Madrid after Franco’s death: between mourning and hope | Spain

When on the afternoon of November 19, 1975, Colita (Barcelona, ​​1940-2023) received a phone call announcing that Franco was dying, she was already one of the most brilliant photographers of her generation. The next call was his. He composed the Carmen Rico-Godoy issue of the weekly Change 16the great political magazine of the Transition. “I want to go to Madrid to work on the streets,” the photojournalist told him. Rico-Godoy immediately said yes because Colita was not known in Madrid and therefore could work in complete freedom. Before going to the airport, she had the ingenuity to sew a piece of ribbon with the Spanish flag on her trench coat “just like Ingrid Bergman’s in Casablanca”.

What he saw in Madrid is what this photo gallery shows, a selection of images taken from his book Franco is dead (Ojos de Buey, 2023). “I found the pulse of the street and the feelings of the people. It was a mix between a party and a funeral: people crying and emotional people shouting “Franco, Franco”, many policemen, soldiers, nuns, priests, bishops, politicians…”. There were three historical moments he portrayed: the queues to visit Franco’s burning chapel in the Palacio de Oriente, the wait for November 22nd when Juan Carlos was proclaimed king and the dictator’s funeral on the 23rd in Plaza de Oriente.