August 30, 2022

75 years since the death of Manolete


 (spanish-fiestas.com)

Of all the bullfighters who have died in bullfights, Manolete is the most famous. He died in the ring in Linares on August 29th in 1947. The Museum of Bullfighting in Cordoba is dedicated to him. Manuel Rodríguez Sánchez, “Manolete”, was born in Córdoba in 1917. By the age of 12 he had already given several “capotazos” and the following year made his public debut in the Montilla school of bullfighting (Cordoba). He then became an itinerant member of the bullfighting show “Los Califas”.

In June 1939 he fought as a “Novillero”(novice) and one month later becomes a fully fledged bullfighter, receiving his “alternativa”, (a ceremony in which a bullfighter authorizes a novice to take his place among the doctorate bullfighters) in Chiclanero, Seville. He confirmed his “alternativa” in Madrid on 12th October of the same year at the hands of Marcial Lalanda. The great Juan Belmonte was the other matador on that unforgettable afternoon when Manolete proved his brilliance to the bullfighting world. By the end of the season he had fought 16 bullfights and had unbeatable prospects for the coming season.

In 1940 he appeared at all the top bullfights in Seville, Alicante, Bilbao, Barcelona and Madrid and became the star of Spanish bullfighting. At the end of the 1945 season he travelled to South America where his astounding successes in the bullrings of Mexico. Peru, Venezuela and Colombia made him the most famous bullfighter in the world.

An ongoing rivalry existed with the Mexican Carlos Arruza and with the young bullfighter Luis Miguel Dominguin who challenged him publically. The resulting bullfight in which Manolete triumphed in the Bullring of Las Ventas in Madrid would be his last in this cathedral of bullfighting.

Just days before the 28th August 1947 the announcements appeared at the Linares Bullring (Jaen) that Manolete would fight the fierce Miura bulls alongside Gitanillo de Triana and Luis Miguel Dominguin. The afternoon arrived and 10,500 people packed into the bullring in suffocation heat to watch their idol.

With Manolete’s first bull he fought a brilliant faena, then came his second bull, the fifth of the day. The bull was called Islero and it was a truly fierce Miura. After another superb demonstration of bullfighting Manolete prepared for the kill. The steel of his sword disappeared deep into the beast but immediately afterwards the bull’s horn dug deep into the bullfighter’s right thigh. Manolete complained bitterly as he was carried to the infirmary.

In the bullring he was awarded both ears of the bull for his display. But back in the infirmary he was given several blood transfusions but his state remained grave. Dr. Giménez Guinea, then official doctor of the Madrid bullring was called upon to attend, arriving at 4 o’clock. Within an hour the great matador was dead. The tragedy left the whole of Spain and all the world enthusiasts in a complete state of shock.

For bullfighting legend, fan pressure led him to an early death

(from whenwordsmatter.typepad.com 12-21-12)

Manuel Rodriguez Sanchez - better known as Manolete - stepped wearily to the microphone in an anteroom of the San Sebastian, Spain, bullring, looking far older than a man who had recently marked his 30th birthday.

Manolete, the most celebrated bullfighter of his day, had just killed his 1,000th bull and the radio announcer asked him to comment on his achievement.

Speaking in a soft voice, barely audible over the roar from his fans in the stadium just beyond the room, Manolete delivered a somber response. "They are asking for more than I can give," he said. "Always more and more. All I can say is I wish the bullfighting season was over."

Manolete had actually considered retirement a year earlier but was persuaded to return for one last go-round in the 1947 season. Antonia Lupe Sino, a Spanish actress and Manolete's long-time girlfriend, did not think the decision would satisfy the matador's rabid fans.

"They'll never let him go until they see him dead," she said.

Less than a month after his depressing radio interview, Manolete, the most famous bullfighter of the 20th century lay dead, killed by a bull of the same Miura breed that killed his great uncle and many other famed Spanish matadors.

Matadors ran in Manolete's family, which came from Cordoba, Spain - the heart of bullfighting country. His mother was the widow of a matador before she married the man who would be his father, also a matador. His father went blind and died when Manolete was 5 years old.

After serving one month as a novice, Manolete was promoted to full-fledged bullfighter around his 13th birthday. The slim, clumsy teenager was spotted by Jose Camara, a retired bullfighter and agent who saw great potential. Thus began a life-long association that saw Manolete improve his footwork to the point of a classic gracefulness, refine his bold style and perfect a stoic technique that would vault him to the top of the bullfighting world. He was widely praised as the successor to Juan Belmonte, the Spanish bullfighting legend who finally retired in 1935.

