fbpx
Wikipedia

Cantinflas

Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes (12 August 1911 – 20 April 1993), known by the stage name Cantinflas (Spanish pronunciation: [kanˈtiɱflas]), was a Mexican comedian, actor, and filmmaker. He is considered to have been the most widely accomplished Mexican comedian and is celebrated throughout Latin America and in Spain as a popular icon. His humor, loaded with Mexican linguistic features of intonation, vocabulary, and syntax, is beloved in all the Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America and in Spain and has given rise to a range of expressions including cantinflear, cantinflada, cantinflesco, and cantinflero.

Cantinflas
Cantinflas in 1964
Born
Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes

(1911-08-12)12 August 1911
Died20 April 1993(1993-04-20) (aged 81)
Mexico City, Mexico
Burial placePanteón Español, Mexico City, Mexico
NationalityMexican
Other namesMario Moreno
CitizenshipMexican
EducationInstituto Politecnico Nacional Chapingo Autonomous University (Agronomy, few months)
Occupation(s)Comedian, actor, screenwriter, film producer, singer
Years active1936–1984
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
Spouse
Valentina Ivanova Zubareff
(m. 1936; died 1966)
ChildrenMario Arturo Moreno
Websitehttps://iamcantinflas.com/

He often portrayed impoverished farmers or a peasant of pelado origin.[1] The character allowed Cantinflas to establish a long, successful film career that included a foray into Hollywood. Charlie Chaplin once commented that he was the best comedian alive,[2] and Moreno has been referred to as the "Charlie Chaplin of Mexico".[3] To audiences in most of the world, he is best remembered as co-starring with David Niven in the Oscar-winning film Around the World in 80 Days, for which Moreno won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.

As a pioneer of the cinema of Mexico, Moreno helped usher in its golden era. In addition to being a business leader, he also became involved in Mexico's tangled and often dangerous labor politics. His reputation as a spokesperson for the downtrodden gave his actions authenticity and became important in the early struggle against charrismo, the one-party government's practice of co-opting and controlling unions.[citation needed]

Moreover, his character Cantinflas, whose identity became enmeshed with his own, was examined by media critics, philosophers, and linguists, who saw him variously as a danger to Mexican society, a bourgeois puppet, a verbal innovator, and a picaresque underdog.[citation needed]

Early and personal life

 
Apartment building that occupies the premises of the "vecindad" where Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" was born, former Sexta Calle de Santa María la Redonda (Sixth Street of Santa María la Redonda), today Eje Central Lázaro Cardenas 182.

Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes was born in Santa María la Redonda neighbourhood of Mexico City, and grew up in the tough neighbourhood of Tepito. He was one of eight children born to Pedro Moreno Esquivel, an impoverished mail carrier, and María de la Soledad Reyes Guízar (from Cotija, Michoacán). The others were Pedro, José ("Pepe"), Eduardo, Esperanza, Catalina, Enrique, and Roberto.[4]

He made it through difficult situations with the quick wit and street smarts that he would later apply in his films. His comic personality led him to a circus tent show, and from there to legitimate theatre and film.

He married Valentina Ivanova Zubareff, of Russian ethnicity, on 27 October 1936 and remained with her until her death in January 1966. A son was born to Moreno in 1961 by another woman;[5] the child was adopted by Valentina Ivanova and was named Mario Arturo Moreno Ivanova, causing some references to erroneously refer to him as "Cantinflas' adopted son".[6] Moreno Ivanova died on 15 May 2017, of a presumed heart attack.[7]

Moreno served as president of one of the Mexican actors' guilds known as Asociación Nacional de Actores (ANDA, "National Association of Actors") and as first secretary general of the independent filmworkers' union Sindicato de Trabajadores de la Producción Cinematográfica (STPC).[citation needed] Following his retirement, he devoted his life to helping others through charity and humanitarian organizations, especially those dedicated to helping children. His contributions to the Roman Catholic Church and orphanages made him a folk hero in Mexico.[citation needed]

He was a Freemason, initiated at Chilam Balam Lodge.[8][9]

In 1961, Cantinflas appeared with Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson at shopping centers and supermarkets in San Antonio, Texas, to support the successful Democratic nominee to the United States House of Representatives for Texas's 20th congressional district, Henry B. Gonzalez, who defeated his Republican challenger, John W. Goode. Gonzalez was the first Hispanic elected to the Texas State Senate and as a U.S. congressman from Texas.[10]

Origin of name

As a young man, Cantinflas performed a variety of acts in travelling tents, and it was here that he acquired the nickname "Cantinflas". According to one obituary, "Cantinflas" is a meaningless name invented to prevent his parents from knowing he was in the entertainment business, which they considered a shameful occupation. Cantinflas confirmed as much in 1992, in his last television interview.[11] Of course, the relationship between Moreno's little-used first given name Fortino and the character in William Shakespeare's Hamlet Fortinbras offers a striking parallel with the stage name of much younger contemporary Chespirito ("Little Shakespeare" in a garbled Mexican pronunciation).

Entertainment career

Before starting his professional life in entertainment, he explored a number of possible careers, such as medicine and professional boxing, before joining the entertainment world as a dancer. By 1930 he was involved in Mexico City's carpa (travelling tent) circuit, performing in succession with the Ofelia, Sotelo of Azcapotzalco, and finally the Valentina carpa, where he met his future wife. At first he tried to imitate Al Jolson by smearing his face with black paint, but later separated himself to form his own identity as an impoverished slum dweller with baggy pants, a rope for a belt, and a distinctive mustache.[12] In the tents, he danced, performed acrobatics, and performed roles related to several different professions.

Film career

 
Cantinflas (left) with Manuel Medel, c. 1938

In the mid-1930s, Cantinflas met publicist and producer Santiago Reachi and subsequently partnered with him to form their own film production venture. Reachi produced, directed, and distributed, while Cantinflas acted. Cantinflas made his film debut in 1936 with No te engañes corazón (Don't Fool Yourself Dear) before meeting Reachi, but the film received little attention. Reachi established Posa Films in 1939 with two partners: Cantinflas and Fernandez. Before this, Reachi produced short films that allowed him to develop the Cantinflas character, but it was in 1940 that he finally became a movie star, after shooting Ahí está el detalle ("There's the rub", literally "There lies the detail"), with Sofía Álvarez, Joaquín Pardavé, Sara García, and Dolores Camarillo. The phrase that gave that movie its name became a "Cantinflas" (or catchphrase) for the remainder of his career. The film was a breakthrough in Latin America and was later recognized by Somos magazine as the 10th greatest film produced largely in Mexico.[13]

In 1941, Moreno first played the role of a police officer on film in El gendarme desconocido ("The Unknown Police Officer" a play on words on "The Unknown Soldier). By this time, he had sufficiently distinguished the peladito character from the 1920s-era pelado, and his character flowed comfortably from the disenfranchised, marginalized, underclassman to the empowered public servant. The rhetoric of cantinflismo facilitated this fluidity.[citation needed] He would reprise the role of Agent 777 and be honored by police forces throughout Latin America for his positive portrayal of law enforcement.

