The Woman Sexism Buried: Who Eva Perón Actually Was
There is a reason most Americans only know Eva Perón through a Madonna film and a Broadway ballad.
There is a reason most Americans only know Eva Perón through a Madonna film and a Broadway ballad. The musical is gorgeous. The woman was not.
This is not an accident. History has a well-documented habit of softening its female wielders of power. Male authoritarians get clinical analysis — thick biographies, documentary series, university syllabi dedicated to understanding how they built what they built. Female ones get musicals. Cleopatra gets Elizabeth Taylor. Mary Queen of Scots gets Cate Blanchett. And Eva Perón — a central architect of a political machine that helped shape decades of Argentine instability — gets Andrew Lloyd Webber, Rachel Zegler singing from a London balcony, and a generation of people whose entire frame of reference is “Don’t Cry For Me Argentina.”
That song is a lie. Argentina should cry. It has been crying for seventy years.

















