Ever since I was a kid growing up in Ogden Utah back in the early 80's, I've been fascinated by the Spanish bullfight. I even searched out books on bullfighting at the Weber County library, where I found and read "Death in the Afternoon" by Ernest Hemingway. I'm probably the only kid in Utah to have ever read that book. Now here we are 40 years later and I still enjoy learning about and keeping up with the bullfights.
Showing posts with label toreros - morante de la puebla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toreros - morante de la puebla. Show all posts

April 19, 2026

Morante does it again

Well, Morante has done it again, he brought the house down in Sevilla.

It is a good thing Morante came out of his very short retirement, otherwise we would not have been able to witness an insane performance and the crowd at a sold out Maestranza on the 16th of April going crazy. The shouts of Ole! were non-stop.

First off, if you are not a subscriber to OneToro, you really need to be. At least pay for one month just so you can watch this performance, and at the same time you might as well go into the archive and watch his tail-cutting performances in Sevilla and Jerez from a couple of years ago.

Also, I am sure the executives at OneToro are incredibly happy they were able to make the deal to broadcast some of the days from this year's feria. It was kind of a late agreement I believe, they only announced they would be broadcasting several of the days just about a month ago. But they must be dancing in their offices thanks to getting this one on their platform.

Even though Morante did not cut any ears from his second Alvaro Nunez bull, his entire performance from start to finish was something out the history books. The crowd went especially crazy when he placed his own banderillas, the third pair while sitting on a folding chair handed down to him but someone in the upper rows of the plaza. 

He even gave two vueltas al ruedo when the fight was over, not just one but two. 

And at the end of the night as the crowd carried him out of the plaza, there was almost a riot as his fans wanted to carry him out of the Puerta del Principe but the police would not allow it since he did not cut any ears. His fans didn't care but there was a lot of yelling and some shoving back and forth.

Here are a couple of Mundotoro links from that day;

-Sevilla, llena hasta la bandera en una tarde para la historia- https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/el-cartelazo-del-jueves-de-preferia-en-imagenes/1929049

-Morante recoge toda la historia del toreo en una faena antológica en Sevilla (Así te hemos contado la tarde en vivo)- https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/morante-ortega-y-victor-hernandez-en-la-quinta-de-la-feria-de-abril-directo-sevilla/1929015






April 5, 2026

Resurrection Sunday

It has been a hectic past few days in the world of the bulls, but the season is off and running!

We had fiestas in Malaga, Arles, Madrid, and Sevilla. (and probably even a few more that I missed.) But the biggest news is probably the return of Morante. It seems like no one can picture a season of bulls in Spain without Morante. Maybe people will tire of him at some point, but at least at the moment they want more. And he was in Sevilla today, along with Roca Rey and David de Miranda ushering in the season.

I will try to get more photos posted soon but it is getting late and I need to get to bed so I can go to work in the morning. But here is a link to a video of today's highlights from Sevilla, along with a few photos.

link to Mundotoro video





(meeting with the King of Spain after la corrida)

January 3, 2026

Morante's 2025 faena in Salamanca - (link to article and video on Mundotoro)

La faena antológica de Morante en Salamanca

La sección ‘El 2025, por sus protagonistas’ acaba con el nombre de este año: Morante de la Puebla. En un sinfín de faenas que quedarán grabadas para la historia, Mundotoro quiere recuperar la que el sevillano cuajó en la plaza de toros de Salamanca.

Una obra inconmensurable que fue premiada con las dos orejas y el rabo. Un año histórico en el que Morante de la Puebla ha llevado el rumbo del toreo hasta que aquel 12 de octubre y después de conseguir su segunda Puerta Grande de Madrid decidiera quitarse la coleta.

https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/el-2025-por-sus-protagonistas-la-faena-antologica-de-morante-en-salamanca/1910941

November 21, 2025

The photo says it all


 

Morante, la última faena de un torero para la historia (Vídeo)

(mundotoro.com October 12, 2025)

