In the book "Who's Who in Spanish-American Theater and Cinema", Anita acted alongside Manuel Antin, an Argentine playwright, film director, scriptwriter, and journalist.
The three works that are in the repertoire They are titled "Mozaicos Argentinos", "Under the Sky of the Pampa" and "Canción Criolla", based on staged tangos, poetry from the countryside and the suburbs, Creole evocations, native dances, and concert numbers.
[7] The Madrid newspaper La Libertad published in its "theaters" section on page 4 (among other artists) about the great Anita Bobasso, who enjoyed the applause of the select audience that filled the room.
[8] Poetry, song, and music festival in honor of the Argentine company to correspond to the kindness they had when inviting authors, artists, and journalists to the extraordinary function offered to them in the Alcazar theater,as noted by the Madrid newspaper.
[12] The archives of "La Prensa Historica" show more than a dozen links to articles talking about Anita, where her husband Andres Bobasso also appears as stage director of the company.
[13] In April 1932, they undertook a tour of Portugal, starting from the María Victoria Theater in Lisbon and continuing to Porto, Braga, Coimbra, and the famous Estoril Casino.
After returning to Buenos Aires, Bobasso was invited to Brazil, where she premiered the musical "La Cancion Argentina" at the Casino Theater in Rio de Janeiro.
"[17] then back to Rio de Janeiro,[18] and continuing to Pernambuco in the north of Brazil[19] and to Vitoria, the state of Espiritu Santo, as seen in the Diario da Manha, presenting 23 musical scenes in two acts in the Theater Carlos Gomes of that city.,[20] and then to the state of Maranhao, where the press noted "A big company from Argentina is visiting Maranhao with artists like Bobasso who have achieved success in the audience where she has been heard".
[23] She lived in the area of the obelisk near 9 de Julio on Alsina Street in Buenos Aires until 1968, when her husband, Andrés Bobasso, died.
[24][25] During her last years she dedicated herself to the cinema, participating in films such as El Gordo catástrofe,[26][27] the movie Grandma[28] and Funny Dirty Little War, playing the role of the singer.