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Cantinflas

 
Biography: Cantinflas

Cantinflas (1911 - 1993) was one of Mexico's most beloved cinematic figures, a masterful comedian who cast himself as the resourceful voice of the common people. With a stream of his trademark non-sense talk, he could neutralize the powerful or work around the most absurd forms of bureaucracy.

That nonsense talk was so well known that by the end of his life Spanish dictionaries listed a new verb, cantinflear, meaning to talk a lot without really saying anything. Cantinflas released some 45 films over his long career, gaining some recognition among English-speaking audiences when he appeared in the 1956 crowd-pleaser Around the World in 80 Days. Often considered a Mexican counterpart to silent-film comedian Charlie Chaplin - an impression reinforced when Chaplin, according to the Houston Chronicle, called him "the greatest co-median alive" - Cantinflas actually blended verbal comedy in a way that recalled various figures of early English-language cinema without resembling any of them closely.

Performed on Streets

The youngest of eight surviving children in his family, Cantinflas (cahn-TEEN-flas) was born Mario Moreno Reyes August 12, 1911, in Mexico City. His father, a post office worker, hoped for professional success for his son and enrolled him in good schools. But Cantinflas preferred to watch the Mexican capital's numerous street performers and, as soon as he was old enough, to try to imitate their tricks and acrobatic feats. Although he did not grow up in extreme poverty, he soon gained sympathy for those who did. Cantinflas was sent to a government agricultural school when he was 15, but he dropped out to join a carpa - the Mexican version of the American tent show.

For a while, Cantinflas was a jack-of-all trades after dropping out of school. He acquired his unusual stage name, which had no real meaning in Spanish, very early on. Several stories have circulated as to its origin, but he seems to have derived it from "En la cantina, tu inflas" (In a bar, you drink), a line that amused him when it was hurled his way by a drunken heckler one night in a bar. He was looking for a stage name, anyhow, for he still hoped to hide his performing career from his parents. Cantinflas was active as both a boxer and a bullfighter, activities that demanded quick thinking.

In the bull ring, Cantinflas was a torero bufo, a comic matador so popular that pawnshops had to be closed to stop poor fans from putting their possessions in hock so they could see him perform. Later, in films (including Around the World in 80 Days) he performed versions of his bullfighting routine, in which he would walk into the ring, head buried in a newspaper, and remain motionless until the charging bull was inches away. Cantinflas was a ham in the boxing ring as well, and on stage in the tent shows he was popular as a dancer.

None of these appearances required him to speak much, however, and one night when he filled in for a sick friend as a tent show's emcee he was seized with stage fright. As he tried to deliver his lines, he began to talk nervously and rapidly, saying the first thing that came into his mind just so that he could keep going. The audience, thinking that the rapid-fire patter was part of his routine, started to laugh, and Cantinflas kept on dishing up more of it. As he refined his unexpectedly successful act, the central part of his performing personality was born. His nonsense speech was a mixture of double-talk, mangled high-class mannerisms, malapropism, and pantomime, at which he always excelled - one of his specialties was a full-scale game of pool, with no table, balls, or cue stick. In a country with a small hereditary aristocracy and a growing urban underclass, Cantinflas used his nonsense speech to twit upper-class ways.

Joined Follies Bergère

Cantinflas climbed his way up the theatrical ladder and in 1935 joined the cast of the Follies Bergère variety show in Mexico City. He made his first film appearance the following year in No te engañes, corazón (Don't Kid Yourself, Sweetheart), but the film had little success. In 1937 he married Valentina Ivanova Zubareff, the daughter of a Russian-born tent show owner. The two stayed together until Valentina's death in 1966 and raised a son, Mario. Valentina urged Cantinflas to keep trying to crack the growing world of cinema, and he appeared in several more films. In the late 1930s he made a series of comic short subjects in which he was featured in a short story but that were essentially commercials for various products, shown along with newsreels between film presentations. The director of these films signed Cantinflas to make two full-length features, Ahí está el detalle (Here's the Point, 1940) and Ni sangre ni arena (Neither Blood Nor Sand, 1941). These films had Mexicans lining up in the street and outgrossed the top imported comedy of 1941, Chaplin's The Great Dictator; it was apparently Ni sangre ni arena that inspired Chaplin to put Cantinflas's talents above his own.