Con cuello, corto de manos, el colorado cuarto. Serio y con perfil. Amplio de sienes. Lo recibió Morante de la Puebla con una tijerilla de rodillas. Varios lances con una rodilla en tierra para proseguir con unas chicuelinas muy confiando, sin apenas sacar los brazos para intentar recoger la embestida. Por el pitón izquierdo pasaba muy ajustado y en la siguiente por ese lado, se lo llevó por delante. Fue brutal la caída. Con la espalda y el cuello. Se quedó Morante de la Puebla inmóvil en la arena. Intentó en el callejón recuperarse. Prosiguió la lidia, mientras el sevillano continuaba en la boca del burladero intentado recuperarse. Se empleó el toro en el primer encuentro. Salió de nuevo Morante de la Puebla. Fuerte ovación. Marcó el toro querencia en el tercio de banderillas, siempre terminando en las tablas. Brindó Morante de la Puebla a Santiago Abascal.

Muleta: Embistió el toro al paso y Morante le sopló una primera serie sobre la diestra de enorme trazo y pulso. Enorme la exposición. Totalmente abandonado y dispuesto en cada embroque a todo. Se rozó el percance y la plenitud del toreo en cada cite. La siguiente serie tuvo un trazo más curvo. El público se puso en pie. Imposible torear con más ajuste, más abandonado. Más entregado al propio destino. Lo físico no tiene importancia. Desde el embroque el muletazo tuvo dimensión mayor. Monumental el toreo sobre la diestra. Por el pitón izquierdo, es imposible. Un altercado en el tendido protagonizó el final de la faena cuando Morante se dispuso a entrar a matar.

Morante se fue al centro del ruedo y en plena soledad y grandeza se cortó la coleta frente la sorpresa de todo el público. Los gritos de ¡Torero, torero! afloraron para un toreo irrepetible, único. Madrid le obligó a saludar otra ovación.

https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/morante-la-ultima-faena-de-un-torero-para-la-historia-video/1901693

Morante: las lágrimas de una leyenda

(mundotoro.com October 12, 2025)

Fue una vez acabada la vuelta al ruedo. Después de una faena inconmensurable que lo acercó más al cielo que a la tierra. Con las dos orejas en las manos y con la segunda Puerta Grande conseguida en su trayectoria después de una temporada grabada con letras de oro en la historia de la Tauromaquia. Morante se fue al centro del ruedo y en plena soledad y grandeza se cortó la coleta frente la sorpresa de todo el público.

Los gritos de ¡Torero, torero! afloraron para un toreo irrepetible, único, que hizo del arte una forma de verdad. Madrid le obligó a saludar otra ovación mientras las lágrimas recorrían su rostro. Lágrimas de felicidad, de gratitud, de la lucha interior y del esfuerzo de superación que lo llevaron hasta ese día. Una amalgama de emociones se fundió en el corazón de Morante y en el de los tendidos del coso venteño, que lloraban al unísono con él y ya sentían el vacío que dejaba su adiós.

https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/morante-de-la-puebla-se-corta-la-coleta-despues-de-desorejar-a-un-toro-en-madrid/1901673

Blood and Tears as Spain’s Troubled Bullfighting Star Hangs Up His Cape

(by Jason Horowitz nytimes.com November 12, 2025)

José Antonio Morante Camacho, arguably the greatest bullfighter of his generation, lay flat on his back in the middle of the arena.

A 1,220-pound bull had just flipped him in the air, prompting a gasp from the sold-out crowd in Madrid’s Las Ventas, Spain’s most hallowed bullfighting ring.

As the 46-year-old, known across the Spanish-speaking world as Morante de la Puebla, did a mental scan of his scarred body, other matadors rushed to carry him off. Brought safely to the ring’s red perimeter wall, he got up, grimaced and walked off the pain. He eventually returned to the fight, drawing the bull close with elegant sweeps of his cape that elicited cries of olé.

When it was over, the bull was dead, the rare prize of its ears were hoisted in Mr. Morante’s hands and a blizzard of white handkerchiefs waved in appreciation.

The bullfighter embraced Spain’s leading far-right politician, bathed in a shower of flowers, Spanish flags and cigars. He turned back to the center of the ring where, with tears on his weathered face, he removed a symbolic pigtail, clipped to the back of his hair. Everyone weeping along with him knew what that meant. Morante de la Puebla was calling it quits.

