Lourdes Barreto is a former prostitute who has been active in promoting the rights of sex workers in Brazil. Co-founder of the Brazilian Network of Prostitutes in the 1980s she has also been instrumental in encouraging HIV prevention policies in Brazil. In 2023 she published an autobiography, Puta autobiografia (Whore autobiography) and in 2024 she was named as one of the 100 Women (BBC) of the year. [1] [2] [3]
Barreto was born in the municipality of Brejo de Areia, in the state of Paraíba in the north-east of Brazil, growing up in Catolé do Rocha in the same state. She left home at the age of 14, after facing domestic and sexual violence, working as a prostitute and travelling through several states, including the mining areas of Serra Pelada and Itaituba, in the mid-1950s. before settling in Belém in the state of Pará on the Amazon River. In Belém, working at night on the streets around the commercial centre, she began her activities in support of the rights of sex workers. She has a tattoo on her arm that says Eu sou puta (I am a whore). [4]
In 1987, Barreto founded, together with Gabriela Leite, the Brazilian Network of Prostitutes, one of the first organizations in support of sex workers in Brazil. This network was to play an important role in establishing the International Whores' Day, celebrated every year on 2 June. [4] She sought election to the Belém city council in 2000 but was not elected, despite receiving significant support. Later she became the first prostitute to serve on the National Council of Women's Rights. She established the Group of Women Prostitutes of the State of Pará (Gempac), which combats prejudice against sex workers. [5] [6] [7]
Barreto published her autobiography in 2023, entitled Puta autobiografia (Whore autobiography). It was published with financial support from the state. A video documentary about her life, for which she has written the script, is in process. She was honoured a by the Piratas da Batucada samba school at the Belém Carnival in 2023. [3] [8] [9]
Barreto has had four husbands, four children and ten grandchildren. [10]
Deborah Fialho Secco is a Brazilian actress. She became known in 1994 as one of the protagonists of the teen series Confissões de Adolescente. On television, she played successful characters such as Íris in Laços de Família, Darlene in Celebridade, Sol in América, Natalie Lamour in Insensato Coração, Karola in Segundo Sol and Alexia Máximo in Salve-se Quem Puder. In cinema, she stood out as Moema in Caramuru - A Invenção do Brasil, Judite in Boa Sorte and the title character in Bruna Surfistinha.
Glória Maria Cláudia Pires de Morais is a Brazilian actress. She is best known for her roles in TV Globo telenovelas such as Dancin' Days, Vale Tudo, Mulheres de Areia and O Rei do Gado. She is also known for starring in films such as Academy Award-nominated O Quatrilho, box-office hit If I Were You and its sequel, and Lula, Son of Brazil, which is the second most expensive Brazilian film of all time, after Nosso Lar.
Maria Flor Leite Calaça, usually known as Maria Flor, is a Brazilian actress.
Bruna Surfistinha is the pen name of Raquel Pacheco, a Brazilian former sex worker who attracted the attention of Brazilian media by publishing, in a blog, her sexual experiences with clients. Bruna explained in television programs that she was a normal girl, who had been adopted by a high/middle-class family but that at around the age of 17 she left her home and her family because of the traditional family oriented views of her father and to start to live on her own. Bruna appeared in various television programs in Brazil and several periodicals and magazines. Her blog attracted more than 50,000 readers per day. She appeared in some pornographic films in Brazil. In 2005, she released a book entitled O Doce Veneno do Escorpião. In just over a month it sold over 30,000 copies in its third edition, and became the best selling book in Brazil. The book was translated into English and published by Bloomsbury Publishing in 2006. Bruna's book also inspired the 2011 Brazilian film Confessions of a Brazilian Call Girl, starring Deborah Secco in the main role, and the 2016 TV series Me Chama de Bruna, starring Maria Bopp in the main role. In 2011, Bruna also appeared in a Brazilian reality show called A Fazenda finishing as the second runner-up. Confessions of a Brazilian Call Girl grossed $12,356,515 in Brazil, first national film after international films in the Brazil 2011 Box Office, thanks to Bruna's popularity with the Brazilian public.
