Dionísio Azevedo
Appearance
Dionísio Azevedo | |
---|---|
Born | Taufic Jacob 4 April 1922 |
Died | 11 December 1994 | (aged 72)
Occupation(s) | Director, actor, writer |
Years active | 1949–1992 |
Dionísio Azevedo, stage name of Taufic Jacob (April 4, 1922 – December 11, 1994) was a Brazilian television, theatre, and film actor, director, and writer.[1]
Career
He started his career as an actor in Rádio Record in 1942. He moved to television, where he was a pioneer, creating TV de Vanguarda, a television theater popular in the 1950s. He directed several telenovelas, including Os Humildes, which is considered the first to address Brazilian themes, and Ambição, the first diary telenovela of the country. In cinema he acted in about 40 films.[2] In 1989, he won the Gramado Film Festival Jury Award for his role on the film A Marvada Carne.[3]
Partial filmography
- Quase no Céu (1949)
- Corações na Sombra (1951) - (voice)
- Custa Pouco a Felicidade (1953)
- Mãos Sangrentas (1955) - (voice)
- O Sobrado (1956) - Fandango
- Cidade Ameaçada (1960) - Chief of police
- Estrada do Amor (1960)
- A Moça do Quarto 13 (1960) - (voice)
- Sua Vida Me Pertence (1961, TV Series)
- The First Mass (1961) - Mestre Zuza
- The Fisherman and His Soul (1961)
- O Pagador de Promessas (1962) - Olavo, the Priest
- Lampião, o Rei do Cangaço (1964) - João de Mariano
- O Santo Milagroso (1967) - Padre José
- Corisco, O Diabo Loiro (1969) - Compadre mariano
- Independência ou Morte (1972) - José Bonifácio
- Longo Caminho da Morte (1972) - Coronel Múcio
- Obsessão (1973)
- A Virgem (1973)
- A Pequena Órfã (1973) - Velho Gui
- Sedução (1974)
- O Dia em Que o Santo Pecou (1975) - Delegado
- Kung Fu Contra as Bonecas (1975)
- Bacalhau (1975) - Petrônio
- O Dia das Profissionais (1976)
- A Noite da Fêmeas (1976)
- O Caçador de Esmeraldas (1979) - Padre João Leite
- Verde Vinho (1982) - Alfredo Morais
- Fuscão Preto (1983)
- O Menino Arco-Íris (1983) - Lucena
- A Marvada Carne (1985) - Nhô Totó
- Os Bons Tempos Voltaram (1985) - Argemiro (segment "Primeiro de Abril")
- Kuarup (1989) - D. Anselmo
- Eternidade (1992) - Balteano (final film role)
References
- ^ "Dionísio Azevedo" (in Portuguese). Museu da TV. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
- ^ "Dionísio Azevedo foi pioneiro da televisão". Folha de S.Paulo (in Portuguese). Grupo Folha. December 13, 1994. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
- ^ "Festival de Gramado – Premiados" (in Portuguese). Gramado Film Festival. Archived from the original on July 1, 2013. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
External links
Categories:
- 1922 births
- 1994 deaths
- 20th-century Brazilian male actors
- Brazilian film directors
- Brazilian male film actors
- Brazilian male television actors
- Brazilian television directors
- Deaths from cancer in Minas Gerais
- Deaths from lung cancer
- People from Minas Gerais
- Brazilian people of Arab descent
- Brazilian actor stubs
- Brazilian film director stubs