Date
|
Title
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Author
|
Actress playing Evita
|
Notes
|
1952
|
The Woman with the Whip
|
Mary Main
|
Inapplicable
|
The book is strongly anti-Peronist. It depicts Evita as not only manipulative but also as a promiscuous woman who made use of men to get her own power, a claim that has never been substantiated. Furthermore, Main discusses Eva's 'shameless flaunting of jewels' in great depth but deliberately undermines all that Eva did for the people of Argentina.
|
1970
|
Evita, vida y obra de Eva Perón
|
Héctor Germán Oesterheld and Alberto Breccia
|
Inapplicable
|
Comic book biography of Eva Perón, narrated from a strong Peronist point of view. It is not a conventional comic book, as it lacks speech balloons or sequential action from one panel to the other. It is instead a written biography by Oesterheld with related interpretations by Breccia. It was not published at the time of creation due to political censorship, but the originals were found and it was edited at 2002 and 2007.
|
1973
|
Mi hermana Evita (Evita, My Sister)
|
Erminda Duarte
|
Inapplicable
|
The older sister of Eva Perón relates the political and human facts of her life in a personal way.[1]
|
1976 (concept album) 1978 (West End) 1979 (Broadway)
|
Evita
|
Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice
|
Julie Covington (concept album) Elaine Paige (West End) Patti LuPone (Broadway)
|
Internationally, perhaps[1] the most famous depiction of Eva Perón. The musical was preceded by a concept album in 1976 with Julie Covington singing the title role, then two years later debuted in London's West End with Elaine Paige, who won an Olivier Award for her performance. Its subsequent Broadway debut in 1979 was with Patti LuPone in the title role, for which she won a Tony Award.
|
1986
|
Eva
|
Pedro Orgambide
|
Nacha Guevara
|
Argentine musical made in response to the one by Lloyd Webber and Rice.[2] With Nacha Guevara in the leading role. The play was performed a second time during 2008.[2]
|
1995
|
Santa Evita
|
Tomas Eloy Martinez
|
Inapplicable
|
Fictionalized account of Eva Perón's life and the transcontinental travel of her corpse. Translated into 32 languages and published in 50 countries.
|
2007
|
Evita, Evita en Fotos
|
Felipe Pigna
|
Inapplicable
|
Appear here multiple public and private aspects of life, intense, brief, the "champion of the poor" are portrayed in an extensive and comprehensive photo tour and a text written by Felipe Pigna particular, to account for the truth, legends, myths, love and hate surrounding the image of Argentina's most famous. "
|
2007
|
Farklı Rüyalar Sokağı (Street of Assorted Dreams)
|
Nazlı Eray
|
Inapplicable
|
Turkish novel following multiple stories, including the events following the death of Evita as well as an anonymous narrator visited nightly by an angel describing her life.
|
2009
|
The Big Wake-Up
|
Mark Coggins
|
Inapplicable
|
Altered conclusion of the bizarre history of Eva Perón's peripatetic remains. Rather than resting in the Duarte family tomb in La Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires, Coggins posits that the body in La Recoleta is a duplicate and that Eva's specially embalmed corpse has been secretly buried in the San Francisco Bay Area under a false name. [2] [3]
|
2012
|
EVITA, Jirones de su vida
|
Felipe Pigna
|
Inapplicable
|
With extensive documentation and testimony, Felipe Pigna traces the life of "the most loved and most hated of Argentina", the truths, legends, myths, loves and hatreds that were woven around its controversial figure in the public and private multifaceted .[4]
|