Posts tagged w/ profile

Brazilian Profile: Clarice Lispector

Posted by Rachel

Clarice Lispector is one of Brazil’s most famous and accomplished female writers, who is finally making headlines in the United States after becoming an icon in Brazil. 

Clarice was born Chaya Pinkhasovna Lispector, the daughter of Jewish Ukrainian parents, in 1920. When she was a baby, her family emigrated to Brazil, fleeing religious persecution, and lived in Recife for several years. Clarice went to a Jewish school, where she learned Hebrew, Yiddish, and Portuguese, and was later accepted into the best elementary school in Pernambuco. But her mother died when she was nine, and Clarice’s father took his children to live in Rio de Janeiro several years later.

Clarice was accepted into the law school at the Universidade do Brasil, the best college in the country at the time. She began writing, and was first published in 1940. She also began working as a journalist for several newspapers. Sadly, her father died when he was 55 of a botched operation, leaving her orphaned at age 20.

1943 was a big year for Clarice. She became a Brazilian citizen, and married Brazilian diplomat Maury Gurgel Valente shortly after. She published her first novel, Perto do coração selvagem (Near to the Wild Heart) that year as well, receiving rave reviews. It was said that the book was “the greatest novel a woman has ever written in the Portuguese language.” Her writing style, revolutionary in Brazil at the time, was likened to Virginia Woolf and James Joyce.

Clarice’s husband was a diplomat, so she spent the next several decades bouncing around the world: Belem, Naples, Torquay, and Washington. She wrote three more novels while abroad. Then, in 1959, she divorced her husband and moved back to Rio de Janeiro with her sons. She spent the rest of her life in Brazil, writing more novels, short stories, children’s books, and newspaper columns.

She died of cancer the day before her 57th birthday, of ovarian cancer, and is buried in the Jewish cemetery in the Caju neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro.

 

Brazilian Profile: Roberto Carlos

Posted by Rachel

Though Brazil is known for its samba and bossa nova musicians worldwide, it may come as a surprise that Brazil’s most successful singer is actually a Barry Manilow-style crooner. In his fifty year career, Roberto Carlos has sold over 100 million albums, more than any Brazilian or Latin American musician. 

Born in 1941, Roberto grew up in the countryside of Espirito Santo, one of four children in a humble household. He began playing the piano and the guitar early in life, and began singing when he was nine. He suffered an accident and had to have his leg amputated, and has been using a prosthetic leg ever since. When he was a teenager, he moved to Niteroi, in Rio de Janeiro, where he first came in contact with rock and MPB. Initially, he formed a band with a group of friends, called the Sputniks, but began his solo career shortly after, singing samba and bossa nova.

In the 1960s, Roberto segwayed into rock, and recorded several successful albums and became a TV star, hosting shows on TV Record. Then, in the 1970s, he moved on to “romantic” music (crooning), when his career took off abroad. He sang for the Pope in Mexico in 1979, during a live broadcast watched by millions around the world. He began to focus on his international career in the 1980s, when he began recording in Spanish, Italian, French, and English. He won a Grammy in 1988 for Best Latin American Singer, and beat the Beatles’ Latin American record sales in 1994, surpassing 70 million records sold in the region.

Roberto got married in 1995, to a teacher named Maria Rita. But tragically, she was diagnosed with cancer three years later, and died in 1999. Though his success continued into the new millennium, he had to deal with other problems. In 2004, he was treated for OCD, which had led him to some odd habits and refuse to sing some of his most successful songs. In 2006, a tell-all biography about Roberto’s life was published without his consent or acknowledgment, and he sued the publisher, who was ordered by the court to remove the books from bookstores nationwide.

Roberto recently celebrated the fifty year anniversary of his career in his hometown of Cachoeiro de Itapemirim. He currently lives in Rio de Janeiro’s Urca neighborhood.

 

Brazilian Profile: Guilherme Marche

Posted by Rachel

Born in 1982, he’s become a millionaire at the age of 26 as a professional rodeo bullrider. He lives in Dallas, Texas with his wife and two children, where he runs a ranch and a steakhouse, as well as competing in rodeos. But surprisingly, this cowboy is Brazilian.

Marche, dubbed Sabonete (Soap) as a child, grew up in rural Sao Paulo, where he quickly developed a love for rodeos and bullriding. He began competing professionally at 16, and at age 18 several American scouts came to watch him perform and offered him new opportunities.

Three years later, he competed in the World Bullriding Championship in Texas and ended up staying in the United States. There, he’s managed to earn three million dollars in his bullriding career which allowed him to buy cattle and open a restaurant, the Rodeo Grill Brazilian Steakhouse.

In 2008, Marche, known by his colleagues as “Hollywood,” won the Professional Bull Riders championship in Las Vegas, one of the most important competitions in bullriding.

For more information, check out his website.