Domingo Dominguín
Domingo González Mateos, better known as Domingo Dominguín (4 August 1895 – 21 August 1958), was a Spanish bullfighter and progenitor of a dynasty of bullfighters.
Domingo Dominguín | |
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Born | Domingo González Mateos 4 August 1895 |
Died | 21 August 1958 63) Madrid, Spain | (aged
Other names | Domingo Dominguín |
Occupation | Matador |
Children | 5, including Luis |
Career
He was born in Quismondo in the province of Toledo into a peasant family. He left agriculture to take part in rural bullfights (capeas) until he took his alternativa on 26 September 1917 in Madrid with Joselito (José Gómez Ortega) for sponsor, facing a bull from the Contreras line.[1]
Until 1922 he performed at an honourable level but then suffered a rapid decline and retired from the bullring. He became an apoderado and an outstanding manager of bullfighters, including his youngest son Luis Miguel Dominguín and his future son-in-law Antonio Ordóñez.[2][3]
Family
Dominguín married Gracia Lucas Lorente, with whom he had five children: Domingo, José, Gracia, Luis Miguel and Carmen. All three sons were well-known bullfighters, as Domingo González Lucas (also known as Dominguín), José González Lucas (also known as Pepe Dominguín) and Luis Miguel Dominguín, the best-known of them, whose son is the singer Miguel Bosé. Dominguín's elder daughter Gracia had a daughter herself who married the bullfighter Ángel Teruel, while his younger daughter Carmen married the bullfighter Antonio Ordóñez; their daughter, the socialite Carmen Ordóñez, married as his first wife the bullfighter Francisco Rivera Pérez, known as Paquirri.[1][4]
References
- Paul Casanova and Pierre Dupuy, Toreros pour l'histoire. Besançon: La Manufacture, 1991 (ISBN 2737702690)
- MemoriaDeMadrid.es - Calle del Principe 35
- "Pepe Dominguín, el último torero romántico", El País, 6 July 2003
- Hola.com: La nostalgia de Francisco Rivera al recordar la boda de sus padres, 18 February 2019