She was born in
Buenos Aires to Pedro and María Ángela Traveso, a well-to-do family in 1903. Losing her father at two months of age, she was raised by her mother, who affectionately called her "Niní." They relocated to the Buenos Aires neighborhood of
Caballito when Niní was in her teens, and she began a career in
advertising. She met Felipe Edelman, an
engineer, while in her senior year in secondary school, and they married in 1922, a few months after the birth of their only daughter, Ángeles. The happy occasion was followed by her mother's untimely death, a tragedy compounded by Felipe Edelman's decline into
compulsive gambling. Facing economic ruin, the couple were separated shortly afterwards and she remarried. Traverso drew on her advertising experience and wit to secure work in
La Novela Semanal, a well-known women's leisure magazine, in 1933. She also contributed to the radio
variety show,
Sintonía, as an entertainment critic and publicist until 1934 and appeared in numerous other
radio programs. A multi-lingual and prolific writer, she began signing her varied articles as "Mitzi." Traveso debuted as a singer on Radio Municipal in 1936, and met her second husband, the Paraguayan entrepreneur Marcelo Salcedo, at that time. She soon began appearing in Buenos Aires' vibrant
theatre, where she developed two
satirical characters,
Cándida and
Catita; by then, she had adopted another pseudonym: "Niní Marshall." in
Educating Niní (1940). These roles led to a prestigious
Sensación Radiofónica award in 1937 for her work in
Sintonía and to a film deal with
Enrique Susini's
Lumiton Studios in 1938. Portraying her character "Catita" (an
Italian Argentine cook), opposite
Mecha Ortiz and
Tito Lusiardo (Catita's fastidious employers), in
Mujeres que trabajan (
Working Women), the comedy's success led to an offer the following year to portray Catita's par,
Cándida (an antiquated
Galician maid), for which she also wrote the
screenplay. Her thickly-accented characters and use of
ethnic humor were not without their detractors, however. The conservative government in power in Argentina at the time ordered her banned from the radio in 1940 and, in 1943, newly installed dictator Gen.
Pedro Ramírez had her banned from the cinema, on the charge of "deforming the language," leading to her exile in
Mexico. A leading box office draw, she portrayed either Catita or Cándida in numerous more films, as well starring in other notable comedy roles such as
Conrado Nalé Roxlo's adaptation of
Victorien Sardou's
Madame Sans Gêne, in 1945. Following President
Juan Perón's 1955 overthrow, Marshall returned to Argentina and to her comedy standby for her first post-exile role in
Julio Saraceni's
Catita es una dama (
Catita is a Lady, 1956). Continuing to perform in the radio and theatre, she went on to create numerous other comedy characters, among them: Cosme, Doña Caterina, Doña Pola, Mingo, the aristocratic Mónica Bedoya Hueyo de Picos Pardo Unzué Crostón, Niña Jovita, Pedantina, Sabelotodo and Ursilina (all satires of stereotypically Argentine types, and some male). Her work in the theatre helped make household names of young colleagues of hers such as
Zully Moreno,
Enrique Pinti,
Antonio Gasalla and
Juan Carlos Altavista, as well making successes of theatre pieces such as
Coqueluche (with
Thelma Biral) and a 1972
monologue, (
Left Suddenly). Her last film role starred opposite veteran comic
Luis Sandrini in
¡Qué linda es mi familia! (''My Family's Beautiful!''). The 1980 yarn on a quiet, elderly couple's brush with fame would be the ailing Sandrini's last, as well. She earned a
Konex Award in 1981, and retired from show business the following year. She penned her memoirs in 1985 and reemerged in the theatre briefly for a friend, dramatist Antonio Gasalla, in 1988. The acclaimed role earned her a recognition as an Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires in 1989. Given the award not by the mayor, but by newly elected President
Carlos Menem, he apologized to her for the persecution she endured 40 years earlier.
Argentine cinema standards
Norma Aleandro and
Alfredo Alcón presented her with a Lifetime Achievement Award in 1992 and theatre revivals of her work were produced from 1992 to 1995 locally and in
Paris, including two works written in her honor. The
grande dame of
Argentine humor to three generations, Niní Marshall died in Buenos Aires in 1996. She was 92. ==Filmography==