Cátulo Castillo

Ovidio Cátulo González Castillo (6 August 1906 – 19 October 1975) was an Argentine poet and tango music composer. He was the author of many famous works, such as Organito de la tarde, El aguacero (lyrics by José González Castillo), Tinta roja and Caserón de tejas (both with music by Sebastián Piana), María and La última curda (both with music by Aníbal Troilo), and El último café (with music by Héctor Stamponi). The tango La calesita, which he composed with Mariano Mores, inspired the film of the same name directed in 1962 by Hugo del Carril.

Cátulo Castillo
Cátulo Castillo hugging Juan Perón
Cátulo (left) with Juan Perón in 1953
Background information
Birth nameOvidio Cátulo González Castillo
Born(1906-08-06)6 August 1906
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died19 October 1975(1975-10-19) (aged 69)
GenresTango
Occupation(s)Poet, lyricist, composer

His father, José González Castillo, an anarchist, wanted to list himself in the civil registry as Descanso Dominical González Castillo, but was convinced by his friends not to, and kept his other name.[1] As an infant, Cátulo lived in Chile, where his father was exiled because of his anarchist ideology. He returned to Argentina in 1913. Cátulo later affiliated with the Communist Party.[2]

Professional career

Cátulo (right) with Aníbal Troilo in 1975

Cátulo composed Organito de la tarde, his first tango, at the age of 17.[3][4] He was also a boxer, eventually becoming the featherweight champion in Argentina and was pre-selected for the Paris Olympics, attending as part of his country's delegation,[3] but not competing.[5]

In 1926, he traveled to Europe, where he would later conduct his own orchestra.[6]

During the 1930s, he obtained one of the cathedras of the Municipal Conservatory of Manuel de Falla in Buenos Aires. In 1950, he would become the director of that conservatory, where he remained until he retired.[6]

During the 1940s and 1950s, when tango was at its peak, he dedicated himself to poetry and wrote with distinguished composers: Mores (Patio de la Morocha), Pontier (Anoche), Pugliese (Una vez), Sebastián Piana (Tinta roja and Caserón de tejas), and his main collaborator after 1945: Aníbal Troilo (María, La última curda, Una canción).[4]

He wrote for many journals, published the book Danzas Argentinas in 1953, composed songs for different films, wrote the lyrical sainete El Patio de la Morocha (with music by Troilo),[3] and was both secretary and president of SADAIC in different years.[7]

In 1953, he became president of the National Commission of Culture of the Nation. Two years later, the military government, the so-called Revolución Libertadora, stripped him of everything he had achieved. His wife, Amanda Pelufo, recalls those times:[8]

Because of persecution by Pedro Eugenio Aramburu's government, he had to abandon his profession. Included on blacklists with dozens of other tangueros like Hugo de Carril, Nelly Omar, Héctor Mauré, Anita Palmero, and Chola Luna, among others, he was persecuted for his political ideas, and did not return to work until the regime's fall.[9]

With the political thaw in the 1960s, Cátulo returned to his former activity. He continued composing, writing radical screenplays, and working in SADAIC. He published the novel Amalio Reyes, un hombre, which became a film directed by Hugo del Carril.[7] He also published Prostibulario, on his correspondence with Perón, in 1971. Among his most popular songs were: Maria, El último café, La última curda, La Calesita, Café de los Angelitos, Desencuentro, Y a mi qué, A Homero, Arrabalera, Mensaje, Tinta roja, Patio mío, and Caserón de tejas.[10]

In 1974, he was named Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires. Upon receiving the award, he told a short fable:[7]

Death

He died 19 October 1975 from a heart attack.[3][6]

Filmography

Author
Music
Soundtracks
Texts

References

  1. Interview with Riardo Horvath. Accessed 20 July 2008.
  2. Lozza, Arturo Marcos (1983). Osvaldo Pugliese, al Colón (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Editorial Cartago. p. 70. ISBN 950-650-029-0.
  3. "La nostalgia de una época" [Nostalgia for an era]. Página12 (in Spanish). 6 August 2006. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  4. Adet, Manuel (31 December 2010). "Cátulo Castillo: los recuerdos en torbellino" [Cátulo Castillo: memories in whirlwind]. El Litoral (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  5. "Argentina Boxing at the 1924 Paris Summer Games". Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  6. "Cátulo Castillo: un artista fundamental" [Cátulo Castillo: a fundamental artist]. Crónica (in Spanish). 6 August 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-08-27. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  7. Ardilles Gray, Julio. "Poeta y compositor de tango, boxeador, docente, periodista" [Tango poet and composer, boxer, teacher, journalist]. La Plata (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  8. "Poeta y Tanguero Cátulo Castillo, de Ciudad Evita" [Poet and Tanguero Cátulo Castillo, from Evita City]. Ciudad Evita Vive (in Spanish). 8 June 2014. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  9. Barrionuevo Anzaldi, Franco (2011). Politischer Tango: intellektuelle Kämpfe um Tanzkultur im Zeichen des Peronismus. Transcript. ISBN 9783837617948.
  10. Santillán, Juan José (1 February 2011). "Susana Rinaldi: "Cada cosa tiene sus tiempos y no son los de uno"" [Susana Rinaldi: "Every thing has its time and is not individual"]. Clarín (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 August 2017.

Bibliography

  • Gobello, José (2002). Mujeres y hombres que hicieron el tango [Women and men who made the tango] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires. Centro Editor de Cultura Argentina. ISBN 950-898-081-8.
  • Manrupe, Raúl; Portela, María Alejandra (2001). Un diccionario de films argentinos (1930–1995) [A dictionary of Argentine films (1930–1995)] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Editorial Corregidor. ISBN 950-05-0896-6.
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