Background
Dalva was born in Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil. Her father was a carpenter and semi-professional musician, playing clarinet and saxophone with a group called Os Oito Batutas (the Eight Batons).
Dalva was born in Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil. Her father was a carpenter and semi-professional musician, playing clarinet and saxophone with a group called Os Oito Batutas (the Eight Batons).
She died as a victim of internal bleeding, probably caused by cancer. At the orphanage, Dalva learned to play piano and organ, as well as choral singing. Dalva left the orphanage due to an illness, and went to live with her mother in the city of São Paulo.
In 1933, while still a teenager, Dalva began working as a singer, touring (together with her mother) with a group led by Antônio Zovetti.
Thereafter, Dalva spent a year as a regularly featured singer on Rádio Mineira in the state of Minas Gerais. At first, Dalva had to work in a factory, while her mother worked as a cleaning woman.
In 1936, however, she was hired by Rádio Mayrink Veiga, the most powerful broadcaster in Rio at that time. Dalva began working with Herivelto Martins and Francisco Sena, whose singing duo Preto e Branco (Black and White) was already popular.
The three renamed the group Trio de Ouro (Golden Trio).
The trio performed and recorded together until 1948. In 1949, Dalva separated from Herivelto. The couple"s separation and divorce was prolonged, bitter, and public.
Their dispute and mutual accusations were featured not only in press coverage, but in the lyrics of songs recorded by each of them.
When she left Herivelto, one part of the public viewed Dalva as a fallen woman. Another part, as a rebel and hero.
Dalva was quoted as saying: "I had everything: a home, husband, children, career, and I left that security in order to gain my freedom, to regain myself as a woman." Author Maria Hupfer wrote of her: "Dalva became the idol of the prostitutes, mistresses, and homosexuals, and was excoriated by housewives and family mentor".