Cecilio Madanes

Cecilio Madanes (Ukraine, 2 December 1921 - Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1 April 2000) was a Ukrainian theater director, set designer, and producer. He was one of the leading figures in Argentine theatre from 1950 through 1960. Madanes founded the Teatro Caminito.

Madanes studied Fine Arts at the Prilidiano Pueyrredón school.[1] In 1947, he received a scholarship to France to continue his theater studies in Paris. When the scholarship ended eight months later, Madanes settled in France for eight years, where he met Jean Cocteau and Georges Braque, and studied at the Conservatoire national supérieur d'art dramatique in Paris with Louis Jouvet.

Theater Caminito

In 1957, Madanes created "theater Caminito", a street theater experience in the neighborhood of La Boca, Buenos Aires, and it lasted until 1973. The theater featured the works of Shakespeare, Molière, and García Lorca, among others, with the participation of leading Argentine actors such as Aida Luz, Jorge Luz, and Beatriz Bonnet.[2] He also worked in television on Channel 7, where he became responsible for overall programming.

He directed several plays included Estrellas en el Avenida in 1961, starring Tita Merello, Tato Bores, Hugo del Carril, and Maria Antinea; "Amadeus"; "Las relaciones peligrosas" with Oscar Martinez and Cecilia Roth; and Equus, which launched the career of Miguel Angel Sola. In the period between 1983 and 1986, he was director of the Teatro Colón. In 1984, he starred in the film Camila, which was nominated for an Oscar).

Madanes died in 2000 of leukemia.

Selected works

Theatre

Opera and zarzuela

See also

References

  1. Senanes, Gabriel (2000). "Murió Cecilio Madanes". Buenos Aires, Argentina: Diario Clarín (edición online). Retrieved 12 July 2008.
  2. Martínez, Adolfo (2000). "Murió Cecilio Madanes, un innovador de la escena teatral". Buenos Aires, Argentina: Diario La Nación (edición online). Retrieved 12 July 2008.
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