Davida – Prostituição, Direitos Civis, Saúde is an NGO that supports sex workers in Brazil. It was founded in 1992, is based in Rio de Janeiro, and gained international notoriety in 2005 when it launched the fashion line Daspu.
Prostitution in Brazil is legal, in terms of exchanging sex for money, as there are no laws forbidding adults from being professional sex workers, but it is illegal to operate a brothel or to employ sex workers in any other way. Public order and vagrancy laws are used against street prostitutes. The affordability of prostitutes is the most inquired-about term in word completion queries on purchases on Google in Brazil.
Giovanna Antonelli Prado is a Brazilian actress, television host, and producer.
Daspu is a Brazilian women's clothing brand aimed at prostitutes, launched on 16 December 2005 in Rio de Janeiro by the NGO Davida, which supports sex workers.
Gabriela Silva Leite was a Brazilian prostitute and activist in support of the rights of sex workers. She was the founder of the NGO, Davida, which derives its name from "Mulheres da Vida", a term commonly used for prostitutes in Brazil, and of Daspu, a fashion brand for prostitutes.
Bruna Linzmeyer is a Brazilian actress also known for her LGBTQIA+ and feminist rights activism.
SlutWalks in Latin America were renamed "Marcha das Vadias" in Brazil and "La Marcha de las Putas" in most Spanish-speaking countries, sometimes using PUTAS as an acronym for "Por una transformación Auténtica y Social " Some countries like Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia were known to host simultaneous Slutwalks in different cities. In almost all countries, Slutwalks are repeated annually, although not always in the same cities. Some protests select their dates to match significant events such as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women and the World Youth Day.
Alice Wegmann Corrêa best known as Alice Wegmann is a Brazilian actress.
Patrícia Kimberly is a Brazilian sex worker.
Luiza Helena Trajano Inácio Rodrigues is a Brazilian billionaire businessperson. She is chair of the retailer Magazine Luiza and associated companies. In July 2020, Forbes noted that she was Brazil's wealthiest woman. Trajano is an advisory board member to both UNICEF Brazil and UNFPA Brazil, among other entities. In 2021 Luiza was listed by TIME magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. She is a feminist. As of April 2022, her net worth was estimated at US$1.4 billion.
Roneys Fon Firmino Gomes, known as the Tower Maniac, is a Brazilian serial killer who, after killing his victims, left their bodies underneath high-voltage electrical towers.
Sara Fernanda Giromini, known as Sara Huff and previously Sara Winter, is a Brazilian activist anti-feminist and right-wing politician. She was the founder of the Brazilian variant of the Femen group, but after the second half of 2013 she worked in her own group, BastardXs. As of 2015, she joined the "Pro-Woman group", at the same time that she started to fight against the agendas she once defended, including the social construction of genders, feminism and the legalization of abortion, defending since then political positions linked to the right and conservatism.
Mulamba is the debut album by the Brazilian band of same name, released on 2 November 2018. It was recorded at a Red Bull studio in São Paulo, following the band's winning of the Vento Festival contest in which the winner would earn a slot at the event and the production of an album at the aforementioned studio.
Erika Santos Silva, known as Erika Hilton, is a Brazilian politician and activist for black and LGBT rights. Hilton studied teaching and gerontology before entering politics.
The 2021 Minas Gerais prostitute strike was a labor strike involving several thousand prostitutes in Minas Gerais, Brazil. The strike was organized by the Associação das Prostitutas de Minas Gerais and ran for about a week in early April. Occurring during the COVID-19 pandemic, the goal of the strike was to pressure the Ministry of Health into categorizing sex workers among other priority groups for immunization against COVID-19. Several protests occurred in the state's capital city of Belo Horizonte. Despite the strike, the Ministry of Health did not add sex workers as a priority group for vaccines.
Isabel Vaz is the executive chair of Luz Saúde, one of the largest healthcare companies in Portugal.