By the time he reached his 20s, Manolete was considered a Spanish cultural treasure. He commanded huge fees and filled arenas with fans who applauded his skills and lined up days before his appearances to guarantee a seat.

During the World War II years, Manolete did most of his fighting in Latin America, where his reputation continued to grow. Fans fought over tickets to his events and his cult-like following resulted in Manolete dolls for little girls and Anis Manolete liquor for adults. He made an estimated $4 million in the 1940s and even drove a Buick imported from the U.S., even though fuel for it was not readily available in Spain.

Manolete's rock star image also played a role in his eventual downfall.

Promoters recognized his box-office potential and, rather than risking getting him hurt, started supplying "arranged bulls" for his appearances. These bulls had shaved horns, an illegal but common practice, that made injury by goring less likely.

Manolete also became a target for young matadors intent on replacing him as Numero Uno. The wear and tear of so many fights became obvious as Manolete approached his 30th birthday on July 4, 1947.

His killing of bulls, which he had elevated to an art form with his bold, stylish technique, was becoming a bit more sloppy. The gorings - he sustained somewhere between 11 and 33, according to various sources - were becoming more common. He was reportedly drinking more and the erosion of his skills was becoming more apparent with each fight.

In the summer of 1947, Manolete was challenged by a 21-year-old up-and-comer, Luis Miguel Dominguin. A joint appearance was set for August 28, 1947, in the small bullring at Linares, Spain.

Over 10,000 people squeezed into the Linares ring to watch Manolete, Gitanillo de Triana and Dominguin do battle with a string of Miura bulls, considered the fiercest and most unpredictable fighting bulls on the planet.

Manolete delivered a lackluster performance in his first kill, which was followed by a brilliant display by Dominguin in a fight that had the crowd roaring with approval. As Manolete entered the ring for his second fight of the day, he was greeted by a smattering of boos.

The bull he drew was named Islero. Islero was known as a fierce fighter, but had poor eyesight and a tendency to chop with his right horn.

Manolete appeared to be on top of his game. Fifteen times he stood his ground, using only his cape as Islero passed, his sharp horns just inches from the gold embroidery on Manolete's fabled "suit of lights." Emboldened, Manolete turned his back on Islero, his scarlet cape behind him, as he prepared for El Momento Supremo, the kill.

Instead of delivering the fatal blow from the side - the more prudent approach - Manolete favored a more straightforward attack. Clamboring over Islero's horns, Manolete drove his sword between Islero's shoulders to the hilt.

Islero paused briefly then hooked his horn into Manolete's thigh, severing his femoral artery, and tossed him aside. As blood gushed from the wound, a hobbling Manolete tried to stop the flow with his hands. Dominguin was among those who rushed to Manolete's aid and carried him from the arena. Islero staggered to the fence, stumbled to his knees and died.

As he lay in the infirmary, Manolete lit a cigarette and asked in a weak voice, "Is the bull dead?" After being informed that the bull was, indeed, dead, Manolete said that he could not feel his legs.

Doctors began what would be a series of transfusions of dry plasma. At 11 p.m. they transfered him to the hospital in Linares and summoned Dr. Luis Gimenez Guinea from Madrid, who arrived around 4 a.m. the next morning. At 5:07 a.m., Manolete uttered his final words, "My mother will not be happy about this. Don Luis, I can't see. I can't see anything!"

Tributes poured in from across Spain and the bullfighting world. Manolete was recognized as one of the most importanrt matadors in bullfighting history who "died fighting and killed before dying."

He was buried in his hometown of Cordoba, home of the Cordoba Museum of Bullfighting, which is dedicated to him. His bloody "suit of lights" was put on exhibition at the Museum of Bullfighting in Madrid and the head of Islero, the bull that killed him, is displayed in the Museum of Bullfighting in Seville.

Islero was also honored by Italian automaker Ferruccio Lamborghini, who was born just a year before Manolete. Lamborghini so admired Spanish bulls for their fierce fighting skills that he launched a line of Miura sports cars in the mid-1960s. In 1968, he introduced the Islero as his newest sports car.

Manolete's life has been the subject of many books and in 2007 it became the subject of a movie. The film, Manolete, starred Adrian Brody as Manolete and Penelope Cruz as his girlfriend, Antonia Lupe Sino. Sino starred in several films after Manolete's death before dying of a stroke at age 42 on Sept. 13, 1959.

