Bailar

Libertad Lamarque: La Novia de América

The Argentine tango singer and film star whose career spanned the 20th century

Pioneers1 min read2 citations

Few entertainers were as adored across the Spanish-speaking world as Libertad Lamarque, the Argentine tango singer and film star known for generations as "La Novia de América" — the Sweetheart of the Americas.[1]

A name meaning liberty

Born in Rosario on 24 November 1908, she was named "Libertad" (liberty) by her anarchist father, who was imprisoned for political dissent when she was born.[1] She began performing as a child and moved to Buenos Aires in 1924, soon making her way into tango with songs such as "Madreselva" and "Besos brujos."[1]

Stage and screen

In 1933 Lamarque appeared in Tango!, the first Argentine sound film, launching a parallel career as a movie star.[1] Through the 1930s and 1940s she was among the biggest names in a popular culture dominated by tango and a booming film industry, celebrated as both a dramatic actress and a singer of tangos, boleros, and folk songs.[1] A famous on-set clash with the rising Eva Duarte (Evita) Perón is often credited with prompting her move to Mexico in 1947, where she became a star of Mexican cinema — even appearing in a Luis Buñuel film.[1]

Why it matters

Across some sixty-five films, countless telenovelas, and hundreds of recordings, Libertad Lamarque had one of the longest and most prolific careers in Latin American entertainment.[1] A peer of figures like Tita Merello, she carried the tango song to film audiences across two countries and remained beloved until her death in Mexico in 2000.[2]

References

  1. 1.Libertad LamarqueWikipedia, 2026
  2. 2.¡Tango!: The Dance, the Song, the StorySimon Collier et al., Thames & Hudson, 1995