- Maysa Matarazzo
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- "Maysa" redirects here. This article is about the Brazilian bossa nova artist. For the American jazz singer who is also often known by the one name "Maysa", see Maysa Leak.
Maysa Figueira Monjardim (June 6, 1936, São Paulo, Brazil – January 22, 1977, Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) [1], better known as Maysa Matarazzo or simply Maysa, daughter of Alcibíades Guaraná Monjardim and wife Inah Figueira and paternal granddaughter of Manuel Silvino Monjardim and wife Ursulina Guaraná, was a singer, composer, and actress from Brazil. She is also associated with Bossa nova music but is widely known as a torch song (fossa) interpreter.
Contents
Biography
Maysa's grandfather was Alfeu Adolfo Monjardim de Andrade e Almeida, the 1st Baron of Monjardim, and wife Laurinda Luísa Pinto Pereira. Maysa showed talent at a young age and by twelve had written a samba song, which later became a hit from her first album. She married André Matarazzo Filho, a member of a wealthy and traditional São Paulo family in 1954 at the age of 18 and two years later had a son, Jayme Monjardim. Jayme would later be known as a television director. In the late 1950s she formed a successful bossa nova group and also did television work relying on her magnificent pair of gorgeous green eyes.
Her tour to Buenos Aires first projected bossa nova beyond Brazil's borders but was not without controversy. The tour was a great success and extended to Chile and Uruguay, but Maysa had an affair with the show's producer, Ronaldo Bôscoli, a journalist and composer linked romantically to bossa nova's muse Nara Leão. This led not only to a break between Nara and Ronaldo, but also to a fracture in the bossa nova movement. Nara supported Carlos Lyra's nationalist vertent of the bossa nova movement, to the detriment of Boscoli's more orthodox approach, emphasizing form rather than content in bossa nova compositions. Nara also began courting older composers of traditional sambas, such as morro composers Zé Kéti and Cartola. She also became an idol of the protest song genre against the military dictatorship in Brazil. Nara's pocket show "Opinião" marked the start of a series of protest musical shows, which both in Rio and São Paulo distracted the public from the main themes of "the love, the smile and the flower", typical of the bossa nova years. So Maysa became "persona non grata" both to the bossa-novistas and the protest singers and her career faltered. She reacted by marrying Spaniard music producer Miguel Anzana, with whom she moved to Spain and began a series of presentations not only in Spain, but also Portugal, Italy and France.
Her personal life, already tumultuous, became even more chaotic leading to her being called "the Janis Joplin of Bossa Nova". But she later made a come back with one of the first notable shows in Rio's "Canecão" venue, the equivalent of Carnegie Hall in NYC. Maysa also played the Olympia in Paris to a full house twice and enjoyed considerable success in Europe. She is still considered the best Brazilian "torch song" (fossa) musician, rivaled only perhaps by Nora Ney as interpreter and Dolores Duran as composer. Upon her return to Brazil, Maysa continued to blend her old unique "broken love affair" trademarks with the more current festival style and occasional bossa nova hits. In the 1970s Maysa tapped her actress side and acted on a few telenovelas in Brazil. She also composed the soundtrack for a Rede Globo telenova just as the TV network became the powerhouse of Brazilian soap operas. She appeared more in peace with herself in latter years but died in a car crash in 1977, on the Rio-Niterói bridge, which connects the cities of Rio de Janeiro and Niterói over the Guanabara Bay.[2]
In January 2009, 32 years after her death, a miniseries about her life was broadcast on Brazilian television and spanned two new books about one of Brazil's most charismatic divas. Maysa's style influenced the following generations of Brazilian female singers and composers, with great ascendancy in the works of Simone, Cazuza, Leila Pinheiro, Fafá de Belém and Ângela Rô Rô.
Discography
Studio albums
- Convite para ouvir Maysa (1956)
- Maysa (1957)
- Convite para ouvir Maysa n. 2 (1958)
- Convite para ouvir Maysa n. 3 (1958)
- Convite para ouvir Maysa n. 4 (1959)
- Maysa É Maysa... É Maysa... É Maysa (1959)
- Voltei (1960)
- Maysa Canta Sucessos (1960)
- Maysa, Amor... E Maysa (1961)
- Barquinho (1961)
- Maysa Sings Songs Before Dawn (1961)
- Canção do Amor Mais Triste (1962)
- Maysa (1964)
- Maysa (1966)
- Maysa (1969)
- Ando Só Numa Multidão de Amores (1970)
- Maysa (1974)
Compilation albums
- Os Grandes Sucessos de Maysa (1959)
- A Música de Maysa (1960)
- Ternura… é Maysa (1965)
- Dois na Fossa- Maysa & Tito Madi (1975)
- Para sempre Maysa (1977)
- Bom é Querer Bem (1978)
- Serie Retrospecto vol. 3 (1979)
- Convite para ouvir Maysa (1988)
- Maysa por ela mesma (1991)
- Canecão apresenta Maysa (1992)
- Tom Jobim por Maysa - Viva Maysa (1993)
- Maysa (1996)
- Tom Jobim por Maysa (1997)
- Bossa Nova por Maysa (1997)
- Barquinho (2000)
- Simplesmente Maysa (2000)
- Quatro em Um - Volume 13 (2001)
- Retratos - Maysa (2004)
- Novo Millennium (2005)
- Maysa - Quando Fala o Coração (2009)
See also
References
- ^ Lira Neto (2007), p. 36, p. 332. "Maysa: Só numa multidão de amores", Editora Globo, São Paulo, ISBN 978-85-250-4303-0
- ^ All Music
External links
Categories: 1936 births | 1977 deaths | Bossa nova singers | Brazilian actors | Brazilian female composers | Brazilian female singers | Brazilian mezzo-sopranos | Brazilian singers | Brazilian people of Portuguese descent | People from São Paulo (city) | Road accident deaths in Brazil
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