Ni sangre, ni arena ("Neither Blood, nor Sand" a play on words on the bullfighter/gladiator phrase Blood and Sand), the 1941 bullfighting film, broke box-office records for Mexican-made films throughout Spanish-speaking countries. In 1942, Moreno teamed up with Reachi, Miguel M. Delgado, and Jaime Salvador to produce a series of parodies, including El Circo, an interpretation of Chaplin's The Circus.

The 1940s and 1950s were Cantinflas' heyday. In 1941, Reachi, the Producer rejected Mexican Studios companies and instead paid Columbia Pictures to produce the films in its Studios in Hollywood.[12] By this time, Cantinflas' popularity was such that he was able to lend his prestige to the cause of Mexican labor, representing the National Association of Actors in talks with President Manuel Ávila Camacho. The talks did not go well, however, and, in the resulting scandal, Moreno took his act back to the theatre.[citation needed]

Theater

On 30 August 1953, Cantinflas began performing his theatrical work Yo Colón ("I, Columbus") in the Teatro de los Insurgentes, the same theatre that had earlier been embroiled in a controversy over a Diego Rivera mural incorporating Cantinflas and the Virgin of Guadalupe. Critics, including the PAN and archbishop Luis María Martínez, called the mural blasphemous, and it was eventually painted without the image of the Virgin.

Yo Colón placed Cantinflas in the character of Christopher Columbus, who, while continually "discovering America", made comedic historical and contemporary observations from fresh perspectives. For the first few months, he persuaded the King and Queen of Spain to fund his voyage so that he could let his wife "drive" so she could make a wrong turn and discover Mexico instead, allowing him to also discover Jorge Negrete so that the Queen – an ardent fan – could meet him. When Negrete died just before Christmas of 1953, he changed it first to Pedro Infante until his death four years later, and then finally to Javier Solis until his death in 1966.

Hollywood and beyond

 
Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" by Rufino Tamayo, 1948, exhibition "The Collection of Mexican Painting by Jacques and Natasha Gelman"[14] poster, 1992, Cultural Center of Contemporary Art (defunct) City of Mexico.

In 1956, Around the World in 80 Days, Cantinflas' American debut, earned him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a musical or comedy.[15] Variety magazine said in 1956 that his Chaplinesque quality made a big contribution to the success of the film.[16] The film ultimately made an unadjusted $42 million at the box office[17] (over $678 million in 2018 dollars). While David Niven was billed as the lead in English-speaking nations, Cantinflas was billed as the lead elsewhere. As a result of the film, Cantinflas became the world's highest-paid actor.[18]

Moreno's second Hollywood feature, Pepe, attempted to replicate the success of his first. The film had cameo appearances by Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, Maurice Chevalier, Shirley Jones, Ricardo Montalbán, James Coburn, Debbie Reynolds, César Romero, and other stars. His humor, deeply rooted in the Spanish language, did not translate well for the American audience and the movie was a notorious box office disappointment. He still earned a Golden Globe nomination for his part. Later in a 1992 American interview, Moreno cited the language barrier as the biggest impediment to his making it big in the United States.[19]

After returning to Mexico, Cantinflas starred in the comic drama El bolero de Raquel (1957), the first Cantinflas film to be distributed to the United States by Columbia Pictures. The film was followed by more Cantinflas-Reachi-Columbia productions: El analfabeto (1961), El padrecito (1963), and Su excelencia (1967). After Su excelencia, Cantinflas began to appear in a series of very low-budget comedies directed by Miguel M. Delgado, which were produced by his own company "Cantinflas Films". These films lasted until El Barrendero, in 1982.

Like Charlie Chaplin, Cantinflas was a social satirist. He played el pelado, an impoverished Everyman, with hopes to succeed. With mutual admiration, Cantinflas was influenced by Chaplin's earlier films and ideology. El Circo (the circus) was a "shadow" of Chaplin's silent film, The Circus and Si yo fuera diputado ("If I Were a Congressman") had many similarities with the 1940 film, The Great Dictator. Cantinflas' films, to this day, still generate revenue for Columbia Pictures. In 2000, Columbia reported in an estimated US$4 million in foreign distribution from the films.[12]

Death

A life long smoker, Cantinflas died of lung cancer on 20 April 1993 in Mexico City. Thousands appeared on a rainy day for his funeral. The ceremony was a national event, lasting three days. He was honored by many heads of state and the United States Senate, which held a moment of silence for him. His ashes lay at the crypt of the Moreno Reyes family, in the Panteón Español ("Spanish Cemetery") in Mexico City.[20][21][22][23]

A 20-year legal battle followed between Mario Moreno Ivanova, Cantinflas' son and heir to his estate, and the actor's blood nephew Eduardo Moreno Laparade over the control of 34 films made by Cantinflas. The nephew claimed his uncle gave him a written notice, Moreno Ivanova argued that he was the direct heir of Cantinflas and that the rights belonged to him. In 2014, Eduardo Moreno Laparade won the rights at the Mexican Supreme Court to 39 films and the name.[24] At the same time, there was another legal battle between Columbia Pictures and Moreno Ivanova over control of these films. Columbia claimed that it had bought the rights to the 34 films four decades earlier, although the court noted several discrepancies in the papers. Moreno Ivanova wanted the rights to the films to remain his, and more generally Mexico's, as a national treasure. On 2 June 2001 the eight-year battle was resolved with Columbia retaining ownership over the 34 disputed films.[25]

Career

 
Meeting with Mexican president Miguel Alemán Valdés, seated from left to right: Jorge Negrete, the president Miguel Alemán Valdés, Cantinflas and María Tereza Montoya [es]
 
Cantinflas' star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles
 
Hand and Foot Prints at Graumanns Chinese Theater in Los Angeles, CA. USA.

Among the things that endeared him to his public was his comic use of language in his films; his characters (all of which were really variations of the main "Cantinflas" persona but cast in different social roles and circumstances) would strike up a normal conversation and then complicate it to the point where no one understood what they were talking about. The Cantinflas character was particularly adept at obfuscating the conversation when he owed somebody money, was courting an attractive young woman, or was trying to talk his way out of trouble with authorities, whom he managed to humiliate without their even being able to tell. This manner of talking became known as Cantinflear, and it became common parlance for Spanish speakers to say "¡estás cantinfleando!" (loosely translated as you're pulling a "Cantinflas!" or you're "Cantinflassing!") whenever someone became hard to understand in conversation. The Real Academia Española officially included the verb, cantinflear, cantinflas and cantinflada[26] in its dictionary in 1992.

In the visual arts, Mexican artists such as Rufino Tamayo and Diego Rivera painted Cantinflas as a symbol of the Mexican everyman.

