![]() |
|
El Cachafaz
|
|
![]() |
|
Dancer |
|
He looked like as if he were not very smart from waist
downwards, with a well upright body, but with too much feet movement,
possibly due to the film maker´s instructions, to attract people´s attention.
His nickname remained for our everyday history as his
definitive first and last names: El Cachafaz.
According to the lunfardo dictionary by Adolfo Enrique
Rodríguez, cachafaz, means: rascal, shameless, insolent, rogue, idler.
It is possible he had been and it is possible he had
not, his face inspired doubts. Combed a la gomina (with a sticky
paste), the hair tightly pulled backwards, Indian-like features and
pock-marked, he always appeared with a serious countenance on pictures
and on movies.
His true name was Ovidio José Bianquet, although his
name for some was Benito. Here is where don José Gobello's knowledge
is needed, and on an article he stated his opinion: «That was a nickname
he was given when a child and in a confusing incident. He lived on La
Rioja street in the neighborhood of south Balvanera when somebody went
to the police precinct to report that a shop window glass had been broken
by someone who had thrown a stone at it. He was accused and when the
police arrived, his mother , a native from Córdoba, could not believe
it and only was able to utter: “No puede ser si él es buenito, es buenito”
(it´s not possible, if he´s so good).»
The police officer mistook Benito for buenito
and so he handed the report: Benito Bianquet. (See note “The famous
dancers”, where there is another opinion.)
And why El Cachafaz? According to Gobello, again, because
when a young guy he was daring with women and more than once he took
undue liberties. One of them complained to his father about his behavior
and they say that he exclaimed furious: ¡Mi hijo es un cachafaz! (My
son is a scoundrel!) The boys in the neighborhood, or all who were,
did the rest.
He was born on 14 February 1885 on the corner of Boedo
and Independencia streets, today neighborhood of Boedo.
In 1911 he traveled to the United States and on his
comeback in 1913 he put a dancing parlor.
Between 1910 and 1929 he had Emma Bóveda and Elsa O’Connor,
later an outstanding dramatic actress in theater and cinema, as his
partners, in love and in dancing. Subsequently, Isabel San Miguel and
since 1933 Carmencita Calderón, exclusively as dancing partner.
In 1919 he was in Paris, they say that to perform at
the mythical Cabaret El Garrón, where the Argentine musician Manuel Pizarro was
playing with his brothers, but the European way of life and his did
not match, so he returned.
Gobello says that he was well paid for dancing lessons
to high society people, and he ends with a sharp remark: «Had he been
or not the greatest tango dancer, as such he will always be considered.»
He died after a performance in the city of Mar del
Plata on 7 February 1942.
Interview made by the journalist Irene Amuchástegui
to Carmen Calderón after 55 years of “El Cachafaz”´s death. Clarín newspaper,
Buenos Aires, 7 February 1997.
|
|