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Elis Regina Biography
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ELIS REGINA CARVALHO COSTA.
Born March 17, 1945 at 15:10 in Porto Alegre,
Brazil.
Died January 19, 1982 at 11:45 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
INTRODUCTION.
With a natural talent, and a will that seemed to spring from a
bottomless well, Elis Regina Carvalho Costa rose from very
average lower-class beginnings to quickly become one of the most
well-known, well-loved and well-paid entertainers in her
country's history. She was nicknamed Furacao (hurricane) and
Pimentinha (little pepper) because of her seemingly boundless
energy. Her first name became a household word and several of her
records are simply titled "Elis". Through her coverage
of their songs, several of her country's most prominent composers
were introduced to the limelight. She made many friends during
her life and career, as well as some enemies. The one thing she
didn't leave behind her was apathy: she made a difference in all
the lives that she touched, if only with her voice. She once
said: "I have dedicated my life to singing, and there isn't
a man, father, mother or child that can drag me away from
that."
EARLY LIFE.
Elis was born to relatively poor parents in Porto Alegre, a city
located in the south of Brazil. Her mother was a housewife and
her father was in and out of jobs. She was the first child, to be
followed by an only brother, Rogerio, a few years later. Her
mother was the daughter of portuguese immigrants, and her father
was of brazilian descent. Family pictures show Elis to be
impeccably dressed by her mother, with ribbons always in her
hair. The Costas could pick up Argentinean radio stations and
Elis at a very young age could sing spanish songs as well as
portuguese. By the time she entered grade school, she already
knew how to write, read and count. Her mother gave a tremendous
amount of attention to Elis, but may have inadvertently smothered
her, with future repercussions as we shall see.
A local radio station featured a children's
show called Clube do Guri, where children often sang on the air.
Elis' first experience at the microphone was at the age of 7,
where she froze and could not utter a sound. At the age of 9,
Elis took piano lessons for 2 years. She learned very fast, and
eventually faced a dilemma: either buy a piano or stop her
studies. She began to sing because they could not afford a piano.
When she was 12, she returned to Clube do Guri, and this time she
didn't freeze. She was a sensation and won the prize, the first
of many... For 2 years, she sang on the show almost every Sunday,
and became a local celebrity. Her only fear came when she had to
go on stage. Until the end of her life, Elis became intolerable
before going on stage: she always had the same insecurity, the
same fear of making mistakes, of not being perfect.
Soon thereafter, she signed her first
professional contract, at 13 and 1/2, with Radio Gaucha. There
was some reticence from her mother, who wanted Elis to do well in
school, possibly becoming a teacher some day. She felt that music
would not last. Anyway, they came up with some kind of compromise
and Elis' singing career continued. Not even 14, Elis was earning
more money than her father. This created a family conflict that
would only worsen as the years went by and her income increased.
At 15, Elis was urged to go to Rio de Janeiro,
where she recorded her first LP. She was to record 3 records
there, returning to Porto Alegre between each. Eventually, Porto
Alegre had nothing to offer her, and Elis went with her father to
live in Rio. He was out of work and hoping to find some there.
Elis was 18. They arrived in Rio around the same time that a
military junta took over control of the country. Her mother
stayed behind with Rogerio and a young cousin that she was
raising. Later, the mother would say that she lost her daughter
at 19 years old.
RISE TO FAME.
It didn't take long for Elis to land a contract with a TV
station, where she sang on various shows, and became quickly
known. She did not arrive in Rio a quiet and timid girl, but
rather with confidence and an aggressive desire to make a mark
for herself. The Bossa Nova reigned at the time, but the
"coolness" of that genre did not suit Elis' personality
or her voice, which were very "hot". She was not well
dressed, and looked somewhat awkward on stage, but her voice
commanded attention and made people notice her. She was a rough
pearl, full of talent.
Some months later, her mother and brother
joined them in Rio. Elis had a boyfriend at that time, named
Solano. At some point, she became pregnant and got an abortion
without telling him. Solano felt that Elis was taking all the
space, and that he did not want to become the "singer's
husband". The relationship came to an end. At home, Elis
realized that she had economic control over her family (her
father had still not found work). On one hand, she wanted to fly
her own wings, but felt guilty to leave her family in need. She
never really resolved that quandary, and to the end of her life,
had difficult relations with her family.