Cantinflas and two partners formed their own production company, Posa Films, and between 1941 and the mid-1950s he regularly released one or more films every year. His persona was that of the pelado (the word means "one who is broke"), the down-and-out but resourceful son of the Mexico City streets. Like Chaplin, Cantinflas had a trademark moustache (his was pencil-thin), and he sometimes wore a hat made of newspaper. He could gain unlimited comic mileage out of the old vaudeville technique of wearing a pair of pants held up by a length of string, always threatening to fall down. Combining physical and verbal comedy, he was, in the words of Octavio Roca of the San Francisco Chronicle, "all the Marx Brothers rolled into one."

Another way in which Cantinflas resembled the great comedians of American cinema was that he mastered the trick of playing different characters in each new film but still keeping a consistent personality that came through to the audience. "Cantinflas had a pact with his audience," wrote Houston Chronicle reporter Fernando Dovalina. "Even though Cantinflas never stepped out of his character while he was on, the whole act was done with a knowing, subtle, and unseen nod to the common people. He was one of them. The adults could laugh at the witticisms-with-a-wink, and the children could laugh at the farce." Such films as El circo (The Circus, 1942), Un día con el diablo (One Day with the Devil, 1945), El mago (The Magician, 1948), and Abajo el telóon (Bring Down the Curtain, 1954) were consistent hits. By 1951 Cantinflas was so popular that a mural of Mexican heroes by artist Diego Rivera depicted him in its center panel.

Dovalina saw Cantinflas's films as a child in south Texas in the 1940s, and they became very popular in Mexican-American neighborhoods north of the border. Cantinflas's verbal routines, however, were impossible to translate into English, and he remained unknown among English-speaking audiences. Cantinflas frequently traveled to the United States, however, and he later acquired homes in the Los Angeles and Houston areas. Cantinflas made powerful American friends, including then Congressman Lyndon Johnson of Texas. In 1966, when Cantinflas's wife was suffering from cancer, the by-then-President Johnson sent a jet to bring her to the U.S. for treatment.

Appeared as Valet

There was obviously potential profit to be made if Cantinflas's popularity could be expanded into the English-speaking world, but the comedian's grasp of English was shaky, and the right opportunity never came along. Finally, in 1956, Cantinflas was cast, over the initial objections of director Michael Todd, in the adventure romance Around the World in 80 Days. Cantinflas played the role of Passepartout, a valet to well-heeled traveler Phineas Fogg (David Niven). Passepartout was intended to be of French origin, but Cantinflas convinced Todd that a change in nationality would work, and, moreover, would give him the chance to trot out one of his comic bullfighting routines. His intuition was vindicated when Around the World in 80 Days became an international hit and earned Cantinflas a Golden Globe award for best actor in a musical or comedy.

Meanwhile, Cantinflas suffered no slowdown in his Spanish-language career, Sube y baja (Up and Down,1958), in which he played an elevator attendant, achieved some international distribution. An attempt to use Cantinflas in a starring English role was unsuccessful, however; Pepe, which starred the comedian as a ranch hand who takes off for Hollywood to try to find a prize horse who has been sold to an alcoholic film director, was a big-budget flop despite the presence of a roster of stars (Bing Crosby, Shirley Jones, Jack Lemmon, Janet Leigh, Jimmy Durante, and many others). Cantinflas returned to the Mexican market, now sometimes working in Hollywood. He released new films consistently through the 1960s, ending his career with Patrullero 777 (Patrolman 777, 1977) and El barrendero(The Street Cleaner, 1981). He made one more appearance in the Mexican television film México … estamos contigo (Mexico, We Are With You) in 1985.

By that time Cantinflas, who had invested his money cannily and sheltered some of it in offshore locations to avoid Mexican taxes, was a wealthy man. Part of his mystique among Mexicans grew from his generosity in plowing money back into neighborhoods like the one in which he had grown up. His annual charitable donations were once estimated at $175,000. At one point he single-handedly supported 250 families in the Mexico City neighborhood of Granjas, and he built and sold off dozens of low-cost housing units.

