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🗓️ 14 February 2025
⏱️ 11 minutes
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Eva Peron – otherwise known as Evita - became an icon in 1940s Argentina, famous for her passionate speeches and populist rhetoric.
Born into poverty, she moved to Buenos Aries at the age of 15 to become an actress, and was soon starring in radio soap operas.
In 1945, she married Colonel Juan Peron, a rising figure in the Argentinian military, and supported his campaign to become president.
After he won the election, she set up the Eva Perón Foundation, to distribute money, food and medicines to the poor. It won her the adulation of Argentina’s working classes, although some believed she exploited her position for personal gain.
Eva fell ill with cancer, and on 17 October 1951, she made her last major public appearance from the presidential palace balcony. It was to be her most famous speech, later inspiring the award-winning song, Don’t Cry for Me Argentina, from the musical Evita.
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(Photo: Eva Peron in 1951. Credit: Bettmann/Getty Images)
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0:29.9 | Natalia Melman Petrazella. Listen to the full series now, first on BBC Sounds. |
0:39.2 | Hello, welcome to the Witness History podcast from the BBC World Service with me, Jane Wilkinson. |
0:46.3 | This is a story about a woman who became an icon in 1940s Argentina, famous for her passionate |
0:53.2 | speeches and popululous rhetoric, |
0:55.6 | as well as being the inspiration behind a hit stage musical. |
1:04.2 | I am not important because of what I've done. |
1:07.4 | I'm not important because of what I am. |
1:09.8 | There is only one thing that matters, and I have it in my heart. |
1:14.7 | Eva Peron, otherwise known as Evita, in her last major public appearance. |
1:21.0 | It sets my soul aflame. |
1:23.4 | It wounds my flesh and burns in my sinus. |
1:26.3 | It's love for the people and for Piron. |
1:31.2 | Eva was born in 1919, poor and with few prospects. |
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