Elis faced a very competitive music market in
Rio, with club owners, radio and TV stations, and numerous
musicians and singers caught up in intense turf battles. She made
friends and enemies, and had to learn to survive. In 1965, she
sang at the first big popular music festival, and won first prize
for her rendition of Arrastao, a controversial song that had come
close to being censored by the ruling military government. She
finished the song with strong voice, her arms outstretched like
the Cristo Redentor, tears in her eyes and a smile on her face.
Her career took off from then. She was on the cover of magazines,
and was sought after by record companies, music producers, TV,
etc. In 1966, at 21 years old, Elis was the highest paid singer
in the country. She remained the reigning queen of brazilian
popular song until her death.
FIRST MARRIAGE.
Successes followed each other. Money flowed in and although she
made sure that her family lived in comfort, her relations with
her parents did not improve, and were marked by long periods of
little or no contact, interspersed with periods of intense
fighting. In 1967, she shocked the music world by announcing her
upcoming marriage to one of her arch-enemies from the turf
battles in Rio, Ronaldo Boscoli, a composer/producer called the
Don Juan of Rio. She was 22 and he was 38. They remained married
for 6 years, and had a son together. Their relationship was one
of open and passionate love and hate, as they would often get
into terrible arguments in front of journalists. He had come from
a rich, cultured family that had lost all its money while he was
a child.
Elis always had a very volatile temperament,
alternating between extremes of joy and anger. This wreaked havoc
on all of her relationships, but particularly with the one with
Boscoli. Their arguments became legendary, although they did have
their good moments together. He was somewhat of a father figure
to her, and proceeded to teach her manners and social etiquette
that she was evidently lacking. He taught her how to dress and
suggested that she cut her hair short like Mia Farrow - the look
became a trademark with her. He claimed that one of the reasons
for her bad relations with her parents is that they had used her
when she was young, to make money from her voice.
In the end, he indeed became the "singer's
husband", and of the most famous singer in Brazil to boot.
This put great stress on their marriage. While she was travelling
the country and the world because of her growing career, he
stayed on the sidelines or at home, often drinking. When they
broke up, and in retaliation to rumours that he had married her
for money, he said that he had walked into the marriage with 3
suitcases, and came out with 2, and nothing else. The third
suitcase contained series of love letters and personal documents
from his past that Elis had burned during a fit of anger. Their
house overlooked the ocean in Rio, and one day after a
particularly strong argument, she had also thrown into the water
his collection of LPs by Frank Sinatra. Until the end of her
life, Elis maintained a bitter grudge against Boscoli, and made
it difficult for him to even see his child.
SECOND MARRIAGE.
Her next relationship was with the pianist on her current
recording, Cesar Camargo Mariano, a talented musician/arranger
who was a shy, quiet, sensitive man (very different from
Boscoli). He had been totally enthraled with her, sitting in the
same studio for weeks/months. One day, she invited him to come to
her house to see Bergman's film "Wild Strawberries"
(she always had an avid interest for cinema). When he got there,
he found a lot of people and was uncomfortable. Between two
reels, she slipped him a piece of paper and quietly told him to
go read it in the bathroom. When he got there, the paper read:
"I love you". Uncertain as to what to do (he was
married at the time), he climbed out the bathroom window and
scampered home.
The next day, at the studio, Elis was distant
to him. At some point, Cesar asked the producer to send the other
musicians away, so that he could record a ballad with Elis,
accompanying her on the piano. At the end of the day, she offered
him a ride home in her car. He stopped at his house to pick up
his toothbrush and they wound up at her house. She was a woman
who possessed tremendous personal appeal. Cesar divorced his wife
and married Elis thereafter. They were married for 8 years and
had 2 children together. Although they had their fair share of
quarrels, overall their relationship was quite a good one. On
vinyl, the musical marriage of Cesar's arrangements with her
voice is something truly special. Elis knew some of the most
happy moments of her life with Cesar and the three children. They
would spend a lot of time in an idyllic country house, away from
the smog and hustle of Sao Paulo, which had an inground pool but
no telephone.
POLITICAL ANECDOTE.
In 1969, while Elis was touring some European countries, she said
during a press conference that Brazil was run by
"gorillas", in a direct attack to the military junta
ruling the country. Only her prominent stature in the music world
apparently prevented her from being persecuted, exiled or even
jailed by the Junta upon her return, as had been done to other
outspoken composers and performers of that period (Veloso, Gil).
