Career beginnings Sometime in 1953, a young Zilha was heard singing in a Doboj kafana by Aca Stepić, and it was a voice he did not forget. They met again six years later in 1959, at the
Hotel Bristol in Belgrade, after she started singing professionally. She was performing with the orchestra of Jovica Marinović and the singer/drummer was
Cune Gojković. After that, she began singing with Aca in the
Grand Casino in Belgrade, where she met her future husband Radmilo. Zilha moved to
Sarajevo at the age of sixteen in 1954, where she lived with her aunt and sang in local kafanas for money. One night Zilha met accordionist
Ismet Alajbegović Šerbo in the Sarajevo suburb of
Ilidža. Delighted with her voice, he wanted to make her part of his orchestra, but the girl was underage and needed her parents permission. Of course, they gave consent and Šerbo promised her that she would have food, a place to stay and a salary of 20,000
dinars monthly. There, she entered the professional world of showbusiness. On a cold night in
Leskovac in spring 1958, Zilha was taking walk through a park before a performance at the garden of a restaurant called
Hisar in a hotel, when she saw a young man sleeping on a bench. It was
Toma Zdravković. She approached him, woke him up, sat down and started a conversation. She asked him "Where are you from? What do you do?". He told her he was from a village, and had come to the city looking for a job. He couldn't find a job, and was broke with no way to pay his fare back home. Zilha wished to help him. She brought him to her performance, even handing her microphone over to him at one point. When she heard Toma sing, she was amazed, according to
Za društvo u ćošku, written by Aleksandar Gajović, a journalist and cultural worker. She begged the manager of the hotel to help Toma find a job. Toma began singing with her, and later she got him his own record deal and he began recording and touring on his own. The two became legends of the former Yugoslavia.
Stage name Eventually she moved to Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia, to further her singing career. There she adopted the
mononymous stage name "Silvana" after the Italian actress
Silvana Mangano. When she was a young girl, her friends would jokingly call her Silvana after watching the film
Bitter Rice (1949), because she resembled the actress.
1965–69: First recordings and television While in Belgrade, Silvana frequently performed in the bohemian neighborhood
Skadarlija. During this time, she was offered several recording contracts from the incredibly competitive Yugoslav record labels. The first song she ever recorded was the Bosnian
sevdalinka "Nad izvorom vrba se nadvila" (
Over the Spring, the Willow Tree Hung), although it wasn't officially released until her 1968 album ''Otiš'o si bez pozdrava
(You Left Without Saying Goodbye''), three years after her first album was released. After recording a single record for the label
Diskos in
Aleksandrovac, she was invited by the label
PGP-RTB to record in the then-popular duet format. Silvana recorded duet albums with singers Petar Tanasijević, Aleksandar Trandafilović, Slavko Perović and Dragan Živković in the
1960s. After both companies competitively issued her records for a period of time, Silvana grew "tired" of singing in duets. The opportunity to record as a soloist came from the
Zagreb-based record label
Jugoton. Her career had taken off rapidly and she became one of the biggest commercial
folk stars in Yugoslavia. This led to numerous and well-publicized country-wide singing engagements. She also appeared in many popular TV sitcoms such as
Ljubav na seoski način (
Love in the Rural Way) with famous Serbian comedian
Miodrag Petrović Čkalja and folksy movies such as
Građani sela Luga (
Citizens of the Village Luga).
1969–76: "Šta će mi život" and The Deer Hunt In 1969, she and singer Toma Zdravković sang in the same group, and Zdravković wrote her biggest hit "Šta će mi život, bez tebe dragi" (
What Do I Need a Life for, Without You Darling): ''...While touring, we ran into one another a lot in different towns all over Yugoslavia, and in 1969, we even sang in the same band. I was already a well known and sought-after composer. She was completely down. She was constantly depressed and wanted me to write a song for her. But I didn't really know what. All of my songs were inspired by women I fancied and love-life, but we were good ol' friends. I had no inspiration. Until one day, I went drinking with my friends, we were drunk for three days straight, and the fourth day I woke up at a hotel, went down to the lounge, ordered a cup of coffee and just like that while getting over a hangover, I wrote "Šta će mi život". I recorded the song in the studio and wanted to use it for a festival coming up, but when she heard it, she wanted to have it. And what could I do? It was her song, inspired by her life, and her problems. I gave her the song and it was a bingo. I wish I had never written it. She died seven years later, it was like the song came true. It would have been better if she had never recorded that song. It would have been better if she had never become famous. She might still be alive...'' The song became one of the biggest folk hits ever written in Yugoslavia, sold over 300,000 copies, and transformed Zdravković and Silvana herself into superstars. But Silvana's life ironically ended seven years later. In a March 1971 interview with the newspaper
Novosti, Silvana did not hide the fact that the same rejection and criticism that she faced at the start of her career, continued well into her successful days. She co-starred in 1972 film
The Deer Hunt with
Boris Dvornik,
Ivo Serdar and
Miha Baloh, among others. The film was written and directed by
Fadil Hadžić. On a Belgrade-based television
New Year's Eve program awaiting the year 1972, the director
Dejan Karaklajić suggested Silvana to dress in a bikini and jump in a pool to resemble
Hollywood actress
Esther Williams. She initially refused and did not like the way her body looked in the swimsuit but was forced to do it as the sponsors had paid 13 million
dinars. She cried and then agreed to appear on the program, but not in the swimsuit and refused to swim in a pool. The stunt sparked outrage among her fan base, who were not used to seeing her sexualize herself. She was also banned from all Yugoslav television for refusing to follow orders. Throughout the
1970s and leading up to her death in 1976, she had several hit songs: "Rane moje" (
My Wounds), "Ciganine, sviraj sviraj" (
Gypsy, Play Play), "Srce gori, jer te voli" (
My Heart Burns, For It Loves You), "Grli me, ljubi me" (
Hug Me, Kiss Me), "Ja nemam prava nikoga da volim" (
I Have No Right to Love Anyone), "Srećo moja" (
Happiness of Mine), "Kišo, kišo tiho padaj" (
Rain, Rain, Fall Quietly) and "Život teče" (
Life Flows). As she became more popular in Yugoslavia, she often performed for the
President Josip Broz Tito and the First Lady
Jovanka Broz. She was friends with many
communist politicians including
Branko Mikulić,
Hamdija Pozderac and
Džemal Bijedić. During a radio interview in Sarajevo in 1973, she stated that she was a fan of fellow sevdalinka singer
Safet Isović and called him a "darling." ==Death==