Last Friday morning, the sad news of the death of Marta Chávarri came to light. The former Marquise de Cubas was found dead at the age of 62 at her home in Madrid. The death of the socialite has been a hard blow for the whole family, especially for her son, Álvaro Falcó, the result of her marriage to the late Fernando Falcó. However, there are many recognized faces who have wanted to pay homage to the socialite after her departure. This is the case of Carmen Lomana, who has dedicated a column to her in La Razón.
Carmen and Marta had a beautiful friendship. This is what Lomana says in her new opinion column, published in La Razón, where she reviews the life of the socialite. Precisely, Carmen was also seen this Friday at the Mortuary of Peace in Tres Cantos (Madrid), where she came to show her support for Chávarri’s loved ones and to say goodbye to one of the most media women of the 90s in Spain.
“She was an icon in the 80s and 90s. All young women wanted to be like Marta Chavarri. They all imitated her. Her fantastic blonde hair, her jeans with booties that no one fit like her,” Carmen begins by saying in her article. “Marta was indeed a true influencer without looking for it or wanting it. She had a unique style, a body of ten, no one from that generation forgets her photo in Puerto Portals getting off the boat with a white bathing suit and a body of a heart attack,” she says.
The businesswoman has recalled in her article the love scandals that made Chávarri occupy a large number of headlines for a time in her life. Lomana speaks in her writing of the controversial romance between the aristocrat and Alberto Cortina during her marriage to Fernando Falcó. “They were moments of social explosion: women abandoned their husbands and vice versa,” recalls Carmen.
Marta’s media exposure has changed in recent years. This is how her great friend remembers him in her text. “Marta was very withdrawn from social life, she related to her family, her two sisters and some friends. She loved to make very creative collage-type pictures. She really enjoyed her son’s wedding with Isabelle Junot and now with her granddaughter,” revealed Lomana.
A column in which, in addition, he wanted to highlight how important Chávarri has been in the social chronicle. “This beautiful woman who was part of a historical socio-political moment in Spain has left us from a stroke,” Lomana said, totally broken. “Marta, rest in peace. May God welcome you in her mercy. Your friends will never forget you,” he sentenced, making it clear that her death has also hit her hard.