In his later years Cantinflas lived off and on in Houston. He carried on a relationship there with an American woman, Joyce Jett, and largely stayed out of the limelight. He remained a folk hero in Mexico, however, and appeared on television in that country with Mexican president Carlos Salinas de Gortari over the 1992 holiday season. After a lung cancer diagnosis, he died in Mexico City on April 20, 1993. Salinas, according to Mike Reid of the London Guardian, called him "a Mexican legend," and his funeral service, initially planned to be restricted to family and close friends, was crowded with thousands of Mexicans great and small.

Cantinflas's reputation continued to grow after his death. Several Spanish-language books chronicled the co-median's career, and an English-language academic study, Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity, sought to relate his film comedy to the tremendous social changes that had overtaken Mexico during his career. A biographical, bilingual play, Cantinflas!, was presented in San Francisco and Houston, and it seemed that, despite the continuing language barrier, one of the great comic figures in the popular culture of the 20th century was becoming better known outside Latin America.

Books

Contemporary Hispanic Biography, vol. 4, Gale, 2003.

Pilcher, Jeffrey M., Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity, Scholastic Resources, 2001.

Stavans, Ilan, The Riddle of Cantinflas: Essays on Hispanic Popular Culture, University of New Mexico Press, 1998.

Periodicals

Guardian (London, England), April 23, 1993.

Houston Chronicle, April 23, 1993; September 21, 1993.

Independent (London, England), April 24, 1993.

Los Angeles Times, April 11, 2001.

New York Times, April 22, 1993.

San Francisco Chronicle, September 17, 2002.

Times (London, England), April 22, 1993.

Variety, April 22, 1993.

Online

"Cantinflas," All Movie Guide, http://www.allmovie.com (January 22, 2006).

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Spotlight: Cantinflas
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From our Archives: Today's Highlights, August 12, 2005

Mexican clown, acrobat, musician and satirist Cantinflas was born on this date in 1911. Having made some 50 films in Mexico, Cantinflas became well known in the English-speaking world for the two Hollywood movies he made, Around the World in Eighty Days and Pepe. Cantinflas' real name was Mario Moreno Reyes. When he died in 1993, the US Senate held a minute of silence to honor his memory.
Actor: Cantinflas
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  • Born: Aug 12, 1911 in Mexico City, Mexico
  • Died: Apr 20, 1993 in Mexico City, Mexico
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'60s, '80s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Around the World in 80 Days, Su Excelencia, Por Mis Pistolas
  • First Major Screen Credit: Aguila O Sol (1938)

Biography

A small man with big ears, a distinctive mustache, pants that never stayed up, and a jaunty little cap cocked upon his eternally mussed hair, comic actor Cantinflas is beloved throughout the Spanish-speaking world and considered the Mexican Charlie Chaplin. Like Chaplin, Cantinflas' frenetic brand of slapstick was as balletic as it was athletic, leading others to compare him to Buster Keaton. His ability to combine humor with pathos was also decidedly Chaplin-esque, while his portrayal of the cocky, optimistic, but naïve little guy evoked Harold Lloyd. But despite such comparisons, Cantinflas' overall style was unique. Unlike the great silent funnymen to which he is compared, Cantinflas worked during the sound era. He usually played a smart-alecky peasant or average fellow and was famous for weasling out of trouble with the authorities by overwhelming them with intimidatingly pompous machine-gun speed monologues that, while sounding gloriously informed, signified absolutely nothing.