“I felt an artistic exhaustion,” Mr. Morante said a few days after the Oct. 12 fight, in an interview at his riverside farm in La Puebla del Río, his hometown outside Seville in southern Spain. In whispered, languid sentences, Mr. Morante, wearing a wool Gucci suit and fedora, said he felt no lessening of his skills and that his career had been “upwards, upwards, upwards.” But, he said, “I’ve decided to stop before I fall.”

The withdrawal of Mr. Morante deprives bullfighting aficionados of a legend admired for his artistry, courage and imagination. Impresarios say they will miss his ability to fill the seats and the end of a rivalry with a rising Peruvian matinee idol. The leader of the nationalist Vox party, Santiago Abascal, had in Mr. Morante a direct line to die-hard fans of an increasingly polarizing and conservative-coded pastime.

But even many of the Spaniards who want to follow the example of some regions and ban bullfighting across the country appreciated Mr. Morante as a rare original, not just for his Elvis impersonator mutton chops and psychedelic rock band outfits but for his bravery in publicly wrestling with mental health problems.

“It exists, and I don’t like to deceive anyone,” he said as he sipped coffee to wash down medication that he said sapped his strength and caused fluctuations in his weight. He talked about his experience with electroshock therapy, his diagnosis of depersonalization, bouts of weeping and his decision to spend much of the year in Portugal, because, he said, “my doctor is there.” And while he acknowledged that fans thank him for destigmatizing mental illness, he added with a quivering smile that “it’s harder to stand in front of a bull.”


He and his family still live in his hometown, where locals drink beers under bullheads and photos of him in a bar that bears his name.

His farm by the river has a bull ring and a ballroom annex featuring taxidermized bullheads, antique bullfighting posters and lighted vitrines displaying his sequined matador costumes. His living room is decorated with the heads and tails of his greatest triumphs, shrines to some of Spain’s most storied matadors and sculptures of cherubs and saints.

A plate featuring Spain’s dictator Francisco Franco hangs by the kitchen counter, near scores of bronze trophies and a stack of his trademark pink and green capes, stained with blood and branded Morante de la Puebla. The place had filled up over the years, he said. “I’ve been doing this for a long time.”

Mr. Morante grew up close by in a small house marked with a plaque above a narrow door and exposed electric wiring. As a child, he said, he faked sleep as his father, who lugged sacks of rice in a nearby factory, carried him into the arena, a ruse designed to avoid paying for a second ticket. Once inside, Mr. Morante said he would open his eyes and soak up “a divine place.”


At home, he stuck a sausage on the end of a stick draped with a red muleta cape and pretended that the family’s dog, Paloma, was a bull. His mother yelled at him, but by 6 years old, he confronted his first young cow in a local corral, and suffered his first collision. But then he got up. “I felt that something unstoppable surged in my blood,” he said.

He dropped out of school and forged papers at age 14 to participate in the ring. At 17 he debuted, against his mother’s wishes, as a matador. He recalled his youthful “beauty” and success. But by the time he was 20, he said, his mother was weeping at his plan to marry a girl from the town, and leave home. That was the day, he said, that he suffered a mental crisis.

“I looked in the mirror. I didn’t seem like myself,” he explained. He began to weep uncontrollably, he said, and felt as though he was living outside his own body. A doctor diagnosed him with depression and a dissociative disorder, and soon after, he said, he received electroshock therapy in Miami, where a friend suggested medicine was more advanced. It helped a little, he said, but his condition remained.

In 2008, after three years of marriage and the birth of a son, he split from his first wife. He said he grew accustomed to the solitude caused by his condition, which was only compounded by the solitude of facing down bulls in the ring. Nevertheless, his career blossomed. While Mr. Morante spoke with envy about the sponsorships and stratospheric salaries of soccer stars, he earned — and spent — millions.

In 2010, he remarried. But as his family expanded with two daughters, the election of a left-wing government clearly antagonistic to bullfighting imperiled his profession.

