Lidia Elsa Satragno
{{Short description|Argentine actress and politician (1935–2022)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2022}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = Lidia Satragno
|image = Lidia Satragno.jpg
|office = National Deputy
|term_start = 10 December 2007
|term_end = 10 December 2011
|constituency = Buenos Aires
|birth_date = {{birth date|1935|11|11|df=yes}}
|birth_place = San Justo, Buenos Aires, Argentina
|death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|2022|12|8|1935|11|11}}
|death_place = Buenos Aires, Argentina
|party = Radical Civic Union
|otherparty = Alliance (1999–2001)
PRO Union (2007–2011)
|spouse =
|children =
|alma_mater =
|profession =
}}
File:Annemarie Heinrich - Pinky -1964.jpg.]]
File:Raúl Lavié & Pinky by Annemarie Heinrich, 1964.png, 1964]]
Lidia Elsa Satragno (11 November 1935 – 8 December 2022) was an Argentine actress and politician, where she was popularly known as Pinky.
Early life and career
Lidia Elsa Satragno was born in the western Buenos Aires suburb of San Justo in 1935. She debuted on Argentine television in a 1956 vinegar advertisement and, by 1957, appeared on as many as 22 television ads on any given day. This success led to her own talk show on Argentine Public Television, Buenos Días Pinky, during which she was invited as a guest of honor by German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. The show also earned renown for its screenwriter, María Elena Walsh, and helped pave the way for women in Argentine television, generally. Cast by noted period piece Director Leopoldo Torre Nilsson in La caída (The Fall) in 1959, in 1961 she was offered a co-anchorship in news anchorman Bernardo Neustadt's Nosotros (Us), becoming the first Argentine woman on television so honored. Co-hosting Incomunicados with Neustadt in 1963, the show became memorable for an interview held with Arturo Frondizi, the first granted by a former president on Argentine television. Her work with Neustadt and introduction to the world of politics led to a friendship with a young UCR strategist, Rodolfo Terragno, that she maintained.{{cite web|url=http://www1.hcdn.gov.ar/curriculums/lsatragno.html|title=Argentine Chamber of Deputies: Lidia Elsa Satragno |publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}}
Pinky hosted or co-hosted a number of other talk and variety shows during the 1960s and 1970s, the most successful of which were Feminísima, El pueblo quiere saber (People Want to Know), Pinky y la noticia (Pinky and the News) and La década del '60. She set time aside for other projects, as well, cast by Argentine and Mexican directors in a number of film roles in the 1960s. One of her interview guests in 1962, a rising figure in Argentine tango named Raúl Lavié, had recently been separated and quickly developed a relationship with the avuncular hostess; the two were married in 1965.{{cite web|url=http://www.gente.com.ar/nota.php?ID=5447|title=Revista Gente|website=Infobae|accessdate=19 January 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721195555/http://www.gente.com.ar/nota.php?ID=5447|archive-date=21 July 2011|url-status=dead}}
Later career
Enjoying a stellar career, she soon became known as "Ms. Television" in Argentina, though her private life entered a difficult phase. She and Lavié had two sons, but soon grew apart and were separated and reunited a number of times before parting ways in 1974, something Pinky has attributed to infidelity on his part.[http://www.clarin.com/diario/2001/08/02/c-00501.htm Clarín {{in lang|es}}] She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1970, but recovered a few years later. Pinky was among the stars on hand to inaugurate Argentine color television broadcasting in 1978, but soon fell out of favor with the prevailing dictatorship after agreeing to interview Norma Aleandro, a renowned actress and dissident.{{cite web|url=http://www.clarin.com/suplementos/zona/2005/04/03/z-950135.htm|title=El recuerdo de Pinky: "No lo hice por un general borracho"|website=www.clarin.com|accessdate=19 January 2018}} This led her to turn to Argentina's vibrant theatre scene, where she accepted leading roles in local productions of Two Women, The Vagina Monologues and The Prisoner of Second Avenue, among others. Pinky produced a successful Buenos Aires presentation of Annie, as well.{{cite web|url=http://www.clarin.com/diario/1999/09/17/c-00310g.htm|title=Los más grandes|first=|last=Clarin.com|publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}}
Political career
Her decision to co-host in 1982 Las 24 horas de las Malvinas, a television fundraiser devoted to the ongoing Falklands War, cost the hostess professional clout following the advent of democracy in 1983, whose victorious UCR she supported, ironically. Continuing to host a number of radio and television shows, she relocated to Azul, where she hosted the nationally broadcast La década del '80. Pinky became officially affiliated to the struggling, centrist Radical Civic Union following that party's 1995 election of Rodolfo Terragno as its president and, in 1999, she ran on the UCR-led Alliance for Mayor of La Matanza, the most populous district in the Province of Buenos Aires. Claiming victory after early returns on election night put her narrowly ahead, she was forced to concede defeat later in the evening after a complete tally gave the Justicialist (Peronist) Party candidate, Alberto Balestrini, a narrow edge.{{cite web|url=http://www.clarin.com/diario/1999/10/25/t-03501h.htm|title=El PJ derrotó a Pinky y logró seguir invicto en La Matanza|first=|last=Clarin.com|publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}}
Buenos Aires Mayor Enrique Olivera named her Secretary of Social Policy Promotion for the city in 2000, where she earned plaudits for her efforts against domestic violence. She returned to television to host Pinky y la conversación in 2001 and was awarded the prestigious Martín Fierro Award for Broadcasting Excellence in 2006. Having appeared for over 30,000 hours on Argentine television, she announced her intention to run for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies to represent the province where she was raised in and continued to live in. Running on the center-right Republican Proposal ticket founded by businessman (and later Buenos Aires Mayor) Mauricio Macri, Pinky was elected to Congress in October 2007.{{cite web|url=http://www.clarin.com/diario/2001/05/10/c-00401.htm|title=La Señora Televisión está de regreso|first=|last=Clarin.com|publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}} Her two sons, Leonardo and Gastón Satragno, formed Ultratango in 2003, a musical group performing in the Nuevo tango genre.{{cite web|url=http://www.clarin.com/diario/2007/06/03/espectaculos/c-01401.htm|title=Otra cara del tango electrónico|first=|last=Clarin.com|publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}}
Following the 2009 mid-term elections, and at 74 years of age, Pinky became the dean of the Lower House of Congress, presiding over the 4 December session that elected the body's new leadership.{{cite web|url=http://www.lanacion.com.ar/nota.asp?nota_id=1207573|title=Pinky, la estrella que volvió a brillar|publisher=|accessdate=19 January 2018}}
Satragno died on 8 December 2022, at the age of 87 in Buenos Aires.{{cite news |title=Murió a los 87 años Pinky |url=https://www.infobae.com/teleshow/2022/12/08/murio-a-los-87-anos-pinky/ |access-date=8 December 2022 |publisher=Infobae |date=8 December 2022}}
References
{{reflist}}
{{commons category}}
{{Argentine deputies, 2007–2009}}
{{Argentine deputies, 2009–2011}}
{{Republican Proposal}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Satragno, Lidia Elsa}}
Category:Argentine television personalities
Category:Argentine women television personalities
Category:Members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies elected in Buenos Aires Province
Category:Argentine deputies 2009–2011
Category:Argentine deputies 2007–2009
Category:Argentine people of Italian descent
Category:People from La Matanza Partido
Category:Republican Proposal politicians
Category:Women members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies
Category:20th-century Argentine politicians