Cantinflas' style and the content of his films have led scholars to conclude that he influenced the many teatros that spread the message of the Chicano Movement during the 1960s-1970s in the United States, the most important of which was El Teatro Campesino. The teatro movement was an important part of the cultural renaissance that was the social counterpart of the political movement for the civil rights of Mexican Americans. Cantinflas' use of social themes and style is seen as a precursor to Chicano theater.[27]

A cartoon series, the Cantinflas Show, was made in 1972 starring an animated Cantinflas. The show was targeted for children and was intended to be educational.[28] The first animated version animated by Santiago Moro and his brother Jose Luis Moro for Televisa in the early 1970s (Cantinflas Show) which educated children by meeting such notable people as Chopin, Louis Pasteur, Albert Einstein and William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet as well learning how important water and oil is and educational parodies of some of his famous movies like Su Excelencia [La Carta with incidental music from Aaron Copland's El Salón México] In the second version his character was known as "Little Amigo" and concentrated on a wide range of subjects intended to educate children, from the origin of soccer to the reasons behind the International Date Line. The second animated series animated in 1979 and dubbed in English in 1982 was a joint venture between Televisa and Hanna-Barbera and Mario Moreno voiced "Little Amigo"/Cantinflas in the Spanish version and Don Messick voiced "Little Amigo" and John Stephenson as the narrator in the English version. Both The Cantinflas Show and Amigos and Friends aired in the mid 1990s on Univision and Televisa re aired The Cantinflas Show in the mid 1990s.

Although Cantinflas never achieved the same success in the United States as in Mexico, he was honored with a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6438 Hollywood Boulevard.[29] He earned two Golden Globe nominations (winning one) for best actor and the Mexican Academy of Film Lifetime Achievement Award.[3][30] His handprints have been imbedded onto the Paseo de las Luminarias for his work in motion pictures.

The Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" Award is handed out annually for entertainers who "represent the Latino community with the same humor and distinction as the legendary Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" and who, like Cantinflas, utilizes his power to help those most in need".[31]

On August 12, 2018, the Google Doodle paid homage to Cantinflas on his 107th birth anniversary.[32]

Characterisations

Moreno's life is the subject of the biographical film Cantinflas (2014, directed by Sebastian del Amo). It stars Óscar Jaenada, who portrays a young Mario Moreno attempting to gain respect and make a living as an actor, and award-winning actor Michael Imperioli as Mike Todd, an American film-producer struggling to film his masterpiece. The film is centered in Moreno's personal life, and in the development of Todd's Golden Globe Award-winning 1956 film Around the World in 80 Days.

Critical response

 
Work called Tribute to Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" made in 1952 by the Chilean muralist Fernando Marcos Miranda.

Cantinflas is sometimes seen as a Mexican Groucho Marx character, one who uses his skill with words to puncture the pretensions of the wealthy and powerful, the police and the government, with the difference that he strongly supported democracy. Historian and author of Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity, writes, "Cantinflas symbolized the underdog who triumphed through trickery over more powerful opponents" and presents Cantinflas as a self-image of a transitional Mexico. Gregorio Luke, executive director of the Museum of Latin American Art said, "To understand Cantinflas is to understand what happened in Mexico during the last century".[12][33]

Monsiváis interprets Moreno's portrayals in terms of the importance of the spoken word in the context of Mexico's "reigning illiteracy" (70% in 1930). Particularly in the film El analfabeto, (The Illiterate), "Cantinflas is the illiterate who takes control of the language by whatever means he can".[34]

The journalist Salvador Novo interprets the role of Moreno's character entirely in terms of Cantinflismo: "En condensarlos: en entregar a la saludable carcajada del pueblo la esencia demagógica de su vacuo confusionismo, estriba el mérito y se asegura la gloria de este hijo cazurro de la ciudad ladina y burlona de México, que es 'Cantinflas'". ("In condensing them [the leaders of the world and of Mexico], in returning to the healthy laughter of the people the demagogic essence of their empty confusion, merit is sustained and glory is ensured for the self-contained son of the Spanish-speaking mocker of Mexico, who Cantinflas portrays.")[35]

In his biography of the comic, scholar of Mexican culture Jeffrey M. Pilcher views Cantinflas as a metaphor for "the chaos of Mexican modernity", a modernity that was just out of reach for the majority of Mexicans: "His nonsense language eloquently expressed the contradictions of modernity as 'the palpitating moment of everything that wants to be that which it cannot be'."[36] Likewise, "Social hierarchies, speech patterns, ethnic identities, and masculine forms of behavior all crumbled before his chaotic humor, to be reformulated in revolutionary new ways."[37]

Filmography

Cinema of the United States
Year Director Title Role Notes
1956 Michael Anderson Around the World in 80 Days Passepartout
1960 George Sidney Pepe Pepe
1969 Norman Foster The Great Sex War General Marcos
Cinema of Mexico
Year Director Title Role Notes
1937 Miguel Contreras Torres Don't Fool Yourself, Dear Canti
1937 Arcady Boytler Such Is My Country El Tejón
1937 Arcady Boytler Heads or Tails Polito Sol
1939 Chano Urueta The Sign of Death Cantinflas
1939 Fernando Rivera Siempre listo en las tinieblas Chencho Albondigon Short
1939 Fernando Rivera Jengibre contra Dinamita Cantinflas Short
1940 Juan Bustillo Oro You're Missing the Point Cantinflas / "Leonardo del Paso"
1940 Carlos Toussaint Cantinflas y su prima Cantinflas Short
1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas ruletero Cantinflas Short
1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas boxeador Cantinflas Short
1941 Alejandro Galindo Neither Blood Nor Sand El Chato / Manuel Márquez "Manolete"
1941 Miguel M. Delgado The Unknown Policeman Badge Number 777
1942 Carlos Villatoro Carnival in the Tropics Himself Cameo
1942 Miguel M. Delgado The Three Musketeers Cantinflas / D'Artagnan
1943 Miguel M. Delgado The Circus Cantinflas
1943 Miguel M. Delgado Romeo and Juliet Romeo de Montesco / Abelardo Del Monte
1944 Miguel M. Delgado Gran Hotel Cantinflas
1945 Miguel M. Delgado A Day with the Devil Juan Pérez
1946 Miguel M. Delgado I Am a Fugitive Cantinflas
1947 Miguel M. Delgado Fly Away, Young Man! Cantinflas
1948 Miguel M. Delgado The Genius Cantinflas
1949 Miguel M. Delgado The Magician Cantinflas
1950 Miguel M. Delgado The Doorman El Portero
1951 Miguel M. Delgado El Siete Machos Margarito
1952 Miguel M. Delgado If I Were a Congressman Cantinflas
1952 Miguel M. Delgado The Atomic Fireman Agente 777
1953 Raúl Medina Bella, la salvaje
1953 Miguel M. Delgado The Photographer Cantinflas
1954 Miguel M. Delgado A Tailored Gentleman Cantinflas
1955 Miguel M. Delgado Drop the Curtain Cantinflas
1957 Miguel M. Delgado El bolero de Raquel El Bolero
1958 Tulio Demicheli Ama a tu prójimo Luis
1959 Miguel M. Delgado Sube y baja El falso Jorge Maciel
1961 Miguel M. Delgado The Illiterate One Inocencio Prieto y Calvo
1962 Miguel M. Delgado The Extra Rogaciano
1963 Miguel M. Delgado Immediate Delivery Feliciano Calloso
1964 Miguel M. Delgado El padrecito Sebastián
1965 Miguel M. Delgado El señor doctor Salvador Medina
1967 Miguel M. Delgado Su excelencia Lopitos
1968 Miguel M. Delgado Por mis pistolas Fidencio Barrenillo
1969 Miguel M. Delgado Un Quijote sin mancha Justo Leal, Aventado
1971 Miguel M. Delgado El profe Sócrates García
1973 Roberto Gavaldón Don Quijote cabalga de nuevo Sancho Panza
1973 Miguel M. Delgado Conserje en condominio Úrsulo
1976 Miguel M. Delgado El ministro y yo Mateo Melgarejo
1978 Miguel M. Delgado El patrullero 777 Diógenes Bravo
1982 Miguel M. Delgado El barrendero Napoleón