The young matador who challenged Manolete to the fatal encounter in Linares, Luis Miguel Dominguin, pronounced himself "Numero Uno" after Manolete's death and went on to have a distinguished and colorful career. Some bullfighter watchers even say he was the best of the 20th Century.

Wearing flashy uniforms designed by his friend Pablo Picasso, Dominguin was a multimillionaire with 2,300 kills to his credit before his 30th birthday. He dated some of the world's most glamorous women, including Ava Gardner, Lauren Bacall, Rita Hayworth and Brigitte Bardot. He counted Orson Welles and Ernest Hemingway among his closest friends.

Dominguin retired three times but couldn't stay away from the sport he loved until his final fight in Barcelona at age 47 in 1973. Late in his career, he explained the lure of the sport:

"It is like being with the woman who pleases you most in the world when her husband comes in with a pistol. The bull is the woman, the husband and the pistol, all in one. No other life I know can give you all that."

Manuel Rodriguez Sanchez (Manolete), bullfighter
Born: July 4, 1917
Died: August 29, 1947 (age 30)



Photo caption: The death of Manolete. Guillermo, his sword-handler (left), with his hand against the wound trying to stop the blood. Luis Miguel Dominguin (right), with cape. Photo by Paco Caño.

August 19, 2022

Roca Rey en Malaga


 August 17, 2022

Toro de Daniel Ruiz

Un toro de Miura - listo para Pamplona


 fought in Pamplona, 2022

Emiliano Gamero confirmation in Portugal


 I guess I've never seen a confirmation of a rejoneador before because I did not know this is how it's done, a banderilla passed behind the back?

Interesting. 

And, are all confirmations of rejoneadores done in Portugal since that is where bullfighting from horseback originated?

So many questions. 

Emiliano Gamero en Lisbon


 

Emiliano Gamero se convertirá el 4 de agosto en el primer rejoneador charro que cabalgue en uno de los escenarios más emblemáticos para el toreo a caballo: Campo Pequeno en Lisboa, Portugal.

El caballista mexicano lo anunció esta tarde en una conferencia virtual desde Portugal en donde radica desde hace unos meses. ‘Estoy feliz, emocionado y muy satisfecho. No ha sido fácil lograrlo y por fortuna el 4 de agosto haré mi debut en Lisboa, el escenario más importante para los rejoneadores y además con la emoción de ser el primer rejoneador charro, con mis caballos charros, que actúe en Campo Pequeno’, contó Gamero en una entrevista posterior al anuncio que hizo via streming.

Emiliano lleva tres temporadas actuando en Europa en donde ha sumado 36 corridas de toros. Esta tarde está anunciado en la plaza española de Moraleja; el 13 de agosto, después de lo de Lisboa, actuará en otro escenario de mucha tradición como lo es Figueira Da Foz, donde alternará con Joao Salgueiro, Mario Pérez y Sebastián Fernández, con toros de Monteviejo; y la otra corrida es el 20 en Nazaré.

El rejoneador mexicano tiene planeado también cabalgar en algunas plazas españolas que dará a conocer más adelante. ‘En Portugal, he tenido la oportunidad de actuar, de triunfar y poner en alto el nombre de México y del toreo mexicano en Aleida da Luz, Redondo, Alexio, Beja, Arruda Dos Vinhos y Montijo‘, señaló.

Gamero cuenta con una cuadra de 10 caballos para conseguir su objetivo que es mantener la racha triunfal que lleva hasta ahora.

Daniel Luque en Dax


 August 13, 2022

August 14, 2022

¿Sabías que Vista Alegre se construyó en 9 meses tras un incendio que la destruyó por completo?


Las Corridas Generales de Bilbao arrancan por todo lo alto el próximo 20 de agosto. Tres años después, Bilbao vivirá con ilusión su Aste Nagusia en el histórico escenario de Vista Alegre, una plaza que se inauguró el 19 de junio de 1962, apenas 9 meses después de arder por completo; Fue tras una novillada de Antonio Pérez de San Fernando, lidiada por El Cordobés, Rafael Chacarte y José María Montilla, el 4 de septiembre de 1961, cuando la plaza de Vista Alegre se incendió a las dos y media de la madrugada. Las causas de semejante catástrofe aún hoy se desconocen. Las llamas se llevaron casi 80 años de toros en el bocho.

