Coup d'état|coup]] overthrew her husband in [[1955]]. Her body was then flown to [[Milan|Milan, Italy]], and buried. Sixteen years later, in [[1971]], the body was exhumed and flown to [[Spain]]. Her husband returned from exile to Argentina as president. He died there in [[1974]], and Eva's body was returned to Argentina and (briefly) displayed beside his. She was reburied in the Duarte family tomb in [[La Recoleta Cemetery]], [[Buenos Aires]].
 
==Evita as popular culture myth and icon==
 
:"''In her own country, her story is at last a part of history. In the rest of the world she has attained the condition of [[apotheosis]]''," Nichalas Frasier, biographer of Evita.
 
[[Image:Evitaoriginalcastrecording.jpg|thumb|right|The cover of the 1979 American Broadway Original Cast Recording of ''Evita''.]]
 
Shortly before her death, Evita said, "Volveré y seré milliones," which translates into, "I will return and I will be millions." Evita herself would perhaps be surprised by how prophetic her words turned out to be. By the late 20th century, Evita had been transformed into a popular culture icon that had transcended Argentine politics. She was made the subject of numerous articles, books, stage plays, and musicals, ranging from the gossipy biography by Mary Main called "The Woman with the Whip" [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0396078346/ref%3Dnosim/divathesite-20/104-0977048-7628726], to the B-grade film "Little Mother" [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070327/], and a [[1981]] [[TV movie]] called "Evita Peron" with [[Faye Dunaway]] in the title role [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082347/].
 
But none of the other renderings of Evita's life were nearly as successful as the [[Musical theater|musical]], ''[[Evita]]''. Co-produced by [[Tim Rice]] and [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]], with [[Julie Covington]] in the title role for the original [[concept album]]. [[Elaine Paige]] would later be cast in the title role when the concept album was converted into a musical stage production on [[London's West End]]. But it was [[Patti LuPone]]'s 1978 [[Tony Award]]-winning Broadway performance that ultimately fulfilled the historical Eva Perón's statement of eventual immortality. As early as 1978, the Broadway musical was considered as the basis for a movie, with everyone from Patti LuPone, to [[Liza Minelli]], to [[Michelle Pfeiffer]], to [[Meryl Streep]], being considered for the title role. After a nearly 20-year production delay, [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]] was cast in the title role of the film version of the musical. Madonna would later win the Golden Globe Award for "Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy."
 
In a 1996 essay, English author Nicholas Fraser wrote that Evita was the perfect popular culture icon for our times. During her reign as first lady of Argetina, Fraser wrote, Evita was often criticized by her detractors for turning national political life into show business. During Evita's time it was virtually unheard-of for a former actress to take part in political life. In our current age this is not the case. Former actors and entertainers, from [[Ronald Reagan]], to [[Sonny Bono]], to [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]], have taken public political offices. Fraser wrote that in this way Evita was ahead of her time and is therefore perhaps "the perfect minor deity" for our age of "electric celebrity."
 
==Further reading==
 
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0393315754/ref=cm_bg_d/002-1025326-2648049?v=glance Evita: The Real Life of Eva Peron] by Marysa Navarro and Nicholas Fraser
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0226791440/ref=cm_bg_d/002-1025326-2648049?v=glance Eva Peron: The Myths of a Woman] by Julie M. Taylor
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0002V7NSE/qid=1120709085/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_ur_1/002-1025326-2648049?v=glance&s=dvd&n=507846 Evita: The Woman Behind the Myth], a video documentary produced by A&E's Biography series.
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0396078346/qid=1120709283/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i1_xgl14/002-1025326-2648049?v=glance&s=books&n=507846 Evita: The Woman with the Whip] by Mary Main
 
==References==
*Guareschi, Roberto (Nov. 5, 2005). "Not quite the Evita of Argentine legend". ''[[New Straits Times]]'', p. 21.
 
*http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/ford_willa/artist.jhtml
==External links==
*http://www.spiketv.com/shows/series/ultimatefighter/
* [http://www.evitaperon.org/ Evita Peron Historical Foundation]
*http://www.lingeriebowl.com/
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/1997/int/970120/cinema.the_woman.html ''The Woman Behind the Myth'' by Tomas Eloy Martinez]
* [http://evita.nickgilham.com The Evita Megasite]
 
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[[Category:American songwriters|Ford, Willa]]
[[Category:People from Florida|Ford, Willa]]
 
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