Showing posts with label "Tango Obituaries". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Tango Obituaries". Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

RIP Cacho Dante



I have no details to report except that he has died.

https://cachodante.wordpress.com/

https://www.facebook.com/Cacho-Dante-49079175993/

https://tangocommuter1.blogspot.com/2013/02/cacho-dante-and-embrace.html

http://www.umich.edu/~matc/articles/Dante-TangoAndTrapezeActs.html







Sent from my iPhone

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

RIP Andrea Misse'

RIP Andrea Misse'

Sad, very sad news....

From El Tangauta 02/01/2012:

'With deep sadness we communicate that Andrea Misse died today in a car accident in La Pampa. Javier Rodriguez also reported that her husband and her baby are in critical condition.'

Sunday, January 10, 2010

The Death of Osvaldo Zotto :: 1963-2010

Osvaldo Zotto by leone perugino [Photo by Leone Perugino on Flickr]

Perhaps everyone has already heard. I found out Friday night that Osvaldo Zotto had also died. He was 46. Not to be outdone by Tete I suppose. It makes me think of the friendly competition between dancers, between milongueros. Osvaldo: "Yes, Tete, that was a good death, but I can die just as well, if not better. Watch me." Tete: "Yes, Osvaldo, that was a good one! Come on up, the pistas are very, very smooth up here."

But no death is a good death. Death is inevitable. We are mortal. I speak the obvious. But do we clamp and shutter our impending doom into the dark recesses of our minds? Do we ignore the obvious damage we are doing to our health? It seems that so many things that taste good and feel good are bad for us. The hard work to remain healthy in this world is just that - hard work. Physically, mentally - it takes will power. Will. Power.

And then sometimes, even the most healthy of us get sick and die. I'll say it again - Death is inevitable. Death.

As it turns out I think they both died on Wednesday, and Osvaldo may have preceded Tete. There are no details to be found. Perhaps a reader knows something?

This has always been my favorite video of Osvaldo (y Lorena). My dream is to be able to dance like this some day. [With Lorena Ermocida at Confiteria Ideal]




And then here is another of Osvaldo dancing solo in an incredible venue. Impressive, and ballsy to say the least. The venue is Salone Margherita di Napoli. Naples, Italy.



And lastly, the 20 tango lessons (with Mora Godoy) on YouTube, by TangoCity. I suppose this is a video/dvd available on the market somehwere.





I never met either man, but wish I had. I admired their dancing. Distinctly different, distinctly unique from each other in their expression of the dance, and that is the beauty of tango. Two men with two different interpretations on the art form. The music goes in their ears, filters through their hearts, and comes out via their feet. Their movement becomes a reflection their hearts. Their souls. That's what I love about this dance. It may be one of the only ways (that I can think of right now) that an individual (okay, a couple) can express their hearts and souls through movement, whilst embracing each other. What a beautiful thing to have in your life.

Sad, sad days. The loss of two tango icons within a couple of days.

If I may for all of us, our thoughts, prayers and condolences go out to their families, friends, and loved ones.

Announcement from telam.com.ar:

Murió el bailarín de tango Osvaldo Zotto


Falleció ayer en Buenos Aires, a los 46 años de edad, informaron sus allegados. Su hermano Miguel Angel Zotto interrumpió su gira en Europa y viajaba anoche hacia Buenos Aires.

Zotto fue hallado muerto en su departamento, en el barrio de Boedo, por su amigo y también bailarín Andrés "Tanguito" Cejas, quien aparentemente tenía las llaves de acceso, dijo a Télam Omar Viola, organizador de milongas.

La presunta causa de la muerte fue un infarto, según expresaron los médicos de la ambulancia que fue a buscar el cuerpo, comentó a esta agencia Ricardo Franquello, un milonguero amigo de Zotto que llegó antes que lo retiraran.

Sus restos mortales serán velados desde este sábado al mediodía en una casa mortuoria de Ramirez de Velazco 1070, en el barrio porteño de Villa Crespo.

El maestro desaparecido era hermano menor del máximo bailarín y productor de espectáculos de tango del momento, Miguel Angel Zotto, quien tras enterarse del deceso partió de Italia -donde se encontraba de gira- hacia Buenos Aires.

Zotto fue pareja de baile y de vida de la también exitosa productora y bailarina Mora Godoy y de Lorena Ermocida, y últimamente bailaba con Giselle Avanzi.

