Cantinflas


Actor, Clown
Cantinflas

About

Also Known As
Mario Moreno Reyes, Mario Moreno
Birth Place
Mexico
Born
August 12, 1911
Died
April 20, 1993
Cause of Death
Lung Cancer

Biography

A diminutive, renowned, high-octane performer of the Spanish-speaking world, primarily in Mexican films from 1936, Cantinflas began his entertainment career at age 16 as a song-and-dance man in "carpas," variety shows staged in tents. He also performed as a circus clown, a bullfighting clown and an amateur bullfighter, and gradually developed the star persona which would serve him so wel...

Family & Companions

Valentina Subarow
Wife
Dancer. Of Russian descent; Cantinflas outlived her.

Notes

Received the Gracias Amigo Award, presented in Houston TX, for his work in promoting Mexican-USA relations

Biography

A diminutive, renowned, high-octane performer of the Spanish-speaking world, primarily in Mexican films from 1936, Cantinflas began his entertainment career at age 16 as a song-and-dance man in "carpas," variety shows staged in tents. He also performed as a circus clown, a bullfighting clown and an amateur bullfighter, and gradually developed the star persona which would serve him so well in his 50 films. His early films include his debut in "No Te Enganes Corazon/Don't Deceive Yourself, My Heart" (1936) and "El Signo de la Muerte/Sign of Death" (1939), but it was "Ahi Esta el Detalle/There Is the Detail" (1940), which began his reign as the Spanish-speaking world's most popular comic at the advent of Mexican cinema's "Golden Age."

Usually mustachioed, his dark hair tousled and often sporting an impishly perched hat, Cantinflas essentially played the "pelado," an impoverished wiseacre, who, in the tradition of the great American silent comedians, often found most of the world against him. His background as an acrobat gave him moments of Keaton-like grace, his clever yet sometimes naive go-getter style can be seen as a first cousin to Harold Lloyd, and like Chaplin, he touched the heart while defending the weak and often had trouble keeping up his pants. Cantinflas acquired the nickname, "the Mexican Charlie Chaplin," and the great actor-director, upon seeing the work of his younger Latino colleague, dubbed him "the greatest comedian in the world."

Cantinflas was, however, very much a comic of the sound era, one of his trademarks being his rapid patter line delivery as he outfoxed authority with a lengthy stream of gobbledygook. His verbal humor managed to play as well in Spain and the rest of Latin America as it did in his homeland, but its charm was all but lost in translation and doubtless became one of the reasons why Cantinflas's work has been virtually unseen in the U.S. and much of Europe. The Spanish academy, however, even accepted a verb based on his name, "cantinflear"--meaning to say nothing in the most verbose manner possible--into the lexicon.

Cantinflas's work was hardly divorced from the English-speaking world. His own favorite among his films, "Ni Sagre Ni Arena/Neither Blood nor Sand" (1941), was an obvious and highly amusing spoof of the Tyrone Power vehicle, "Blood and Sand" of earlier that same year (as well as its 1922 Rudolph Valentino predecessor). And by the mid-50s his fame from films including "Un Dia con el Diablo/A Day with the Devil" (1945) and "El Bombero Atomico/The Atom Bomb" (1951) had spread to the extent that Mike Todd cast Cantinflas in the key role of Passepartout in the lavish "Around the World in 80 Days" (1956). If this Oscar-winner, top-heavy with dozens of star cameos, doesn't hold up today, Cantinflas' briskly amusing charm as the hero's resourceful valet does. Columbia followed up with a lavish, cameo-ridden vehicle for the feisty Mexican, but "Pepe" (1960) was such a disaster critically and commercially that Cantinflas never made another US film.

Instead, Cantinflas returned to his home turf, continuing the exclusive collaboration with director Miguel M. Delgado which had begun in 1942 with "El Gendarme Desconocido/The Unknown Policeman." In a 1972 series of cartoons, "The Adventures of Cantinflas," and in features like "Un Quijote Sin Mancha/A Quixote Without a La Mancha" (1969) and "El Ministro y Yo/The Minister and Me" (1976) the gracefully aging comic still delighted his immense following. Cantinflas spent much of the 1980s involved in philanthropic work, especially for the benefit of children, and he was honored with a lifetime achievement award by the Mexican Academy of Cinemagraphic Arts and Sciences in 1988.

Life Events

1927

Worked as a song-and-dance man in shows staged in tents in Jalapa, Vera Cruz, Mexico

1936

Made feature film debut in a small role in "No Te Enganes Corazon/Don't Deceive Yourself, My Heart"

1940

First starring role, "Ahi Esta el Detalle/There Is the Detail"

1940

Performed in three comedy shorts to take advantage of his new fame: "Cantinflas y Su Prima", "Cantinflas Boxeador" and "Cantinflas Ruletero"

1941

Founded his own production company, Posa Films

1941

First worked with director Miguel M. Delgado on "El Gendarme Desconocido"

1942

Made approximately one film a year with Delgado

1956

English-language film debut, "Around the World in 80 Days"

1960

Starred in the lavish, all-star English-language comedy, "Pepe"

1972

"The Adventures of Cantinflas", a series of cartoons, produced by Televicine

1979

Last film, "El Barrendero" (date approximate)

1984

Recorded an album of children's songs

1992

Met with President Carlos Salinas de Gortari of Mexico; announcement made of a national tribute to Cantinflas in December

Videos

Movie Clip

Pepe (1960) -- (Movie Clip) How Humiliatin'! Cantinflas (title character), seeking his beloved horse, has reached Las Vegas, where director George Sidney lays down another barrage of cameos, this time including Frank Sinatra, Cesar Romero, Jimmy Durante and just the start of Dean Martin's bit (Peter Lawford and Sammy Davis Jr. done earlier), in Pepe, 1960.
Pepe (1960) -- (Movie Clip) That's How It Went, All Right It's been said that Bobby Darin's secret was that he could deliver any song like it was the one you'd been waiting for all night, example here with Cantinflas (title character) watching, tune by Andre and Dory Previn, in George Sidney's celebrity cavalcade Pepe, 1960.
Pepe (1960) -- (Movie Clip) The Rumble Second part of a long number in an L-A club where waitress Suzie (Shirley Jones, not a double) also dances, Eugene Loring choreography with two uncredited partners, her friend Cantinflas (title character) panicking when it gets a little too West Side Story, in Pepe, 1960.
Around The World In 80 Days (1956) -- (Movie Clip) These Foreigners Boarding the Bombay to Calcutta train, Fogg (David Niven) and the general (Sir Cedric Hardwicke) aid the hasty retreat of Passepartout (Cantinflas), followed by train's-eye-view widescreen stuff, in Around The World In 80 Days 1956.
Around The World In 80 Days (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Gallic Braggadocio First Passepartou (Cantinflas) then Fogg (David Niven) with their French travel agent who of course is Charles Boyer, providing them with a famous mode of transport, early in producer Mike Todd's Around The World In 80 Days, 1956.
Pepe (1960) -- (Movie Clip) Faraway Part Of Town Cantinflas (title character) tries to persuade struggling performer friend Suzie (Shirley Jones) she can make it big, when Judy Garland does her cameo on the radio and Dan Dailey, as the director she hasn't won over, joins for a dance, in Pepe, 1960, song by Andre and Dory Previn.

Trailer

Family

Mario Arturo Moreno Ivanova
Son
Survived him.

Companions

Valentina Subarow
Wife
Dancer. Of Russian descent; Cantinflas outlived her.

Bibliography

Notes

Received the Gracias Amigo Award, presented in Houston TX, for his work in promoting Mexican-USA relations