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Film Outcome
1952 Ariel Awards[38] Special Ariel Won
1987 Golden Ariel Won
1957 Golden Globe Awards[39] Best Performance by an Actor
in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical
Around the World in 80 Days Won
1961 Pepe Nominated
1961 Laurel Awards Top Male Comedy Performance Nominated
1962 Menorah Awards[40] Best Comic Actor El analfabeto Won

See also

References

  1. ^ "The peladito is the creature who came from the carpas with a face stained with flour or white paint, dressed in rags, the pants below the waist and covered with patches, the belt replaced by an old tie, the peaked cap representing a hat, the ruffled underwear that shows at any provocation, the torn shirt, and gabardine across his left shoulder." – Cantiflas
  2. ^ Candelaria, Cordelia; Arturo J. Aldama; Peter J. Garcia (2004). Encyclopedia of Latino Popular Culture: Volume I, A-L. Greenwood. p. 103. ISBN 0-313-33210-X.
  3. ^ a b Cantinflas biography by Allmovie Retrieved 24 January 2006.[dead link]
  4. ^ Yahoo Cantinflas biography. Retrieved 9 February 2006.
  5. ^ Ilan Stavans. The riddle of Cantinflas: Essays on Hispanic popular culture, 1st ed. ISBN 0-8263-1860-6. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico. 1998, p. 37.
  6. ^ Biography from Vanity Magazine Retrieved 29 January 2006.
  7. ^ Sughey Baños (15 May 2017). "Mario Moreno Ivanova dejó todo en orden: viuda" (in Spanish). Eluniversal.com.mx. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  8. ^ Diario Masónico (12 August 2017). "Solicitud de ingreso en la masonerĂ­a de Mario Moreno "Cantinflas"". Diariomasonico.com. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  9. ^ "Cantinflas". Freemasonry.bcy.ca. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  10. ^ Gilbert Garcia, "Castro unlike O'Rourke has much to lose," San Antonio Express-News, 31 March 2017, p. A2.
  11. ^ "Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" (1992) Su Ultima Entrevista Por Television" (in Spanish). YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  12. ^ a b c d Cantinflas article by the Los Angeles Times Retrieved 24 January 2006
  13. ^ . Somo Magazine. Archived from the original on 8 February 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2006.
  14. ^ See Jacques Gelman
  15. ^ Film awards for Cantinflas Retrieved 29 January 2006.
  16. ^ Variety magazine review of film Retrieved 29 January 2006
  17. ^ Box office figures from Box Office Mojo Retrieved 31 January 2006
  18. ^ Biederman, Christine (19 October 2000). . Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on 15 April 2006. Retrieved 27 January 2006.
  19. ^ Article on theatre re-enactment of Cantinflas' humor Retrieved 30 January 2006
  20. ^ "Recuerdan a 'Cantinflas' en el Panteón Español" [Cantinflas remembered at the Spanish Cemetery] (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  21. ^ "Recuerdan a Cantinflas en Panteón Español" [Cantinflas remembered at the Spanish Cemetery] (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  22. ^ "Profanan la tumba de "Cantinflas" en la Ciudad de México" [Cantinflas tomb defiled] (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  23. ^ "Carmen Salinas: Spanish Cemetery, beloved actress final resting place". 10 December 2021. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  24. ^ "Tras 21 años de pleito, el sobrino de Cantinflas gana juicio por los derechos del actor" (in Spanish).
  25. ^ Cantinflear at the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy Retrieved 21 January 2006
  26. ^ D'Souza, Karen. Mercury News "Remembering Cantinflas"
  27. ^ Yahoo entry on the Cantinflas Show Retrieved 24 January 2006
  28. ^ . walkoffame.com. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on 1 September 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  29. ^ Biography from Barnes & Noble Retrieved 25 January 2006.
  30. ^ . ErnieG. Archived from the original on 23 February 2006. Retrieved 29 January 2006.
  31. ^ "Mario Moreno "Cantinflas'" 107th Birthday". Google. 12 August 2018. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  32. ^ Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity. Retrieved 1 February 2006
  33. ^ Monsiváis, p. 52
  34. ^ Novo, p. 47
  35. ^ Pilcher, p. xxii
  36. ^ Pilcher, p. xviii
  37. ^ . academiamexicanadecine.org.mx. Archived from the original on 24 October 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  38. ^ . goldenglobes.org. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  39. ^ García Riera, Emilio (1992). Historia documental del cine mexicano: 1961–1963. Universidad de Guadalajara. p. 141. ISBN 9789688955406.

Sources

  • Garcia Riera, Emilio, 1970. Historia documental del cine mexicano, vol. II.
  • Leñero, Vicente. Historia del Teatro de los Insurgentes.
  • Monsiváis, Carlos, 1999. Cantinflas and Tin Tan: Mexico's Greatest Comedians. In Hershfield, Joanne, and Maciel, David R. (Eds.), Mexico's Cinema: A Century of Film and Filmmakers, pp. 49–79. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources, Inc. ISBN 0-8420-2681-9
  • Morales, Miguel Ángel, 1996. Cantinflas: Amo de las carpas. México: Editorial Clío, Libros y Videos, S. A. de C. V. ISBN 968-6932-58-5
  • Novo, Salvador, 1967. Nueva grandeza mexicana. México: Ediciones Era.
  • Pilcher, Jeffrey M., 2001. Cantinflas and the chaos of Mexican modernity. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources. ISBN 0-8420-2769-6
  • Smith, Ronald L. (Ed.), (1992). Who's Who in Comedy pp. 88–89. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 0-8160-2338-7
  • Stavans, Ilan, 1998. The Riddle of Cantinflas: Essays on Hispanic popular culture. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-1860-6

