Cayetano Ordóñez | |
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Cayetano Statue in Ronda, Malaga |
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Birth name | Cayetano Ordóñez y Aguilera |
Born | January 4, 1904 Ronda, Spain |
Died | October 30, 1961 Madrid, Spain |
(aged 57)
Nationality | Spanish |
Cayetano Ordóñez (January 24, 1904, Ronda, Spain - October 30, 1961, Madrid, Spain) is the founder of the Ordóñez family of bullfighters.
His parents owned a shoeshop called La Palma, which gave him his nickname (Nino de la Palma). In 1917 he first began to perform as a bullfighter in the ranches of the area were he lived. In 1923 he had his debut in Ronda, where he became the first bullfighter to be carried in triumph through the main gates of the Maestranza, and in 1924 he caused great commotion again when the same thing happened in Seville. From that point on he was greatly in demand by all the professional and amateur rings in Spain. He was used by Ernest Hemingway as the model for "Pedro Romero", the talented young bullfighter in The Sun Also Rises. Hemingway later stated that "everything that happened in the ring was true, and everything outside was fiction. Nino knew this and never complained about it."
His last bullfight was at Aranda de Duero in 1942. He was the director of the Lisbon School of Bullfighting and died in Madrid on 30 October 1961.