Carmen Miranda Overview:

Legendary actress, Carmen Miranda, was born Maria do Carmo Miranda Da Cunha on Feb 9, 1909 in Marco de Canavezes, Portugal. Miranda died at the age of 46 on Aug 5, 1955 in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles and was laid to rest in Cemit?rio S?o Jo?o Batista, Botafogo Cemetery in Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

MINI BIO:

Extravagantly made-up, with eyebrows that reached nearly to her black hair, and the widest mouth since Martha Raye, Carmen Miranda could have been made of wood - but when she danced, and sang, you knew she wasn't. Known as "The Brazilian Bombshell" (although born in Portugal) she spoke wonderful fractured English, and stormed to immense popularity in wartime Hollywood musicals. She was said to have been fired by Fox when they found she wore no knickers beneath her swirling dresses! Died from a heart attack.

(Source: available at Amazon Quinlan's Film Stars).

HONORS and AWARDS:

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She was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures. Carmen Miranda's handprints and footprints were 'set in stone' at Grauman's Chinese Theater during imprint ceremony #56 on Mar 24, 1941. Miranda was never nominated for an Academy Award.

BlogHub Articles:

Fridays With : That Night in Rio (1941)

on Jun 24, 2016 From Journeys in Classic Film

Our farewell to the month of all things Miranda sees a few other exits as well. After starting out with The Gang’s All Here (1943) which had lost its prime star, Don Ameche, we conclude with our first Ameche pairing with Alice Faye…which was also their last film together. Are you confuse... Read full article


Fridays With : Doll Face (1945)

on Jun 10, 2016 From Journeys in Classic Film

In just two years became?a mainstay at?20th Century-Fox, mainly working in programmers, the cinematic equivalent of a paint-by-numbers coloring book. Her appearances extended to having a different name but playing nonetheless, usually accompanied by a joke describing?he... Read full article


Fridays With : The Gang’s All Here (1943)

on Jun 2, 2016 From Journeys in Classic Film

The final Fridays With recipient until fall is the “lady in the tutti frutti hat,” ! The Portuguese chanteuse best remembered for her fruit-inspired headgear popped up in several 20th-Century Fox musicals, usually paired with Alice Faye. We start with her fifth outing for F... Read full article


The Classic Movie History Project Blogathon, 1944: , The Three Caballeros and the Good Neighbor Policy

By Bernardo Villela on Jan 14, 2014 From The Movie Rat

Introduction and Approach With the Classic Movie History Project Blogathon it was always my feeling that there was, and is, only so much of any given time period that one can truly discuss given the confines of a blog post. Truly if you’re looking at an artform such as film one that was so fru... Read full article


The Legend of

By Lara on Oct 9, 2013 From Backlots

By Lara Gabrielle Fowler Though many outside of the classic film world might not know her name, is, nonetheless, one of the most widely recognized figures of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Her signature look, always featuring an elaborate hat often made of fruit, has inspired countless... Read full article


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Carmen Miranda Quotes:

Dorita: You are here to kick up some more heels, huh?


Chiquita Hart: What a letdown. I think I'm going to be a Southern belle and I get sold down the river.


Dorita: [singing] Some people say I dress too gay, but every day I feel so gay, and when I'm gay I dress that way, is something wrong with that? Noooo!


read more quotes from Carmen Miranda...



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Grauman's Imprints

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Carmen Miranda on the
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Carmen Miranda Facts
The "Lady with the Tutti-Frutti Hat" in Hollywood musicals of the 1940s. See her at her sparkling best as the cheeky "Rosita Murphy" in the gorgeous Technicolor Springtime in the Rockies (1942), in which, without the slightest effort, she virtually steals every scene she's in - upstaging even the film's [nominal] star, Betty Grable!

Singer/songwriter Jimmy Buffett included a tribute to Carmen Miranda on his 1973 album A White Sport Coat and a Pink Crustacean, entitled "They Don't Dance Like Carmen No More."

Daughter of José Maria Pinto da Cunha (1887-1938) and Maria Emília Miranda (1886-1971).

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