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Gata

By Julienne Gage

Published on August 20, 2008 at 9:53am

Some cats really know how to scratch at your heartstrings. A little over a year ago, Miami's popular octogenarian tango interpreter La Gata had Latin American émigrés in tears when she asked them to join with her in singing "Volver" ("Return") after a screening of a self-titled documentary about her at the Coral Gables Spanish Cultural Center. Those who missed that magically melancholy moment (or wish to experience it all over again) will get a second chance Thursday when she returns to perform on the center's stage. For those who've never heard the story of how this cat meows, they'll be intrigued to know that her life is as dramatic as the tango. Raised by nuns in a Buenos Aires orphanage, a young María Angélica Milán took to the streets of the Argentine capital as soon as she reached adulthood. Her sensuous feline looks and talent soon had her singing for her supper in clubs all across South America and Spain. She arrived in Miami 20 years ago with dreams of doing the same, but the local market just wasn't ready. That changed about four years ago, when the city's ever-growing Argentine population—many of whom are young rockers — got nostalgic for the Madre Patria and its rebellious tanguero roots. The glamtankerous ol' Gata was just the remedy for homesickness, and she's been gracing Miami's night scene ever since.