A couple of years later, however, she was compelled to sing the
national anthem at a big ceremony put on by the military
government to celebrate the anniversary of Brazil's independence
(according to Cesar, she was threatened with prison if she did
not show up). This appearance attracted the criticism of many
people in the Arts community and on the Left, who were opposed to
the military rulers.
There was a cartoonist named Henfil who
published in one of the large newspapers. He had a series of
cartoons called the cemetery of the living-dead, in which he
would portray publicly known people (living-dead) who had
ridiculed themselves or fallen out of favour. Following her
singing at the military gathering, Elis appeared in Henfil's
cartoon, in which she metamorphosed into Maurice Chevalier
singing to a crowd of saluting nazis. Some time later, Henfil and
Elis found each other at the same table in a restaurant along
with a crowd of people, after one of her shows. During the meal,
Elis started attacking Henfil, saying that he should not have
depicted her in such a way in his cartoon when he didn't know all
the reasons behind her presence at that ceremony. She then
started to cry, asking "Why did you bury me alive?".
Henfil told her that it was just a cartoon but Elis would hear
nothing of it. Finally, Henfil sort of apologized for it and he
and Elis then began discussing a number of things, and eventually
became good friends. Elis would often call him up to discuss
politics or other issues. She would also give him money to give
to intellectuals who were condemning
and opposing the junta, since he had contacts in that area.
Some years later, when the Junta appeared to be
on the way out, and when there was talk about whether or not to
provide an amnesty to the many people who had been exiled for
political reasons, Elis picked up a song by Joao Bosco and Aldir
Blanc, called O Bebabo e A Equilibrista (The Drunk and The
Tightrope Walker) and made it her own, producing a wonderful
recording of it in 1979. The song was an allegory about the
absurdity of the military government, and the fragility of
freedom. It featured a line that said "bring back Henfil's
brother" (Henfil had a brother who had been exiled). Because
of Elis' rendition of it, the song became the anthem for the
amnesty of exiled brazilians, and contributed to uniting people
on this issue, with the result that the government eventually
gave in and amnestied the exiled.
At a concert that she gave around the time of
the amnesty, Elis sang that song triumphantly. Henfil was in the
audience, with his newly arrived brother. When the song was over,
Elis looked at him with a way that seemed to say "We're even
now." A few days after her death, there was a memorial
concert in the Morumbi stadium in Sao Paulo, where several of the
country's most popular singers sang tributes to Elis. The high
point of the show was when all the singers and the audience
(100,000 in all) joined in to sing O Bebabo E A Equilibrista.
What a moment that must have been...
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS.
Elis was one of the most well-loved entertainers in her country's
history. Several high points mark her career, as well as some low
ones. First, there were the tremendous successes in the popular
music festivals of the mid-60's that launched her career. In
1965, fate united her with another young singer, Jair Rodrigues,
for a stage performance. They worked so well together that they
became an extremely popular team who gave many concerts and
produced 3 live records together (the Dois Na Bossa series) over
a 3-year period. In the late 60's, Elis toured some European
countries and was a hit at the Olympia in Paris; she also
recorded an album with Toots Thielemans in Sweden, and with Peter
Knight in London.
In 1974, Elis was sent to L.A. by her record
company to record an album with the master of modern brazilian
popular music, Antonio Carlos (Tom) Jobim. The record, simply
called ELIS & TOM, is legendary, timeless, and generally
regarded as one of the top 10 brazilian popular records of all
time. A little later, she put on a stage show in Sao Paulo called
FALSO BRILHANTE, featuring dance, mime and music; it went n for
18 months and is probably one of Elis' finest moments. Other
shows that she put on and which were large successes were ESSA
MULHER (79), SAUDADE DO BRASIL (80), and TREM AZUL (81). During
the latter, she was singing under the influence of cocaine and
attained levels of vocal expression exceeding what she had ever
done, according to some commentators.
One low point was an appearance that she made
at the Montreux Jazz Festival, in 1979. She and the band were
enthraled at having been invited to that prestigious gathering,
and they were nervous because of the famous musicians in
attendance in the audience. During the warmup, as Elis was
vocalizing offstage, the audience gave a standing ovation. Elis
was so moved when she hit the stage that she started crying,
which messed up her eye makeup and made it difficult for her to
see. The first part of the concert was a fiasco because of that.
She recovered enough in the second part to end on a good note but
overall, the whole affair was very disappointing for her.