External links

  • Cantinflas at IMDb
  • (in Spanish) at the cinema of Mexico site of the ITESM
  • (in Spanish) Cantinflas Fan site
  • (in Spanish) Cantinflas Movie Official Facebook Page of the 2014 Biopic Movie Cantinflas
  • (in Spanish) Cantinflas Movie Official Page of the 2014 Biopic Movie Cantinflas
  • Cantinflas 107th Birthday at Google Doodles

cantinflas, mario, moreno, redirects, here, other, people, named, mario, moreno, mario, moreno, disambiguation, this, article, about, actor, 2014, film, film, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, moreno, second, maternal, family, name, reyes, mario, . Mario Moreno redirects here For other people named Mario Moreno see Mario Moreno disambiguation This article is about the actor For the 2014 film see Cantinflas film In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Moreno and the second or maternal family name is Reyes Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes 12 August 1911 20 April 1993 known by the stage name Cantinflas Spanish pronunciation kanˈtiɱflas was a Mexican comedian actor and filmmaker He is considered to have been the most widely accomplished Mexican comedian and is celebrated throughout Latin America and in Spain as a popular icon His humor loaded with Mexican linguistic features of intonation vocabulary and syntax is beloved in all the Spanish speaking countries of Latin America and in Spain and has given rise to a range of expressions including cantinflear cantinflada cantinflesco and cantinflero CantinflasCantinflas in 1964BornMario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes 1911 08 12 12 August 1911Santa Maria la Redonda Mexico City MexicoDied20 April 1993 1993 04 20 aged 81 Mexico City MexicoBurial placePanteon Espanol Mexico City MexicoNationalityMexicanOther namesMario MorenoCitizenshipMexicanEducationInstituto Politecnico Nacional Chapingo Autonomous University Agronomy few months Occupation s Comedian actor screenwriter film producer singerYears active1936 1984Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary PartySpouseValentina Ivanova Zubareff m 1936 died 1966 wbr ChildrenMario Arturo MorenoWebsitehttps iamcantinflas com He often portrayed impoverished farmers or a peasant of pelado origin 1 The character allowed Cantinflas to establish a long successful film career that included a foray into Hollywood Charlie Chaplin once commented that he was the best comedian alive 2 and Moreno has been referred to as the Charlie Chaplin of Mexico 3 To audiences in most of the world he is best remembered as co starring with David Niven in the Oscar winning film Around the World in 80 Days for which Moreno won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor Motion Picture Musical or Comedy As a pioneer of the cinema of Mexico Moreno helped usher in its golden era In addition to being a business leader he also became involved in Mexico s tangled and often dangerous labor politics His reputation as a spokesperson for the downtrodden gave his actions authenticity and became important in the early struggle against charrismo the one party government s practice of co opting and controlling unions citation needed Moreover his character Cantinflas whose identity became enmeshed with his own was examined by media critics philosophers and linguists who saw him variously as a danger to Mexican society a bourgeois puppet a verbal innovator and a picaresque underdog citation needed Contents 1 Early and personal life 2 Origin of name 3 Entertainment career 3 1 Film career 4 Theater 5 Hollywood and beyond 6 Death 7 Career 7 1 Characterisations 8 Critical response 9 Filmography 10 Awards and nominations 11 See also 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksEarly and personal life Edit Apartment building that occupies the premises of the vecindad where Mario Moreno Cantinflas was born former Sexta Calle de Santa Maria la Redonda Sixth Street of Santa Maria la Redonda today Eje Central Lazaro Cardenas 182 Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes was born in Santa Maria la Redonda neighbourhood of Mexico City and grew up in the tough neighbourhood of Tepito He was one of eight children born to Pedro Moreno Esquivel an impoverished mail carrier and Maria de la Soledad Reyes Guizar from Cotija Michoacan The others were Pedro Jose Pepe Eduardo Esperanza Catalina Enrique and Roberto 4 He made it through difficult situations with the quick wit and street smarts that he would later apply in his films His comic personality led him to a circus tent show and from there to legitimate theatre and film He married Valentina Ivanova Zubareff of Russian ethnicity on 27 October 1936 and remained with her until her death in January 1966 A son was born to Moreno in 1961 by another woman 5 the child was adopted by Valentina Ivanova and was named Mario Arturo Moreno Ivanova causing some references to erroneously refer to him as Cantinflas adopted son 6 Moreno Ivanova died on 15 May 2017 of a presumed heart attack 7 Moreno served as president of one of the Mexican actors guilds known as Asociacion Nacional de Actores ANDA National Association of Actors and as first secretary general of the independent filmworkers union Sindicato de Trabajadores de la Produccion Cinematografica STPC citation needed Following his retirement he devoted his life to helping others through charity and humanitarian organizations especially those dedicated to helping children His contributions to the Roman Catholic Church and orphanages made him a folk hero in Mexico citation needed He was a Freemason initiated at Chilam Balam Lodge 8 9 In 1961 Cantinflas appeared with Vice President Lyndon B Johnson at shopping centers and supermarkets in San Antonio Texas to support the successful Democratic nominee to the United States House of Representatives for Texas s 20th congressional district Henry B Gonzalez who defeated his Republican challenger John W Goode Gonzalez was the first Hispanic elected to the Texas State Senate and as a U S congressman from Texas 10 Origin of name EditAs a young man Cantinflas performed a variety of acts in travelling tents and it was here that he acquired the nickname Cantinflas According to one obituary Cantinflas is a meaningless name invented to prevent his parents from knowing he was in the entertainment business which they considered a shameful occupation Cantinflas confirmed as much in 1992 in his last television interview 11 Of course the relationship between Moreno s little used first given name Fortino and the character in William Shakespeare s Hamlet Fortinbras offers a striking parallel with the stage name of much younger contemporary Chespirito Little Shakespeare in a garbled Mexican pronunciation Entertainment career EditBefore starting his professional life in entertainment he explored a number of possible careers such as medicine and professional boxing before joining the entertainment world as a dancer By 1930 he was involved in Mexico City s carpa travelling tent circuit performing in succession with the Ofelia Sotelo of Azcapotzalco and finally the Valentina carpa where he met his future wife At first he tried to imitate Al Jolson by smearing his face with black paint but later separated himself to form his own identity as an impoverished slum dweller with baggy pants a rope for a belt and a distinctive mustache 12 In the tents he danced performed acrobatics and performed roles related to several different professions Film career Edit Cantinflas left with Manuel Medel c 1938 In the mid 1930s Cantinflas met publicist