09 Jun MIÚCHA, THE VOICE OF BOSSA NOVA
MIÚCHA, THE VOICE OF BOSSA NOVA
Brazil, France, United States / 2022 / 98’
DIRECTED BY: Daniel Zarvos, Liliane Mutti
SCREENPLAY BY: Liliane Mutti
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Daniel Zarvos, Liliane Mutti
EDITED BY: Isabel Castro, Daniela Ramalho
PRODUCER: Mostafiz Shahmohammed
ANIMATION: Guilherme Hoffmann, Meton Joffily, Julie Reed
NARRATION: Silvia Buarque
Brazilian singer Miúcha worked with bossa nova legends such as Vinicius de Moraes, Tom Jobim, Stan Getz, and her brother, Chico Buarque. She was married to the “father” of the genre, João Gilberto. As well as singing on their records, she co-wrote music, but until now her role in this musical movement, and with it the female perspective, has been neglected. When Míucha died in 2018, her nephew, the director Daniel Zarvos, was already working on this film, in which the singer indirectly tells the story of her life, through her personal archive of photographs, home videos, stories, letters, beautiful watercolors and audio recordings. Through her father, the young Miúcha met feminist Simone de Beauvoir and moved to Paris, where she worked as a singer. There she met Gilberto, and impulsively decided to accompany him to New York. It is striking that after they married and had a child, she stepped into the background, supporting his career rather than her own. In extracts from her letters and diary, Míucha shares her intimate thoughts about this complicated marriage and her struggles to find her own path—in life and in music.
Daniel Zarvos, director and screenwriter, graduated from Bard College in New York in 1997. In the 1990s, he worked with American independent and experimental Filmmakers and also as an assistant producer for the Italian television channel Rete 4 and for National Geographic. In Brazil, he began working as an Assistant Director on documentaries produced by Walter Salles Production Company, Videofilmes, along with iconic cinema director Nelson Pereira dos Santos.
Liliane Mutti, is the founder of the Ciné Nova Bossa Association in Paris. She produces and directs films with strong political engagement, such as “Ecocide,” “Elle,” “Ta Clarice,” “Instant-ci,” and “Out of Breath.”