Another low point was an episode in the late
70's with the jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter. They were to record
an album together, and Elis felt that this could launch her into
an international career. She and Cesar put up Shorter in their
home; she would cook him breakfast while he meditated or went on
his jog, and they generally did all they could to please him. In
the end, when they finally got to the studio, it became evident
that Shorter only intended Elis to play a minimal background
vocal role in the recording. Cesar became indignated at this and
angrily criticized Shorter, who packed up his stuff and left the
country.
Overall, though, her career is marked by many
more successes than failures. She carried several notebooks in
her purse, in which she would meticulously note down plans for
the future, engagements, concert dates, song titles for possible
recording, etc. As late as the night before her death, she was
still entering plans for the future into her notebooks.
THE END.
Around the time that her marriage with Cesar broke up for good,
Elis started using cocaine, probably after a stay in the U.S. She
did this in the secrecy of her own bedroom, or dressing-rooms
backstage. Even her family and closest friends knew nothing about
it (which in fact contributed to her untimely death). In a way,
cocaine may have provided her with the crutch that she needed at
that time in her life, when she was trying to cope with raising
three children, supporting her parents, and maintaining a very
demanding career (touring, recording, engagements, etc.).
Soon after, Elis fell in love with her lawyer,
Samuel MacDowell. In December 1981, they decided to get married
in the coming year. As the year 1982 got underway, Elis's life
opened up with many new ventures: a marriage with Samuel, a new
house for their family, a new recording contract with a different
company, a new show with a different band, etc. She was in the
process of coming up with the songs for her new album, and
getting ready to enter the studio, as well as finalizing the move
to the new house that she would share with Samuel, when she
succumbed to a bad combination of Cinzano and cocaine, during a
night that she spent up alone in her bedroom, making plans for
the future and listening to tapes for her new record. An accident
and a senseless waste. This was on January 19, 1982. She was not
yet 37 years old. Brazil was shocked and shattered by the news.
CONCLUSION.
Elis was often a controversial public figure. She took chances in
her career and public life, and had her share of both great
successes and dismal failures, although the good by far
outweighed the bad. Her personal life consisted of great peaks
and valleys, characterized by difficult relations with her
parents, and often- tortuous relationships with the men who
shared her life. She was opinionated, and publicly defended her
views forcefully and convincingly, even though her viewpoints
would often change drastically. She once said: "Between the
wall and the sword, I am drawn toward the sword".
She was a temperamental person whose mood could
quickly shift from exuberance to terrible anger and frustration.
She was often very demanding of the friends around her, but would
give a tremendous amount in return. It was said that there was no
better place to be than around her when she was on top of things.
Not when she was down, however, as she could then make life very
miserable to those around her. She loved to cook a big meal for
friends, and maintained a meticulous house, with everything in
its place. She knew how to manage a house with children, and was
very handy with crafts like crochet and knitting.
Elis was afflicted with an insecurity regarding
the more intellectual composer/singers such as Gilberto Gil or
Caetano Veloso, and late in life even considered going back to
school to enhance her intellectual side. Having attained the
status of top singer in the country at an early age, Elis fought
all her life, and successfully, to maintain that status, because
she could not bring herself to accept to being anything else than
first. This drove her to be very demanding of herself and others.
She was driven by a strong sense of achievement and was a
perfectionist. She once said "I make a lot of compromises
with my clothes, my friends; but with my stage, there are no
compromises".
She could easily have become one of the top
singers in the world, if she had so wished. A small woman, her
stage presence was so strong that she often appeared to be a
giant. She had an ear for music and language that would have
enabled her to sing convincingly in almost any language. But she
loved her country and didn't want to be away from it for the long
periods of time required to engender an international career.
Shortly after she died, a newspaper paid homage by publishing a
caricature of her at the microphone, casting a shadow on the wall
behind her; but instead of her shadow, it was the outline of
Brazil that was projected. She was the soul of brazilian popular
music, and her death has left a void that can never be filled. In
a way, this void serves to remind us of the great talent that
breathed so much life into 20 years of recorded and stage music.
Elis always took great care in choosing the
songs that she would sing, either because they described aspects
of her life, or portrayed her aspirations. In the end, I feel
that those who know her music are probably the ones who know her
best. She once said: "When I get old like Edith Piaf, they
will put me on the stage. It's the only thing that I know how to
do, and which will be left to me: singing."
Obrigado e Boa Noite, Furac�o.
(Thank you and good night, little hurricane.)
[Copyright 1993 Robert St-Louis]
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