and producer Santiago Reachi and subsequently partnered with him to form their own film production venture Reachi produced directed and distributed while Cantinflas acted Cantinflas made his film debut in 1936 with No te enganes corazon Don t Fool Yourself Dear before meeting Reachi but the film received little attention Reachi established Posa Films in 1939 with two partners Cantinflas and Fernandez Before this Reachi produced short films that allowed him to develop the Cantinflas character but it was in 1940 that he finally became a movie star after shooting Ahi esta el detalle There s the rub literally There lies the detail with Sofia Alvarez Joaquin Pardave Sara Garcia and Dolores Camarillo The phrase that gave that movie its name became a Cantinflas or catchphrase for the remainder of his career The film was a breakthrough in Latin America and was later recognized by Somos magazine as the 10th greatest film produced largely in Mexico 13 In 1941 Moreno first played the role of a police officer on film in El gendarme desconocido The Unknown Police Officer a play on words on The Unknown Soldier By this time he had sufficiently distinguished the peladito character from the 1920s era pelado and his character flowed comfortably from the disenfranchised marginalized underclassman to the empowered public servant The rhetoric of cantinflismo facilitated this fluidity citation needed He would reprise the role of Agent 777 and be honored by police forces throughout Latin America for his positive portrayal of law enforcement Ni sangre ni arena Neither Blood nor Sand a play on words on the bullfighter gladiator phrase Blood and Sand the 1941 bullfighting film broke box office records for Mexican made films throughout Spanish speaking countries In 1942 Moreno teamed up with Reachi Miguel M Delgado and Jaime Salvador to produce a series of parodies including El Circo an interpretation of Chaplin s The Circus The 1940s and 1950s were Cantinflas heyday In 1941 Reachi the Producer rejected Mexican Studios companies and instead paid Columbia Pictures to produce the films in its Studios in Hollywood 12 By this time Cantinflas popularity was such that he was able to lend his prestige to the cause of Mexican labor representing the National Association of Actors in talks with President Manuel Avila Camacho The talks did not go well however and in the resulting scandal Moreno took his act back to the theatre citation needed Theater EditOn 30 August 1953 Cantinflas began performing his theatrical work Yo Colon I Columbus in the Teatro de los Insurgentes the same theatre that had earlier been embroiled in a controversy over a Diego Rivera mural incorporating Cantinflas and the Virgin of Guadalupe Critics including the PAN and archbishop Luis Maria Martinez called the mural blasphemous and it was eventually painted without the image of the Virgin Yo Colon placed Cantinflas in the character of Christopher Columbus who while continually discovering America made comedic historical and contemporary observations from fresh perspectives For the first few months he persuaded the King and Queen of Spain to fund his voyage so that he could let his wife drive so she could make a wrong turn and discover Mexico instead allowing him to also discover Jorge Negrete so that the Queen an ardent fan could meet him When Negrete died just before Christmas of 1953 he changed it first to Pedro Infante until his death four years later and then finally to Javier Solis until his death in 1966 Hollywood and beyond Edit Mario Moreno Cantinflas by Rufino Tamayo 1948 exhibition The Collection of Mexican Painting by Jacques and Natasha Gelman 14 poster 1992 Cultural Center of Contemporary Art defunct City of Mexico In 1956 Around the World in 80 Days Cantinflas American debut earned him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a musical or comedy 15 Variety magazine said in 1956 that his Chaplinesque quality made a big contribution to the success of the film 16 The film ultimately made an unadjusted 42 million at the box office 17 over 678 million in 2018 dollars While David Niven was billed as the lead in English speaking nations Cantinflas was billed as the lead elsewhere As a result of the film Cantinflas became the world s highest paid actor 18 Moreno s second Hollywood feature Pepe attempted to replicate the success of his first The film had cameo appearances by Frank Sinatra Judy Garland Maurice Chevalier Shirley Jones Ricardo Montalban James Coburn Debbie Reynolds Cesar Romero and other stars His humor deeply rooted in the Spanish language did not translate well for the American audience and the movie was a notorious box office disappointment He still earned a Golden Globe nomination for his part Later in a 1992 American interview Moreno cited the language barrier as the biggest impediment to his making it big in the United States 19 After returning to Mexico Cantinflas starred in the comic drama El bolero de Raquel 1957 the first Cantinflas film to be distributed to the United States by Columbia Pictures The film was followed by more Cantinflas Reachi Columbia productions El analfabeto 1961 El padrecito 1963 and Su excelencia 1967 After Su excelencia Cantinflas began to appear in a series of very low budget comedies directed by Miguel M Delgado which were produced by his own company Cantinflas Films These films lasted until El Barrendero in 1982 Like Charlie Chaplin Cantinflas was a social satirist He played el pelado an impoverished Everyman with hopes to succeed With mutual admiration Cantinflas was influenced by Chaplin s earlier films and ideology El Circo the circus was a shadow of Chaplin s silent film The Circus and Si yo fuera diputado If I Were a Congressman had many similarities with the 1940 film The Great Dictator Cantinflas films to this day still generate revenue for Columbia Pictures In 2000 Columbia reported in an estimated US 4 million in foreign distribution from the films 12 Death EditA life long smoker Cantinflas died of lung cancer on 20 April 1993 in Mexico City Thousands appeared on a rainy day for his funeral The ceremony was a national event lasting three days He was honored by many heads of state and the United States Senate which held a moment of silence for him His ashes lay at the crypt of the Moreno Reyes family in the Panteon Espanol Spanish Cemetery in Mexico City 20 21 22 23 A 20 year legal battle followed between Mario Moreno Ivanova Cantinflas son and heir to his estate and the actor s blood nephew Eduardo Moreno Laparade over the control of 34 films made by Cantinflas The nephew claimed his uncle gave him a written notice Moreno Ivanova argued that he was the direct heir of Cantinflas and that the rights belonged to him In 2014 Eduardo Moreno Laparade won the rights at the Mexican Supreme Court to 39 films and the name 24 At the same time there was another legal battle between Columbia Pictures and Moreno Ivanova over control of these films Columbia claimed that it had bought the rights to the 34 films four decades earlier although the court noted several discrepancies in the papers Moreno Ivanova wanted the rights to the films to remain his and more generally Mexico s as a national treasure On 2 June 2001 the eight year battle was resolved with Columbia retaining ownership over the 34 disputed films 25 Career Edit Meeting with Mexican president Miguel Aleman Valdes seated from left to right Jorge Negrete the president Miguel Aleman Valdes Cantinflas and Maria Tereza Montoya es Cantinflas star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles Hand and Foot Prints at Graumanns Chinese Theater in Los Angeles CA USA Among the things that endeared him to his public was his comic use of language in his films his characters all of which were really variations of the main Cantinflas persona but cast in different social roles and circumstances would strike up a normal conversation and then complicate it to the point where no one understood what they were talking about The Cantinflas character was particularly adept at obfuscating the conversation when he owed somebody money was courting an attractive young woman or was trying to talk his way out of trouble with authorities whom he managed to humiliate without their even being able to tell This manner of talking became known as Cantinflear and it became common parlance for Spanish speakers to say estas cantinfleando loosely translated as you re pulling a Cantinflas or you re Cantinflassing whenever someone became hard to understand in conversation The Real Academia Espanola officially included the verb cantinflear cantinflas and cantinflada 26 in its dictionary in 1992 In the visual arts Mexican artists such as Rufino Tamayo and Diego Rivera painted Cantinflas as a symbol of the Mexican everyman Cantinflas style and the content of his films have led scholars to conclude that he influenced the many teatros that spread the message of the Chicano Movement during the 1960s 1970s in the United States the most important of which was El Teatro Campesino The teatro movement was an important part of the cultural renaissance that was the social counterpart of the political movement for the civil rights of Mexican Americans Cantinflas use of social themes and style is seen as a precursor to Chicano theater 27 A cartoon series the Cantinflas Show was made in 1972 starring an animated Cantinflas The show was targeted for children and was intended to be educational 28 The first animated version animated by Santiago Moro and his brother Jose Luis Moro for Televisa in the early 1970s Cantinflas Show which educated children by meeting such notable people as Chopin Louis Pasteur Albert Einstein and William Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet as well learning how important water and oil is and educational parodies of some of his famous movies like Su Excelencia La Carta with incidental music from Aaron Copland s El Salon Mexico In the second version his character was known as Little Amigo and concentrated on a wide range of subjects intended to educate children from the origin of soccer to the reasons behind the International Date Line The second animated series animated in 1979 and dubbed in English in 1982 was a joint venture between Televisa and Hanna Barbera and Mario Moreno voiced Little Amigo Cantinflas in the Spanish version and Don Messick voiced Little Amigo and John Stephenson as the narrator in the English version Both The Cantinflas Show and Amigos and Friends aired in the mid 1990s on Univision and Televisa re aired The Cantinflas Show in the mid 1990s Although Cantinflas never achieved the same success in the United States as in Mexico he was honored with a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6438 Hollywood Boulevard 29 He earned two Golden Globe nominations winning one for best actor and the Mexican Academy of Film Lifetime Achievement Award 3 30 His handprints have been imbedded onto the Paseo de las Luminarias for his work in motion pictures The Mario Moreno Cantinflas Award is handed out annually for entertainers who represent the Latino community with the same humor and distinction as the legendary Mario Moreno Cantinflas and who like Cantinflas utilizes his power to help those most in need 31 On August 12 2018 the Google Doodle paid homage to Cantinflas on his 107th birth anniversary 32 Characterisations Edit Moreno s life is the subject of the biographical film Cantinflas 2014 directed by Sebastian del Amo It stars oscar Jaenada who portrays a young Mario Moreno attempting to gain respect and make a living as an actor and award winning actor Michael Imperioli as Mike Todd an American film producer struggling to film his masterpiece The film is centered in Moreno s personal life and in the development of Todd s Golden Globe Award winning 1956 film Around the World in 80 Days Critical response Edit Work called Tribute to Mario Moreno Cantinflas made in 1952 by the Chilean muralist Fernando Marcos Miranda Cantinflas is sometimes seen as a Mexican Groucho Marx character one who uses his skill with words to puncture the pretensions of the wealthy and powerful the police and the government with the difference that he strongly supported democracy Historian and author of Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity writes Cantinflas symbolized the underdog who triumphed through trickery over more powerful opponents and presents Cantinflas as a self image of a transitional Mexico Gregorio Luke executive director of the Museum of Latin American Art said To understand Cantinflas is to understand what happened in Mexico during the last century 12 33 Monsivais interprets Moreno s portrayals in terms of the importance of the spoken word in the context of Mexico s reigning illiteracy 70 in 1930 Particularly in the film El analfabeto The Illiterate Cantinflas is the illiterate who takes control of the language by whatever means he can 34 The journalist Salvador Novo interprets the role of Moreno s character entirely in terms of Cantinflismo En condensarlos en entregar a la saludable carcajada del pueblo la esencia demagogica de su vacuo confusionismo estriba el merito y se asegura la gloria de este hijo cazurro de la ciudad ladina y burlona de Mexico que es Cantinflas In condensing them the leaders of the world and of Mexico in returning to the healthy laughter of the people the demagogic essence of their empty confusion merit is sustained and glory is ensured for the self contained son of the Spanish speaking mocker of Mexico who Cantinflas portrays 35 In his biography of the comic scholar of Mexican culture Jeffrey M Pilcher views Cantinflas as a metaphor for the chaos of Mexican modernity a modernity that was just out of reach for the majority of Mexicans His nonsense language eloquently expressed the contradictions of modernity as the palpitating moment of everything that wants to be that which it cannot be 36 Likewise Social hierarchies speech patterns ethnic identities and masculine forms of behavior all crumbled before his chaotic humor to be reformulated in revolutionary new ways 37 Filmography EditCinema of the United StatesYear Director Title Role Notes1956 Michael Anderson Around the World in 80 Days Passepartout1960 George Sidney Pepe Pepe1969 Norman Foster The Great Sex War General MarcosCinema of MexicoYear Director Title Role Notes1937 Miguel Contreras Torres Don t Fool Yourself Dear Canti1937 Arcady Boytler Such Is My Country El Tejon1937 Arcady Boytler Heads or Tails Polito Sol1939 Chano Urueta The Sign of Death Cantinflas1939 Fernando Rivera Siempre listo en las tinieblas Chencho Albondigon Short1939 Fernando Rivera Jengibre contra Dinamita Cantinflas Short1940 Juan Bustillo Oro You re Missing the Point Cantinflas Leonardo del Paso 1940 Carlos Toussaint Cantinflas y su prima Cantinflas Short1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas ruletero Cantinflas Short1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas boxeador Cantinflas Short1941 Alejandro Galindo Neither Blood Nor Sand El Chato Manuel Marquez Manolete 1941 Miguel M Delgado The Unknown Policeman Badge Number 7771942 