La pareja con Ermocida se conformó a principios de 1997 y dos años más tarde fueron convocados por Julio Iglesias para bailar en sus presentaciones, cuando el cantante español comenzó a cantar tangos.

La Orquesta Sinfónica del Hollywood Bowl, los convocó para una función, en la que bailaron frente a 50.000 personas en la ciudad de Los Angeles, California.

También fueron invitados al festival "Buenos Aires Tango en France 2", en el "Teatro Nacional Chaillot", de París, y participaron de los festivales más importantes del mundo, como los de Madrid, Sitges, Granada, Roma, Génova, Torino, Bologna, Hamburgo, Hanover, Miami y Buenos Aires.

Además integraron la compañía "Tango x 2" en sus dos obras "Una Noche de Tango" y "Perfumes de Tango", con las que visitaron Inglaterra, Alemania, Italia y Estados Unidos, además de encabezar "Perfumes de Tango" en la ciudad de Mar del Plata.

El velatorio de Zotto se realizará en la misma casa fúnebre donde hasta ayer fue velado el cuerpo de su amigo y milonguero Pedro "Tete" Rusconi, fallecido el jueves.

Franquelo dijo entre lágrimas que "esta tarde enterramos a Tete y ahora se nos fue Osvaldito, y mañana (por este sábado) otra vez de velorio en el mismo lugar. Estoy destrozado y todo el tango y los tangueros estamos llorando".

Tete no era un bailarín de espectáculos, sino un tanguero de las milongas, y además de concurrir a bailar casi todas las noches, había dado clases y exhibiciones en todas las pistas de Buenos Aires y muchas del interior y numerosos países de varios continentes.


Here is an article from Keith Elshaw's ToTango.net:

For many years, it could be said that Osvaldo was in the shadow of his famous older brother, Miguel - who has had a 15 year run of big shows, television exposure and a great body of work.

Both brothers have worked for a long period of time with incredibly good partners with whom they ultimately have split. Miguel and Milena Plebs separated in 1999 and Miguel has not stayed with one partner for any extended time since then.

As today I watch Osvaldo in sheer awe, I also reflect on how impossible it would have been to have said the same thing way back when as he danced (very well, but ...) with Guillermina Quoroga in the old days. You wouldn't think it is the same person - even though he even then had his patented moves. Osvaldo and his then wife Mora Godoy achieved a high profile in part through the series of instructional videos they made in the 90's and in shows with Miguel and Milena. Their break-up occurred. Then in 1997, his partnership with Lorena began. Their dancing now is sublime.

When teaching in English, it is Lorena who explains and shines. She is a gifted dancer and communicator. But just watching Osvaldo is inspiring.

Dancing to Pugliese's Desde El Alma, they begin with tantalizingly slow walking and interplay through the first half of the song. It is the most mature performers who don't feel they must fill up their 3 minutes with flash.

But as the song builds, their energy increases; their performance more dramatic. In the last 30 seconds, after Lorena's sultry display of the sexiest walk in Tango, they display a stunning mastery of Tango at it's most furious and complicated.

You love Tango with so much ever-increasing emotion. It tends to dominate your life. The love goes on and on over time, deepening it's hold on you.

When you see Osvaldo and Lorena, you understand more why. They embody all the physical beauty, the emotional maturity, the artistic sensibilities of Tango's potential in motion.



And another article about Osvaldo I found on CliveJames.com:

With tango partnerships, the man’s name always comes first, not just because of the art-form’s unreconstructed macho heritage but because the man leads and takes the responsibility. His first responsibility, however, is to bring out the lyricism of the woman. Of the two famous brothers, Miguel Angel Zotto is the more vivid but Osvaldo is the more poetic. When I first saw him dance, on one of his teaching visits to London, I thought seriously of tearing up every poem I had ever written and making arrangements to be born again in Buenos Aires. In the first three examples of his mastery that I have chosen here, he dances with his regular partner Lorena Ermocida. Almost every video of serious Argentinian tango that you will ever see was shot by an amateur and the sound is usually as raucous as the visuals are patchy, but if, at a first viewing, you keep your eyes on Osvaldo’s feet you will see the essence of the matter. The remarkable length of his sideways stride is always in evidence, and the default position of his advancing foot is invariably with the toe extended, giving a man of average height the stride of an unusually suave giant.