Mr. Morante said he went “asking for a little help,” from Mr. Abascal, the hard-right leader who, he said, “doesn’t know much” about bullfighting, but who eagerly went to bat for a hero to his political base. “Show the deep Spain,” Mr. Abascal texted Mr. Morante during the interview at the farm.

Mr. Morante’s triumphs helped bring in bigger crowds, and bullfighting became more popular with younger conservatives. But his personal demons haunted him.

Confidantes in town said his mood swung wildly depending on how he did in the ring. He sat out some bullfights, and in others, he dispatched bulls he didn’t like the look of with efficient, lackluster performances.

He eventually got back on track with the help of Pedro Jorge Marqués, a childhood friend from Portugal who had become a dentist and his manager and who lived with Mr. Morante’s mother when in Puebla.


But during Mr. Morante’s absences, other stars rose, including the young Peruvian bullfighter Andrés Roca Rey. This summer, the two had words in the ring, and Mr. Rey infuriated Mr. Morante by telling him to take it easy: “Maestro, smoke a cigar slowly.”

Mr. Morante, who admitted, with a puff on a Cuban, that cigars relaxed him, said he decided a rivalry was good “only if it’s noble and in front of the bull.” The two had made up, he said, but added he had no interest in seeing “Afternoons of Solitude,” an award-winning documentary focused on Mr. Rey, who, he said, “looked for” attention.

On Oct. 12, Mr. Morante assured that all attention focused on him. He said he had made a deal with God that if he triumphed in Madrid he would call it a day. “The combination of my mental health issues, the suffering, it wasn’t a joyful situation,” he said. “But it was one of satisfaction. For having fulfilled a dream.”

And as if in a dream, thousands of young, preppy bullfighting fans stormed the ring and carried him out on their shoulders through the arena’s famous gate of triumph, though their ripping at his shimmering matador costume for souvenirs, he said, was “very distressing.” The evening ended with him on the balcony of a famous Madrid hotel blowing kisses to the crowd in a special silk striped nightgown that he had packed, he said, “just in case” he triumphed and went out in style.

The problem now, he said, was that he had no other interests. “Nothing” he said. “Nothing.” Contrary to bullfighting gossip, he said, he and his wife were still together, though, he added with a shrug, “I don’t know until when.” A local farmer who dropped off a couple of golden pheasants to raise on the farm began to weep when Mr. Morante signed for him one of the capes stacked in the kitchen.

“What else am I going to do with them?” Mr. Morante said.


His weary eyes instead lit up when Mr. Marqués told him promoters were already plotting to bring him back.

“I had a dream about that,” Mr. Morante said, adding, “let’s not call it a complete retirement. It’s a rest.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/world/europe/spain-bullfighting-morante-camacho.html

August 10, 2025

The gray sand of Bilbao


I still don't understand how the sand in Bilbao is gray. I might just have to go there myself some day to figure it out.

June 11, 2025

The year of Morante


Talk about the year of Morante. 

After cutting two ears off a bull in Sevilla on May 1st, then cutting a tail off a bull in Jerez, now Morante brought the house down in Madrid on the last day of San Isidro by cutting an ear off each of his bulls and being carried out la Puerta Grande for the first time in his career in Madrid. 

He even came out of his hotel room later, wearing nothing more than a bathrobe, and toasted the crowd that had assembled and drank champagne all while standing on his balcony.

There are a lot of videos out there and eventually I will post links, but here is one for now.

https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/morante-en-la-espana-que-sigue-siendo/1863813

June 2, 2025

Morante saves the day in Madrid


May 28, 2025, after one of Morante's banderilleros had placed a pair of banderillos in this Garcigrande bull, the bull gave chase. As the bull was closing the distance Morante had to step in and distract the bull, even though he was taking a drink of water out of his silver cup. 

Without spilling a drop, or so the TV announcers said, Morante distracted the bull and saved the day.

August 4, 2024

Morante de la Puebla: Una torera faena a su primero en Huelva


https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/morante-de-la-puebla-una-torera-faena-a-su-primero-en-huelva/1794611

Vino el público en peregrinación devocional para ver a Morante de la Puebla, quedando en su regusto satisfechos con el bello recibo a la verónica de Morante de la Puebla, muy hundido, de mucha estética. Como un gran quite a la verónica, rematado de una media abrochada a la cadera. El de Zalduendo, al límite por delante, tuvo nobleza y buen son en la embestida.