He was born Mario Moreno Reyes and started out singing and dancing in traveling tent variety shows known as carpas. He gained a large following as a circus clown and acrobat and then became a bullfighter/bullring clown, the Mexican equivalent of American rodeo clowns who distract bulls from performers in trouble. Cantinflas made his film debut in 1936 with No te Engages Corazon. Forty-nine more films followed. His humor is deeply rooted in Spanish cultures; this combined with his unique patter did not translate well to non-Spanish-speaking audiences. He did have one English-language success when he played Passepartout, loyal valet of Phinneas Fogg, in the smash hit Around the World in 80 Days (1956). He did not make another Hollywood film until 1960's notorious box-office bomb Pepe. After that rare failure, Cantinflas returned to making Spanish-language films. Following his retirement in the late '60s, Cantinflas devoted his life to helping others through charity and humanitarian organizations, especially those dedicated to helping children. In 1988, he received a lifetime achievement award from the Mexican Academy of Cinema. In 1993, shortly before his death from lung cancer, Cantinflas was named a "symbol of peace and happiness of the Americas." ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Cantinflas
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Cantinflas
Born Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes
August 12, 1911(1911-08-12)
Mexico City, Mexico
Died April 20, 1993 (aged 81)
Mexico City, Mexico
Years active 1937–1982
Spouse(s) Valentina Ivanova (1936-1966)

Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes (August 12, 1911 – April 20, 1993) was a Mexican comedian and stage and film actor, known professionally as Cantinflas. He often portrayed impoverished campesinos (slum dweller of pelado origin).[citation needed] The character came to be associated with the national identity of Mexico, and allowed Moreno to establish a long, successful film career that included a foray into Hollywood. Charlie Chaplin once called him "the greatest comedian in the world"[1], and Moreno has been referred to as the "Charlie Chaplin of Mexico".[2] To audiences in the United States, he is best remembered as costarring with David Niven in Around the World in 80 Days (1956).

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. Although he was himself politically conservative, 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 coopting 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 variably as a danger to Mexican society, a bourgeois puppet, a kind philanthropist, a venture capitalist, a transgressor of gender roles, a pious Catholic, a verbal innovator, and a picaresque underdog.[citation needed]

Contents

Personal life

He was born the sixth of twelve children to Pedro Moreno Esquivel, an impoverished mail carrier, and María de la Soledad Reyes Guizar de Moreno (from Cotija, Michoacan). Four of their twelve children died due to miscarriages. Eight survived: Pedro, Jose ("Pepe"), Eduardo, Fortino, Esperanza, Catalina, Enrique and Roberto.

Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes was born in the Santa María la Redonda neighborhood of Mexico City, and grew up in the tough neighborhood of Tepito. [3] He made it through difficult situations with the quick wit and street smarts that he would later apply in his films. After an unsuccessful attempt to enter the United States through California, he became a prizefighter in his teens as a source of income.[4] 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 October 27, 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]

Cantinflas was a friend of Elizabeth Taylor and Mike Todd.[7]

He served as president of the Mexican actor's guild 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, Moreno 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]

In 1993, after his death in Mexico City of lung cancer, thousands appeared on the rainy day for his funeral. The ceremony was a national event, lasting three days. His body lay in state in the Rotonda de los Hombres Ilustres (Rotunda of Distinguished Men) and he was honored by many heads of state and the United States Senate, which held a moment of silence for him.

After his death, a 12-year legal battle ensued 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 to the rights for movies on his deathbed. Moreno Ivanova argued he is the direct heir of Cantinflas and the rights belong to him. Moreno Laparade won the lawsuit twice,[8] but Moreno Ivanova eventually triumphed after two appeals.[9] In 2005, Mario Moreno Ivanova, Jr. won rights to 39 films and name.

At the same time, another legal battle ensued between Columbia Pictures and Moreno Ivanova over control of these films. Columbia claims that it bought the rights to the 34 films four decades ago with the court noting 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 June 2, 2001 the eight year battle was resolved with Columbia retaining ownership over the 34 disputed films.[10]

Origin of name

As a young man, Cantinflas performed a variety of acts in travelling tents, and it was here that he earned the nickname "Cantinflas", although the origin of the name is obscured by legend. 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. In another version, the Mexican media critic and theorist Carlos Monsiváis cites a legendary account of the origin of Cantinflas's characteristic speech:

According to a legend that he agrees with, a young Mario Moreno, overwhelmed by stage fright, once, in the Ofelia carpa, forgets his original monologue. He begins to say what comes to mind in a complete emancipation of phrases and words, and what comes to mind is an incoherent brilliance. His assistants recite his attack on syntax, and Mario becomes aware of it: destiny has placed in his hands the distinctive characteristic, the style that is manipulation of chaos. Weeks later, the name that will mark the invention is invented. Someone, taken in by the nonsense, screams: "Cuanto inflas!" [C' ntinflas] (You're annoying!) or "En la cantina inflas!" (You like to drink a lot at the cantina (inflar means to swell)). The contraction catches on and becomes proof of the baptism that the character needs.[11]

Entertainment career

Cantinflas with Bing Crosby in the 1960 movie Pepe, his second and last American film.

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.[4] In the tents, he danced, performed acrobatics, and performed in the roles of several different professions.

Cantinflismo

In 1936, Moreno made his debut in Mexico City's Folies Bergères Theater. Now removed from the lower-class environment that pandered to baser humor, cantinflismo, the political joke that challenged the notion that Cantinflas' nonsense was vacuous, was born. In 1937, the politician Vicente Lombardo Toledano responded to a political rival: "If [labor leader Luis] Morones has decided to show his dialectical prowess, let him argue with Cantinflas". Now directly invoked in the debate, Cantinflas responded:

Ah! but let me make one thing clear, I have moments of lucidity, and I speak very clearly. And now I will speak with clarity ... Friends! There are moments in my life that are really momentary ... And it's not because one says it, but we must see it! What do we see? that's what we must see ... because, what a coincidence, friends, that supposing that in the case — let's not say what it could be — but we must think about it and understand the psychology of life to make an analogy of the synthesis of humanity. Right? Well, that's the point![12]

Media figures and intellectuals fleshed out the definition and applications of cantinflismo in subsequent publications. Monsiváis interprets it in the context of the left-leaning presidency of Lázaro Cárdenas, calling it a "mock[ery] of proletariat discourse from glorious senselessness".[13] But perhaps the contemporary writer Miguel del Río's elaboration is the most eloquent:

It's as if Cantinflas were, more than anyone, the Mexican dictator of optimism ... he flirts with politics as if he were the most experienced politician. He becomes a leader and a proletariat, with only the change of a hat or a phrase.[14]

The political bent of Moreno's work was a marked turn, and his comedic innocence no longer sufficed to shield him from the criticism that political involvement entailed.

Film career

A caricature of Cantinflas on the poster for Águila o sol (meaning Heads or Tails) under the alternative title Cantinflas en el teatro.

In the mid-1930s, Cantinflas met Russian producer Jacques Gelman and subsequently partnered with him to form their own film production venture. Gelman produced, directed, and distributed, while Cantinflas acted. Cantinflas made his film debut in 1936 with No te engañes corazón but the film received little attention. He established Posa Films in 1939, producing 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"). The phrase that gave that movie its name became a "Cantinflas" (or catch phrase) 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.[15]

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 Miguel M. Delgado and Jaime Salvador to produce a series of low-quality parodies, including an interpretation of Chaplin's The Circus.[citation needed]

The 1940s and 1950s were Cantinflas's heyday. In 1946, he rejected Mexican film companies and instead signed with Columbia Pictures.[4] By this time, his 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]

On August 30, 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 comical historical and contemporary observations from fresh perspectives. The jokes changed nightly, and Moreno continued to employ his word games and double entendres to jab at politicians.

In 1956, Around the World in Eighty Days, Cantinflas's American debut earned him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a musical or comedy.[16] Variety magazine said in 1956 that his Chaplinesque quality made a big contribution to the success of the film.[17] The film ultimately made an unadjusted $42 million dollars at the box office.[18] 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 best paid actor.[19]

Moreno's second Hollywood feature, Pepe, attempted to replicate the success of his first. The film had cameo appearances by Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland 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.[20]

After returning to Mexico, Cantinflas created his own company, Cantinflas Films, and continued making movies until his last, 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's films, to this day, still generate revenue for Columbia Pictures. In 2000, Columbia reported in an estimated USD$4 million in foreign distribution from the films.[4]

Impact

Cantinflas' star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles.