An expert witness could go on for hours about the intricacies of Osvaldo Zotto’s technique, yet his smoothly linked steps are never more complicated than necessary, even when he uncorks a giro that has chapter after chapter, like a little book. But his chief instrument of expression is his partner. Under his guidance, she is given oceans of time to flourish the free foot and decorate as she pleases. I have chosen the first example with some care, so that the beginning viewer will realise that the woman should know how to get her effects with her feet near the floor before she takes off into the adagio bravura whose crowd-pleasing over-use makes so many tango stage shows tediously repetitive. Lorena Ermocida (that’s her with him in the photograph) is an artist, not a stunt woman.

Perhaps the most expressive partner Osvaldo Zotto ever danced with, however – she was probably the most expressive partner any leading man of Osvaldo’s generation ever danced with – was the great Milena Plebs. My last chosen example shows Osvaldo and Milena demonstrating exactly what the tango ought to be. Notice, in particular, how Milena scarcely even decorates. She gets her effects with a simple-seeming sweep of the free foot, just as Osvaldo gets most of his from merely changing direction. But of course there is nothing simple, or mere, about it. This is a language in which fluency costs a lifetime.



Other Bloggers on Osvaldo :::

TangoPilgrim.com

Friday, January 8, 2010

The Death of Pedro Alberto "Tete" Rusconi :: Un Milonguero

Tete Rusconi y Silvia Ceriana
Tete Rusconi y Silvia Ceriana :: Photographer: Carlos Vizzotto

Born: January 9, 1936

Died: January 7, 2010

Two days before his 74th birthday. Young. Too young to die at 73, especially when "80 is the new 50" or whatever they are saying.

Apparently he was dancing as usual at Milonga El Beso on Wednesday night, appeared to everyone to be in perfect/usual health and humor, but then died in his sleep of an apparent heart attack.

There was a wake held for him in Buenos Aires at midnight last night.

I never met Tete Rusconi. I watched countless YouTube videos of him dancing. He was inspiration for many of us. He was a milonguero, known for his vals, with his arms extended out like a kid pretending to be an airplane.

And fly like a kid he did, floating across the dance floor like no other.

Others, who knew him, could say more, could share their stories, share his stories. From the little bit I have gleaned over the past five years, hearing bits and pieces about him, he was a larger-than-life character. A full-of-life kinda guy. And he obviously loved tango and the people of tango.

The milongueros are a dying breed. Literally. Dying off into extinction. I'm sure there are videos and interviews with him, but it seems a shame that these gentlemen are dying and we are losing them, their stories, their personalities, their knowledge of the dance, their love and light and quirks and whatever. But this is a subject for another post.

Here is the background information from the "Tete y Silvia" website:

Pedro “Tete” Rusconi is the foremost teacher of the close embrace style of Argentine Tango, genuine Tango Salón.

Since 1996 Tete and Silvia have been dancing and teaching together. They have toured throughout Europe including Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, Holland, Spain, Belgium and Sweden as well as the USA.

They offer group and private lessons and dance in exhibitions and performances.

They have participated in many international Tango Festivals.
Tete and Silvia pay special attention to the compass, the sensitivity of the dancers, and the freedom of the movement.

Their tango-waltz classes are internationally acclaimed. Tete is noted for his individual style of musicality; Silvia is a master at tango technique and expression of the dance.

Their approach to teaching is complementary and their unique style encourages students to explore the tango for its personal and individual meaning and interpretation.

Paul Pellicoro (New York) included Tete & Silvia in his book "Paul Pellicoro on Tango" (2002). This book features the most important tango teachers from the last thirty years.


There is a section on the Tete y Silvia website about his friendship with Pina Bausch . The met in 1994 when Pina saw Tete dancing in Plaza Dorrego. I'm not sure when she died, but the information about their relationship is touching.

Tete Rusconi y Pina Bausch

I makes me wonder if they were more than friends. Who knows? But they are dancing together now.

Dancing upon that thread of energy we call tango.

I leave you with this, Tete y Silvia dancing to Canaro's "Claro de Luna" at Porteño y Bailarín back in December of 2005. Video courtesy of Ney Melo.








Back to add some stuff...from their website..."up close and personal" with Tete y Silvia...on the subject of tango...