En un tiempo record de nueve meses, se levantó sobre las propias cenizas, la nueva plaza de Vista Alegre. Lorenzo Hurtado de Saracho, alcalde de Bilbao, asumió la responsabilidad de dotar a la ciudad del nuevo coso. Bajo un proyecto del arquitecto Luis María Gana y Hoyos, siendo contratistas los hermanos Olavarría. El nuevo coso nació con un aforo de 14.785 localidades y fue inaugurado el 19 de junio de 1962 por los diestros Antonio Ordóñez, César Girón y el baracaldés, Rafael Chacarte. Se enfrentaron a toros de distintas ganaderías: Juan Pedro Domecq, Carlos Urquijo, Atanasio Fernández, Antonio Pérez Tabernero, Marqués de Domecq y Ricardo Arellano.

El primer toro que saltó al ruedo, se llamaba ‘Limonero’ –número 32, negro, de 493 kilos- de la ganadería de Juan Pedro Domecq. Le correspondió a Antonio Ordóñez, quien cortó la primera oreja del nuevo coso, tras estoquear al cuarto toro de Antonio Pérez de San Fernando. César Girón, paseó un trofeo del quinto toro y Rafael Chacarte las dos orejas del sexto.

La nueva plaza de Vista Alegre fue pionera por sus modernas instalaciones.

La gestión del coso continuó siendo de la Junta Administrativa de Vista Alegre, contando desde hace 52 años con la colaboración y asesoramiento de la Casa Chopera, actuales empresarios del inmueble a través de la empresa BMF que dirige la familia Bailleres.

Ganaderías mexicanas aprovechan la ‘apertura’ de exportación: vacas de La Quinta, Garcigrande y Victoriano del Río ya están en ranchos mexicanos o pasando cuarentena

 (mundotoro.com Aug. 1, 2022)

En silencio y sin transcendencia: ejemplares de varias ganaderías punteras de España ya están en varios ranchos mexicanos o pasando la cuarentena correspondiente para refrescar sangres y añadir nuevas. Hacía muchas décadas que las fronteras para la exportación de animales bravos entre España y México estaban cerradas. De esta forma, los ganaderos mexicanos que deseaban refrescar, crear o cruzar se habían de conformar con las denominadas “pajuelas”. Mundotoro ha podido contrastar que, en las últimas fechas, vacas madres de La Quinta, Victoriano del Río y Garcigrande, al menos, ya están en varias ganaderías mexicanas o en situación de cuarentena. 

En concreto, lotes de La Quinta están pasando la cuarentena y podrían estar en septiembre en los ranchos de Rancho Seco, que también ha adquirido un lote de vacas y cuatro sementales de López Gibaja, y Pepe Marrón. Un lote a completar de Garcigrande está ya en la ganadería “española” de Santiago Pérez Salazar (San Fernando), alrededor de unas sesenta vacas. Por otro lado, en las ganaderías de Fernando de la Mora (con dos sementales) y los Gutiérrez Cortina (Santa Fe del Campo), pastan ya reses de Victoriano del Río.

Podría darse la circunstancia de que de las vacadas propiedad de la familia Baillères, Zalduendo y los amplios lotes adquiridos a Núñez de Cuvillo, podrían “viajar” a México en un traslado entre el mismo propietario. En cualquier caso, estas adquisiciones tratan de refrescar y ampliar el toro mexicano para lograr una nueva “oferta” ganadera en un país en donde el monopolio de un origen de raza ha sido el alimento de su tauromaquia. Lo que no se sabe es quien ha logrado esta estupenda circunstancia de fronteras abiertas que tan bien puede hacer al toreo mexicano.

Desde el año 1998 que Martín Arranz y José Miguel Arroyo hicieron una exportación importante de procedencia Parladé/Domecq a México, así como llegaron a este país lotes de Buendía a ganaderías como la de Los Encinos y otra sangres santacolomeñas como las de Paco Camino, adquiridas por Pepe Chafick. Desde entonces los ganaderos mexicanos no habían podido adquirir ejemplares para trasladaros a tierras mexicanas.


August 4, 2022

Arte de Manuel Castellanos


Uno de los preciosos dibujos que nos dejó, a lápiz, el gran Manuel Castellanos. Este es de un toro de Benjumea lidiado en Madrid en el año 1855. Gracias a este legado podemos ver el tipo y hechuras de toros de esa época.

Rafaelillo


 Impactante foto de Rafaelillo en Madrid