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 Cantinfleada, 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[21] 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. The American EDM band Mindless Self Indulgence released a song about Cantinflas called "Whipstickagostop".

Cantinflas's 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.[22]

A cartoon series, the Cantinflas Show, was made in the 1970s starring an animated Cantinflas. The show was targeted for children and was intended to be educational.[23] The animated 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.

Although Cantinflas never achieved the same success in the United States as in Mexico, he was honored with a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He earned two Golden Globe nominations (winning one) for best actor and the Mexican Academy of Film Lifetime Achievement Award.[2][24]

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."[25] Cantinflas films are distributed in North America by Laguna Films.

Critical response

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. 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."[4][26]

For his part, Monsiváis interprets the 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."[27]

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 the giving back to the healthy laughter of the people the demagogic state of their empty confusion, merit is sustained and glory is ensured for the self-contained son of the Spanish-speaking mocker of Mexico, who is Cantinflas.")[28]

In his biography of the comic, the 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'."[29] 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."[30]

A cinematic biopic is being co-written and directed by Alejandro Gomez Monteverde.[31]

Bibliography

  • Moreno, Mario "Cantinflas", 1969. Su Excelencia Mexico, D.F.: Gráficas Menhir, S.A.[citation needed]

Filmography

Cinema of the United States
Year Director Film Role
1960 George Sidney Pepe Pepe
1956 Michael Anderson Around the World in Eighty Days Passepartout
Cinema of Mexico
Year Director Film Role
1981 Miguel M. Delgado El barrendero Napoleón
1977 Miguel M. Delgado El patrullero 777 Diógenes Bravo
1975 Miguel M. Delgado El ministro y yo Mateo Melgarejo
1973 Miguel M. Delgado Conserje en condominio Úrsulo
1972 Roberto Gavaldón Don Quijote cabalga de nuevo Sancho Panza
1970 Miguel M. Delgado El profe Sócrates García
1969 Miguel M. Delgado Un Quijote sin mancha Justo Leal, Aventado
1968 Miguel M. Delgado Por mis pistolas Fidencio Barrenillo
1966 Miguel M. Delgado Su excelencia Lopitos
1965 Miguel M. Delgado El señor doctor Salvador Medina
1964 Miguel M. Delgado El padrecito Sebastián
1963 Miguel M. Delgado Entrega inmediata Feliciano Calloso
1962 Miguel M. Delgado El extra Rogaciano
1960 Miguel M. Delgado El analfabeto Inocencio Prieto y Calvo
1958 Miguel M. Delgado Sube y baja Cantinflas
1958 Tulio Demicheli Ama a tus prójimo Cantinflas
1956 Miguel M. Delgado El bolero de Raquel Cantinflas
1954 Miguel M. Delgado Abajo el telón Cantinflas
1953 Miguel M. Delgado Caballero a la medida Cantinflas
1952 Miguel M. Delgado El señor fotógrafo Cantinflas
1951 Miguel M. Delgado Lluvia de estrellas Cantinflas
1951 Miguel M. Delgado Si yo fuera diputado Cantinflas
1950 Miguel M. Delgado El bombero atómico Cantinflas
1950 Miguel M. Delgado El siete machos Margarito
1949 Miguel M. Delgado Puerta, joven (El Portero) Cantinflas
1948 Miguel M. Delgado El mago Cantinflas
1948 Miguel M. Delgado El supersabio Cantinflas
1947 Miguel M. Delgado ¡A volar joven! Cantinflas
1946 Miguel M. Delgado Soy un prófugo Cantinflas
1945 Miguel M. Delgado Un día con el Diablo Cantinflas
1944 Miguel M. Delgado Gran Hotel Cantinflas
1943 Miguel M. Delgado Romeo y Julieta Romeo de Montesco
1942 Miguel M. Delgado El circo Cantinflas
1942 Miguel M. Delgado Los tres mosqueteros Cantinflas / D'Artagnan
1941 Carlos Villatoro Carnaval en el trópico Cameo
1941 Alejandro Galindo Ni sangre, ni arena El Chato / Manuel Márquez "Manolete"
1941 Miguel M. Delgado El gendarme desconocido Badge Number 777
1940 Juan Bustillo Oro Ahí está el detalle Cantinflas / "Leonardo del Paso"
1940 Carlos Toussaint Cantinflas y su prima (short) Cantinflas
1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas ruletero (short) Cantinflas
1940 Fernando Rivera Cantinflas boxeador (short) Cantinflas
1939 Fernando Rivera Jengibre contra Dinamita (short) Cantinflas
1939 Fernando Rivera Siempre listo en las tinieblas (short) Cantinflas
1939 Chano Urueta El signo de la muerte Cantinflas
1937 Arcady Boytler Águila o sol Polito Sol
1937 Arcady Boytler ¡Así es mi tierra! El Tejón
1936 Miguel Contreras Torres No te engañes corazón

