Un Quijote sin mancha | |
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Directed by | Miguel M. Delgado |
Written by | Cantinflas (as Mario Moreno Reyes) Jaime Salvador Carlos León (additional dialogue) |
Produced by | Jacques Gelman |
Starring | Cantinflas Ángel Garasa Lupita Ferrer Susana Salvat |
Cantinflas (pronounced cahn-TEEN-flas) made 49 films over a half-century, but is best known for his role as Passepartout, Phileas Fogg's devoted valet in the 1956 film "Around the World in 80 Days." David Niven played Fogg, the urbane explorer.Apr 22, 1993
Cantinflas is a 2014 Mexican biographical comedy drama film directed by Sebastián del Amo. Based on the life of actor and comedian Cantinflas, the film stars Óscar Jaenada as the title character, Michael Imperioli, Ilse Salas, Bárbara Mori, Ana Layevska and Adal Ramones.
Valentina Ivanova ZuvareffCantinflas / Spouse (m. 1936–1966)
In 1940, Cantinflas starred in the movie Allí Está El Detalle, which proved to be his breakout role. His character in the film, also called Cantinflas, spoke like Groucho Marx, but had the physical mannerisms of Charlie Chaplin.Aug 13, 2011
It is in the shape of a bull's horns because Cantinflas actually had been a bullfighter. He shot all of his bullfighting scenes without using a double, risking injury or even death, and the production having to be delayed if he were injured, but he insisted on doing the bullfighting.
He was 81. Mario Moreno Jr., the actor's adopted son and only survivor, told reporters his father died at his Mexico City home. Cantinflas was diagnosed earlier this year as having cancer during a checkup at a clinic in Houston, but his son said he concealed the nature of the illness at his father's request.Apr 21, 1993
Valentina Ivanova ZubareffMario 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....CantinflasSpouse(s)Valentina Ivanova Zubareff ( m. 1936; died 1966)ChildrenMario Arturo Moreno11 more rows
Cantinflas Net Worth: Cantinflas was a Mexican actor, producer, and screenwriter who had a net worth of $5 million.
April 20, 1993Cantinflas / Date of death
81 years (1911–1993)Cantinflas / Age at death
The humor style of Mario Moreno Cantinflas followed him from film to film. His first famous character was a clever slum dweller that had no malice, no arrogance, and no agenda. He had no education or profession but possessed charming wit and unparalleled sagacity.Sep 24, 2021
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or ComedyAriel Award - Golden ArielGolden Globe Special Achievement AwardCantinflas/Awards
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.
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).
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. Of course, the relationship between Moreno's little-used first given name Fortino and the character in William Shakespeare 's Hamlet Fortinbras offer a striking parallel with the stage name of much younger contemporary Chespirito ("Little Shakespeare" in a garbled Mexican pronunciation).
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 in its dictionary in 1992.
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.
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. In the tents, he danced, performed acrobatics, and performed roles related to several different professions.
^ "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
In this movie "Cantinflas" plays the role of a humble street sweeper named Napoleón or 'Don Napo', who while performing his daily duties is the only witness of the robbery of a valuable painting, then he is threatened by the art thieves and also becomes a suspect. IMDb. ∙.
This is a parody of Alexander's Dumas "The Three Musketeers". Cantinflas is Dartagnan, the skillful leader of the musketeers, and will fight with the evil Cardinal Richelieu, who wants to take the power of France in the XVII Century.
Suddenly this man appears so the servant tells him that Cantinflas is his wife's brother (Leonardo), who had been lost for years.
The plan doesn't work, as Don Juan is sold to washed-up Hollywood movie director Ted Holt - his current Hollywood status due to alcohol over-consumption - who wants to use Don Juan for his comeback project to be shot in Mexico with an all-Mexican cast except for an American female lead.
Along for the ride is Fogg's new, loyal and devoted valet, the recently arrived Latin immigrant, Passepartout, who possesses unusual skills which could be major assets, but whose all consuming thoughts on the opposite sex could take away his focus from the task at hand.
The line amused him so much that he took up Cantinflas as his stage name. Initially Moreno was a jack-of-all-trades. During the early period, he was a dancer in the tent show, a torero bufo or a comic matador in the bull ring and a ham in the boxing ring.
Mario Moreno, born Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno-Reyes and professionally known as Cantinflas, was a Mexican comedy film actor, producer and screenwriter. He was born in an improvised family in the beginning of the twentieth century in Mexico City and started his acting career in a carpa. One night, he accidentally developed a routine ...
For next five years, he performed in a series of carpas, where he danced, performed acrobats and also enacted roles relating to different professions. Initially, he tried to imitate American comedian Al Jason, but later developed a style of his own.
Meanwhile from 1939 onwards, Post Films began to produce a number of short films with the character of Cantinflas as the central one. Played by Moreno, whose stage name was also Cantinflas, the character became almost iconic.
The word ‘cantinflear’, which means to talk a lot without really saying anything , was actually derived from his trademark nonsense talks as Cantinflas. It became so popular that the Spanish dictionaries listed it as a new verb while he was still alive.
In 1957, Mario received Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical for his role of Passepartout in ‘Around the World in 80 Days’. He was also awarded Special Ariel Award in 1952 and Golden Ariel Award in 1987 by Mexican Academy of Film.
His mother was María de la Soledad Reyes Guízar. He was born fourth of his parents’ eight surviving children. In spite of the lack of resources, Mario’s parents enrolled him into a good school. However, he was more interested in watching the street plays and as he became old enough, he tried to imitate the actors.