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Reply #5: Another Haitian folk singer was driven out in earlier days, and [View All]

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-15-06 11:14 PM
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5. Another Haitian folk singer was driven out in earlier days, and
Edited on Tue Aug-15-06 11:40 PM by Judi Lynn
became a celebrity in Cuba:
Singer Martha Jean-Claude Dead at 82
Haitian singer and actress Martha Jean-Claude, whose engaged music inspired Haitians struggling against dictatorship for decades, died at age 82 on Nov. 14 in Havana.

Known as "the daughter of two islands," she was a symbol of the fraternity between Haiti and Cuba, where she lived most of her life and raised four children.

Martha Jean-Claude, known affectionately as Mamita, came to fame in Haiti during the 1940s, most notably during Port-au-Prince's bicentennial festivities in 1949. As a child, she sang at the Port-au-Prince Cathedral and, in 1942, began her professional career with folkloric concerts at the Rex Theatre, where she was often accompanied by fellow singer-dancer Emérantes Despradines.

In 1952, she was imprisoned for publishing a play, "Avrinette," which the regime of President Paul Magloire found subversive. She fled to Cuba on Dec. 20, 1952.

"I left Haiti after spending several months in prison while pregnant," she recalled in an interview. "I gave birth two days after getting out. One month after leaving prison -- my husband was in Cuba -- I left to join him." She had married Cuban journalist Victor Mirabal, whom she met after one of her shows. A few months later, they married in Venezuela.

Together they had four children: Linda, an opera singer in Madrid; Sandra, a musician living in Amsterdam; Magdalena, a doctor living in Cuba; and Richard Mirabal, a musician and director of the Martha Jean-Claude Foundation, based in Pétionville, Haïti.

In Cuba, she quickly became a star on the stage, radio, and television, playing with different orchestras and in many clubs, including the famous "Tropicana." In 1957, she spent a year working in Mexico, where her "Afro Cabaret" was very popular on television.

When she returned to Cuba in 1958, the country was in upheaval and she sided with the revolutionaries. After the Batista dictatorship fell in 1959, she became something of an ambassador for the Cuban Revolution, Haitian culture, and the the anti-Duvalierist struggle, bringing her concerts to many socialist countries as well as playing at schools, Army bases, and official receptions in Cuba. She even travelled with the Cuban Army to Angola in the 1970s. She also toured Paris, Montreal, New York, Panama, Mexico, and Spain.

In 1971, she starred in the anti-Duvalierist film Si m pa rele, produced in Cuba.
(snip/...)
http://www.haitiprogres.com/2001/sm011121/xeng1121.htm



Martha Jean-Claude
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