Colvin MariquinhasCycleOngoing 2014
Colvin MariquinhasCycleOngoing 2014
Colvin MariquinhasCycleOngoing 2014
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Since the mid-nineteenth century, prostitutes and ruffians have been the
protagonists of Fado songs that take place in Lisbon’s working-class neigh
bourhood of the Mouraria; and their sordid acts combined with a seemingly
contrasting piety — born of their marginal, untouchable social status — has
made them folkloric heroes: triumphant underdogs in an undemocratic
Portugal.1 Legendary figures such as Maria Severa, Rosa Maria and Cesária,
and mythic personages like Chico do Cachené, Timpanas and tia Macheta are
incarnations of an autonomous nineteenth-century Lisbon where caste seems
to break down when aristocrats mingle with the fadista class of the Mouraria.2
And in the twentieth century, these figures represent a Lisbon of another
generation: memories archived in popular culture. Their persistence in the cast
of characters in the theatre of the Fado is testament to the popular will to rescue
the undocumented chronicle of Lisbon’s underbelly as a means to subvert the
state’s erasure of an ignoble history.
But as the Estado Novo demolishes the western half of the Mouraria in
its mid-twentieth-century public works projects, designed to bring progress
and cleanliness to the ‘cidade “abandonada e suja” ’ [dirty, abandoned city],
the working-class setting of the vagrants’ exploits also assumes top billing
in the Fado’s cast of characters.3 As a result, Fado ballads whose setting is
1
Thanks to Nuno Miguel Carvalho dos Santos whose questions about the relationship between ‘Vou
Dar de Beber à Dor’ and ‘Vou Dar de Beber à Alegria’ compelled me to write this article.
2
João Pinto de Carvalho, História do fado [1903] (Lisbon: Dom Quixote, 1992), gives brief biographies
of Lisbon fadistas, Maria Severa Onofriana (1820–1846), Rosa Maria (early nineteenth century), and
Cesária (A Mulher de Alcântara, late nineteenth century). Fadista Fernando Farinha (1928–1988)
created the character of O Chico do Cachené in his eponymous Fado (1948); Timpanas and tia Macheta
are characters in Júlio Dantas, A Severa [1901] (Porto: Porto Editora, 1973) and Júlio Dantas and André
Brun, A Severa [1909] (Andre Brun, A Severa: ópera cómica em três actos (Porto: n.pub., 1912)).
3
José-Augusto França, Lisboa: urbanismo e arquitectura (Lisbon: Instituto de Cultura e Língua
Portuguesa, 1980), p. 98. (All translations from Portuguese are mine, unless otherwise stated). For
more on twentieth-century urban planning in Lisbon, see Francisco Keil Amaral, Lisboa, uma cidade
em transformação (Lisbon: Europa-América, 1969) and Marina Tavares Dias, Lisboa desaparecida,
9 vols (Lisbon: Quimera, 2007). For more on the Fado’s reaction to the Estado Novo and the
Portuguese Studies vol. 30 no. 1 (2014), 37–46
© Modern Humanities Research Association 2014
artes plásticas (Lisbon: Instituto de Cultura e Língua Portuguesa, 1982), understands that beyond
the apparent goal of fighting anti-social ideas, Ferro’s SPN hoped to invent Salazar and a Salazarist
mythology.
33
Víctor Duarte Marceneiro, Recordar Hermínia Silva (Lisbon: Grafispaço, 2004), for more infor
mation about the fadista.
34
The CML and Programa de ação QREN Mouraria have restored Severa’s house. On 13 July 2013, the
Museu do Fado opened the Casa de Severa, a cultural space devoted to Fado.