Tete by himself :: by Tete Rusconi

I can only tell the truth. Let’s not disguise Tango because it will get ruined in the end. No offense, I love Tango so let us please not disguise it.

Tango can be danced in a thousand different ways, but let’s step on the ground in the first place, because that is where we ought to dance to the music. Let’s not forget pleasure and love for Tango.

Kids these days tend to dance in the air. You can do many nice things, but please do them on the floor. Great Masters did all those nice things but mostly on the dance floor. The music, the beat of Tango is very beautiful. It’s a shame to ignore this.

On or off a stage, a dancer must live the music. Please wake up and realize what you do with the music, otherwise the moment will come when Europeans will return and try to sell Tango to us. I speak from the heart. I’m just another guy who dances.

I’ve taught workshops to teachers abroad, I never thought they could surpass our dancers. I wouldn’t like this to ever happen. There are people here that can dance ferociously well. So let’s stand up within our axis and avoid looking down to the floor.

Let’s not dance for an audience but for ourselves. Even on stage one has to dance for oneself; it shows better. Not because I’m showing others I should forget who I am or what music I’m dancing to.

There’s two to Tango. No dancer can dance without a lady. And a lady can make her partner stand out when she really understands him.

Even if Tango becomes a job you must not practice it without the music. You cannot teach “a step” for its own sake.

I appreciate your disposition to understand even though we do not always agree. My first loyalty remains with Tango: without the music, there is no dance, no Tango.

No teacher, no learner. The true teacher can only transmit the teaching that the Music has left him.



Silvia by herself
Silvia Ceriani

A word is becoming familiar in all tongues throughout the world: Tango.

Tango refers to a specific scene, a man and a woman embrace and pace to the same tune and then some others join, and again a few others until they put together that everlasting merry-go-round: a milonga.

I was gifted with the chance to learn Tango from a man who dances it with his body and his soul, always giving priority to the spirit of the music, sensibility and freedom of movement.

Therefore, teaching to me is to share this treasure, aware that these concepts are valid for other styles and practices.

I believe that this ART which arises from movement will be the first and last faith in the world, and to dream that for the first time in this world men and women will achieve this result together.

Let me give you this piece of advice; don’t leave this world without dancing one tango.






And here is some additional information I found about Tete y Silvia on "www.TangoTales.com" There is a wealth of information here - interviews, letters, a link to a documentary about Tete - good stuff. Wow. How did I know know about this site!? There appears to be a regular radio show and Podcasts for iTunes. Tons of stuff here...check it out...

Which led me to this, on Rick McGarrey's website "Tango & Chaos". It's titled "Without Fear" and is about Tete.

Lastly, and finally, followers who have danced with Tete please leave a note, a story, a memory...thank you in advance...and thank you, dear readers, for making it all the way to the end of this post.

10 Jan 2010 :: Thanks to Cherie for finding this one...




Other Bloggers on Tete ::

Tango Chamuyo

Working Artist :: Flying with Tete

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Sad news :: The death of Marilyn Feng

The tango community is a small and close-knit one. I did not know Marilyn, but I know people who knew her. She lived in NYC, and was killed by a drunk driver last night at around 3:30 a.m. Her companion, Dennis, is in critical condition.

My heart and love goes out to her family and friends.

Sad news indeed.

Here's a link with more info...

Monday, December 1, 2008

Obit :: My close friend Luciano Mares has died

Luciano Mares Oct 2006 Photo by Alex Long

Luciano Mares y Gabriela Fernandez October 2006 Aspen Colorado

Luciano Mares



Luciano Mares :: Apres Tango at The Little Nell in Aspen

Luciano Mares :: Apres Tango at 39 Degrees [Sky Hotel] in Aspen

Luciano Mares y las rusas potrancas

Luciano Mares at Jimmy's Restaurant in Aspen

I've been without internet access for a few days and was just now checking my email. I received the bad news that he died of a heart attack this morning at age 41. He had a heart attack on 21 Nov and was in intensive care recovering for the past 10 days. He had knee surgery on Oct 17 - I wonder if a blood clot was dislodged or something - to cause the first heart attack. He was fit and trim and healthy. I don't understand it.

I was just thinking about him the other day - that I had not heard from him in a while - and that I needed to touch base with him and see how he was doing.

I'll fill you in on more details as I find out. If you know any details, or if you knew Luciano, please leave a comment.

Very sad news indeed. I need to go cry now.