Con un gran embroque y enorme torería, llevó Morante de la Puebla las embestidas con mucho temple y reunión. Un toreo al natural, que fluyó con inspiración y empaque. Más ligado siempre por el pitón derecho dentro de una faena secuestrada por el primer toro. Dejó la estocada al segundo intento y todo quedó en una ovación.

April 29, 2023

Morante corta un rabo en Sevilla

Después de 52 años, el 26 de Abril Morante de la Puebla baja los duendes en la Maestranza de Sevilla y corta 2 orejas y rabo para en Sevilla.

El toro Nº 82. LIGERITO. Negro de 515 kg. de la ganadería de Domingo Hernández.
 

December 4, 2022

El cartel más ‘gallista’ de Morante para la Historia


 (mundotoro.com)

Bien es sabida la admiración que Morante de la Puebla procesa a Joselito ‘El Gallo’, muy presente en la figura del matador de toros sevillano. La temporada 2022 del de La Puebla del Río ha girado en torno a la figura del ‘Rey de los toreros’ con el objetivo muy marcado de llegar a las 100 tardes como consiguió José en 1919. Dicha azaña del diestro de Gelves quedó registrada en un precioso cartel de seda con todos los paseíllos de ese memorable año. Y también quedará registrada la temporada 2022 de Morante de la Puebla en un cartel para la Historia.

Bajo la figura de Joselito ‘El Gallo’, Morante es protagonista de un cartel donde queda registrada todas las tardes de un año histórico, como ya escribió Mundotoro hace algunos días. Una muestra más de la enorme presencia de Joselito El Gallo en la trayectoria y el propio modo de vida de Morante de la Puebla que se le une a otras como el traje de corto que lució el de La Puebla del Río hace escasos días en el Club Taurino de Londres, la recuperación de varias suertes, la interpretación del par al quiebro o la adquisición de la mesa del considerado precursor del toreo hasta llegar a nuestros días.  

Morante de la Puebla ha acabado el año como líder absoluto del escalafón, con 100 paseíllos y tardes para el recuerdos en plazas como Sevilla y Madrid. Una temporada de máxima exigencia y responsabilidad que ha terminado con 84 orejas cortadas y dos rabos. 

https://www.mundotoro.com/noticia/el-cartel-mas-gallista-de-morante-para-la-historia/1666802

October 23, 2022

Morante 100 corridas 100 en la presente temporada


Por Jorge García DELGADILLO 

Algunas metas en la vida son alcanzables y el presente año José Antonio Morante Camacho, mejor conocido como “Morante de la Puebla” se propuso realizar una campaña europea que le permitiera realizar, por primera vez, en sus 25 años de matador de Toros, llegar al mágico número de 100 Corridas en una Temporada. 

La decisión se veía venir desde el año pasado, donde aceptó lidiar algunos encastes de los llamados minoritarios y otros duros, lo cual inclusive motivó el rompimiento con la casa de Apoderamiento de Toño Matilla, para tener la libertad de que ha gozado durante este año. 

No sólo rompió con su apoderado sino que rompió cánones propios de las figuras del toreo modernas, al aceptar lidiar encastes olvidados, duros, minoritarios y  ganaderías que no torean las  figuras, revive suertes antiguas, pega las verónicas más bellas del mundo, se muestra  como una gran figura del toreo con los toros peligrosos, desdeña lo que no enviste, pega un gran petardo, es el más malo para matar, se viste estrafalario, inventa una faena con un animal al que nadie da nada, pagréguele lo que ud guste.

Para su corrida No 100 compartirá cartel con Emilio de Justo, Ángel Téllez y el novillero Marco Pérez, el próximo sábado 22 de octubre en 

la localidad abulense de Arenas de San Pedro. Los Toros serán de dos ganaderías que han dado buen juego durante la presente temporada, Victoriano del Río y El Pilar.