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Cantinflas: 1911-1993: Actor, Comedian - Mexico's Answer To Charlie Chaplin". Jrank. http://biography.jrank.org/pages/3808/Cantinflas-1911-1993-Actor-Comedian-Mexico-s-Answer-Charlie-Chaplin.html. Retrieved 2009-10-18. 
  2. ^ a b Cantinflas biography by Allmovie Retrieved January 24, 2006.
  3. ^ Yahoo Cantinflas biography. Retrieved February 9, 2006.
  4. ^ a b c d e Cantinflas article by the Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 24, 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, page 37.
  6. ^ Biography from Vanity Magazine Retrieved January 29, 2006.
  7. ^ Kitty Kelley Elizabeth Taylor, the Last Star, p. 109, Simon & Schuster, 1981 ISBN 978-0671255435
  8. ^ (Spanish) Moreno Laparade gana derechos sobre las 39 cintas de Cantinflas ("Moreno Laparade wins the rights over 39 of Cantinflas films"), La Jornada. March 11, 2005. Retrieved February 9, 2006.
  9. ^ Monsiváis, Carlos (1999). "Chapter 4" Hershfield, Joanne; Maciel, David R. Mexico's Cinema: A Century of Film and Filmmakers, 1, 49-79, Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources, Inc. ISBN 0-8420-2681-9.
  10. ^ Ibid, p. 54
  11. ^ Ibid p. 55
  12. ^ del Río, Miguel. 1938 Vea (magazine)
  13. ^ Top 100 movies of Mexican cinema by Somo magazine Retrieved January 28, 2006
  14. ^ Film awards for Cantinflas Retrieved January 29, 2006.
  15. ^ Variety magazine review of film Retrieved January 29, 2006
  16. ^ Box office figures from Box Office Mojo Retrieved January 31, 2006
  17. ^ The Power and No Story Retrieved January 27, 2006
  18. ^ Article on theatre re-enactment of Cantinflas' humor Retrieved January 30, 2006
  19. ^ Cantinflear at the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy Retrieved January 21, 2006
  20. ^ D'Souza, Karen. Mercury News "Remembering Cantinflas"
  21. ^ Yahoo entry on the Cantinflas Show Retrieved January 24, 2006
  22. ^ Biography from Barnes & Noble Retrieved January 25, 2006.
  23. ^ Mario Moreno "Cantinflas" Award Retrieved January 29, 2006
  24. ^ Cantinflas and the Chaos of Mexican Modernity. Retrieved February 1, 2006
  25. ^ Monsiváis, p. 52
  26. ^ Novo, p. 47
  27. ^ Pilcher, p. xxii
  28. ^ Pilcher, p.xviii
  29. ^ http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117998028.html?categoryid=1236&cs=1

References

  • 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
  • Mindless Self Indulgence's song Whipstickagostop featured the line "Cantinflas was a body rocker."

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Tom Ewell
for The Seven Year Itch
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1957
for Around the World in Eighty Days
Succeeded by
Frank Sinatra
for Pal Joey

 
 
Learn More
Ángel Garasa (Actor, Comedy/Drama)
Romeo Y Julieta (1943 Comedy Film)
Cantinflas: Galaxies and Games (1984 Children's/Family Film)

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August 12, 2005

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