Carlos Villatoro Carnival in the Tropics Himself Cameo1942 Miguel M Delgado The Three Musketeers Cantinflas D Artagnan1943 Miguel M Delgado The Circus Cantinflas1943 Miguel M Delgado Romeo and Juliet Romeo de Montesco Abelardo Del Monte1944 Miguel M Delgado Gran Hotel Cantinflas1945 Miguel M Delgado A Day with the Devil Juan Perez1946 Miguel M Delgado I Am a Fugitive Cantinflas1947 Miguel M Delgado Fly Away Young Man Cantinflas1948 Miguel M Delgado The Genius Cantinflas1949 Miguel M Delgado The Magician Cantinflas1950 Miguel M Delgado The Doorman El Portero1951 Miguel M Delgado El Siete Machos Margarito1952 Miguel M Delgado If I Were a Congressman Cantinflas1952 Miguel M Delgado The Atomic Fireman Agente 7771953 Raul Medina Bella la salvaje1953 Miguel M Delgado The Photographer Cantinflas1954 Miguel M Delgado A Tailored Gentleman Cantinflas1955 Miguel M Delgado Drop the Curtain Cantinflas1957 Miguel M Delgado El bolero de Raquel El Bolero1958 Tulio Demicheli Ama a tu projimo Luis1959 Miguel M Delgado Sube y baja El falso Jorge Maciel1961 Miguel M Delgado The Illiterate One Inocencio Prieto y Calvo1962 Miguel M Delgado The Extra Rogaciano1963 Miguel M Delgado Immediate Delivery Feliciano Calloso1964 Miguel M Delgado El padrecito Sebastian1965 Miguel M Delgado El senor doctor Salvador Medina1967 Miguel M Delgado Su excelencia Lopitos1968 Miguel M Delgado Por mis pistolas Fidencio Barrenillo1969 Miguel M Delgado Un Quijote sin mancha Justo Leal Aventado1971 Miguel M Delgado El profe Socrates Garcia1973 Roberto Gavaldon Don Quijote cabalga de nuevo Sancho Panza1973 Miguel M Delgado Conserje en condominio Ursulo1976 Miguel M Delgado El ministro y yo Mateo Melgarejo1978 Miguel M Delgado El patrullero 777 Diogenes Bravo1982 Miguel M Delgado El barrendero NapoleonAwards and nominations EditYear Award Category Film Outcome1952 Ariel Awards 38 Special Ariel Won1987 Golden Ariel Won1957 Golden Globe Awards 39 Best Performance by an Actorin a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical Around the World in 80 Days Won1961 Pepe Nominated1961 Laurel Awards Top Male Comedy Performance Nominated1962 Menorah Awards 40 Best Comic Actor El analfabeto WonSee also EditMononymous person ChespiritoReferences Edit The peladito is the creature who came from the carpas with a face stained with flour or white paint dressed in rags the pants below the waist and covered with patches the belt replaced by an old tie the peaked cap representing a hat the ruffled underwear that shows at any provocation the torn shirt and gabardine across his left shoulder Cantiflas Candelaria Cordelia Arturo J Aldama Peter J Garcia 2004 Encyclopedia of Latino Popular Culture Volume I A L Greenwood p 103 ISBN 0 313 33210 X a b Cantinflas biography by Allmovie Retrieved 24 January 2006 dead link Yahoo Cantinflas biography Retrieved 9 February 2006 Ilan Stavans The riddle of Cantinflas Essays on Hispanic popular culture 1st ed ISBN 0 8263 1860 6 Albuquerque NM University of New Mexico 1998 p 37 Biography from Vanity Magazine Retrieved 29 January 2006 Sughey Banos 15 May 2017 Mario Moreno Ivanova dejo todo en orden viuda in Spanish Eluniversal com mx Retrieved 17 August 2017 Diario Masonico 12 August 2017 Solicitud de ingreso en la masonerĂ a de Mario Moreno Cantinflas Diariomasonico com Retrieved 17 August 2017 Cantinflas Freemasonry bcy ca Retrieved 17 August 2017 Gilbert Garcia Castro unlike O Rourke has much to lose San Antonio Express News 31 March 2017 p A2 Mario Moreno Cantinflas 1992 Su Ultima Entrevista Por Television in Spanish YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 14 February 2015 a b c d Cantinflas article by the Los Angeles Times Retrieved 24 January 2006 Las 100 mejores peliculas del cine mexicano Somo Magazine Archived from the original on 8 February 2010 Retrieved 28 January 2006 See Jacques Gelman Film awards for Cantinflas Retrieved 29 January 2006 Variety magazine review of film Retrieved 29 January 2006 Box office figures from Box Office Mojo Retrieved 31 January 2006 Biederman Christine 19 October 2000 The Power and No Story Dallas Observer Archived from the original on 15 April 2006 Retrieved 27 January 2006 Article on theatre re enactment of Cantinflas humor Retrieved 30 January 2006 Recuerdan a Cantinflas en el Panteon Espanol Cantinflas remembered at the Spanish Cemetery in Spanish Retrieved 26 May 2022 Recuerdan a Cantinflas en Panteon Espanol Cantinflas remembered at the Spanish Cemetery in Spanish Retrieved 26 May 2022 Profanan la tumba de Cantinflas en la Ciudad de Mexico Cantinflas tomb defiled in Spanish Retrieved 26 May 2022 Carmen Salinas Spanish Cemetery beloved actress final resting place 10 December 2021 Retrieved 26 May 2022 Tras 21 anos de pleito el sobrino de Cantinflas gana juicio por los derechos del actor in Spanish Columbia gains ownership of films PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 December 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2006 Cantinflear at the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy Retrieved 21 January 2006 D Souza Karen Mercury News Remembering Cantinflas Yahoo entry on the Cantinflas Show Retrieved 24 January 2006 Hollywood Walk of Fame Cantinflas walkoffame com Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Archived from the original on 1 September 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2018 Biography from Barnes amp Noble Retrieved 25 January 2006 Mario Moreno Cantinflas Award ErnieG Archived from the original on 23 February 2006 Retrieved 29 January 2006 Mario Moreno Cantinflas 107th Birthday Google 12 August 2018 Retrieved 12 August 2018 Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity Retrieved 1 February 2006 Monsivais p 52 Novo p 47 Pilcher p xxii Pilcher p xviii Ariel Ganadores y nominados Mario Moreno academiamexicanadecine org mx Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Golden Globe Awards Official Website Cantinflas goldenglobes org Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Garcia Riera Emilio 1992 Historia documental del cine mexicano 1961 1963 Universidad de Guadalajara p 141 ISBN 9789688955406 Sources EditGarcia Riera Emilio 1970 Historia documental del cine mexicano vol II Lenero Vicente Historia del Teatro de los Insurgentes Monsivais Carlos 1999 Cantinflas and Tin Tan Mexico s Greatest Comedians In Hershfield Joanne and Maciel David R Eds Mexico s Cinema A Century of Film and Filmmakers pp 49 79 Wilmington Delaware Scholarly Resources Inc ISBN 0 8420 2681 9 Morales Miguel Angel 1996 Cantinflas Amo de las carpas Mexico Editorial Clio Libros y Videos S A de C V ISBN 968 6932 58 5 Novo Salvador 1967 Nueva grandeza mexicana Mexico Ediciones Era Pilcher Jeffrey M 2001 Cantinflas and the chaos of Mexican modernity Wilmington Delaware Scholarly Resources ISBN 0 8420 2769 6 Smith Ronald L Ed 1992 Who s Who in Comedy pp 88 89 New York Facts on File ISBN 0 8160 2338 7 Stavans Ilan 1998 The Riddle of Cantinflas Essays on Hispanic popular culture Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 1860 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cantinflas Cantinflas at IMDb in Spanish Cantinflas at the cinema of Mexico site of the ITESM in Spanish Cantinflas Fan site in Spanish Cantinflas Movie Official Facebook Page of the 2014 Biopic Movie Cantinflas in Spanish Cantinflas Movie Official Page of the 2014 Biopic Movie Cantinflas Cantinflas 107th Birthday at Google Doodles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cantinflas amp oldid 1144028057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.