Luís Fernando Veríssimo

Luís Fernando Verissimo

Luís Fernando Veríssimo in 2003
Born September 26, 1936 (1936-09-26) (age 75)
Porto Alegre  Brazil
Nationality Brazilian
Genres Humor

Luís Fernando Veríssimo (born September 26, 1936 in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) is a Brazilian writer.

Verissimo is the son of Brazilian writer Erico Verissimo and lived with his father in the United States during his childhood. Best known for his chronicles and texts of humor, more precisely satire of manners, published daily in several Brazilian newspapers, Verissimo is also a cartoonist, translator, and television writer, playwright and novelist. He has also been advertising and newspaper copy desk. He is also a musician, having played saxophone in a few sets. With over 60 published titles, is one of the most popular contemporary Brazilian writers.

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Personal life

Verissimo is a great fan of jazz, and plays saxophone[1] in a band called Jazz 6. Like many Brazilian intellectuals, he enjoys the culture of Rio de Janeiro . Verissimo is a critic of right-wing politicians, especially the former president, Fernando Henrique Cardoso.

Verissimo is fond of football, and a famous Sport Club Internacional supporter. He has already written many texts about his passion for football.

Verissimo was married to Lúcia Helena Massa in 1964, and the couple has three children: Fernanda, a journalist, Mariana, a writer, and Pedro, a musician. He lives with his wife in Porto Alegre.

Born and raised in Porto Alegre, Luis Fernando lived most of his childhood and adolescence in the United States with his family, due to professional commitments undertaken by his father - a professor at UC Berkeley (1943-1945) and cultural director at the Organization of American States in Washington (1953-1956). As a result, he attended primary part of San Francisco and Los Angeles, and completed high school at Roosevelt High School in Washington.

At 14 years he produced with her sister Clarissa and a cousin, a local periodical with news of family, which was hanged in the bathroom of the house and was called "The Patentino" ("patente" is the way toilet are known in Rio Grande do Sul).

During the time he lived in Washington, Verissimo developed his passion for jazz, and started studying saxophone and frequent trips to New York, attending performances of the greatest musicians of the era, including Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.

Early Works

Back in Porto Alegre in 1956, he began working in the art department of Editora Globo. Since 1960, he joined the musical group Renato and his Sextet, which featured dances professionally in the state capital, and was known as "the world's largest sextet," because it had nine members.

Between 1962 and 1966, lived in Rio de Janeiro, where he worked as a translator and copywriter, and where he met and married (1963) with the Rio Lucia Helena Massa, his partner today, and mother of his three children (Fernanda, 1964 , Mariana, 1967, and Peter, 1970).

In 1967, again in his hometown, he began working in the newspaper Zero Hora, first as a copy editor (copy desk). In 1969, after covering the holidays of columnist Sergio Jockymann and to showcase the quality and speed of the text, he went on to sign his own daily column in the newspaper. His first columns were about football, addressing the foundation of the Beira-Rio stadium and the games of the Internacional, his club. The same year he became editor of the advertising agency MPM Propaganda.

In 1970 he moved to the newspaper Folha da Manhã, where he held his daily column until 1975, writing about sport, cinema, literature, music, food, politics and behavior, always with irony and personal ideas, and short stories of humor which illustrated their views.

Created in 1971 with a group of friends in the press and publicity in Porto Alegre, the alternative weekly O Pato Macho, with texts of humor, cartoons, stories and interviews, and circulated throughout the year in the city.

Fame in Brazil and the gaucho culture of southern Brazil

In 1981, the book "O Analista de Bagé", launched at the Book Fair of Porto Alegre, sold out its first edition in two days, becoming a bestseller around the country. The character, created (but unused) for a television comedy program with Jô Soares, is an orthodox Freudian psychoanalyst, but with the accent, the language and customs typical of the border of Rio Grande do Sul, Uruguay and Argentina . The contradiction between the sophistication of psychoanalysis and "rough" caricature of the gaucho of the border has generated very funny situations, which Verissimo was able to explore talent in two books of short stories, a comic book (with drawings by Edgar Vasques) and an anthology.

In 1982 Verissimo began to publish a weekly page of humor in the magazine Veja, which would keep until 1989.

In 1983, the tenth volume of unpublished chronicles, has launched a new character that would also make great success, A Velhinha de Taubaté ( The Old Lady of Taubaté), defined as "the only person who still believes in government." The naive character, who gave to his pet cat the name of the spokesman for President-General Figueiredo, marked the decline of the Brazilian military government, which was almost completed 20 years. But years later, in a democracy, Verissimo would revive the Old Lady of Taubaté, mocking the credibility of civilian presidents, especially Fernando Collor and Fernando Henrique Cardoso.

Throughout the 1980s, Verissimo has established itself as a phenomenon of popularity rare among Brazilian writers, keeping weekly columns in several newspapers and throwing at least one book a year, always on the bestseller lists, and writing sitcoms for TV Globo.

In 1986, he lived six months with his family in Rome, and covered the World Cup for Playboy magazine. In 1988, contracted by MPM Propaganda, he wrote his first novel, The Devil's Garden.

New Directions

In 1999, Verissimo quitted drawing As Cobras comic strips and changed publishers, switching L&PM by Objetiva, which began republishing all his work. One of these anthologies, " As Mentiras que os homens contam" (The Lies that men tell) (2000), has sold over 350,000 copies.

In 2003, he decided to reduce its workload in the press, from six to just two columns a week, now published in Zero Hora, O Globo and O Estado de Sao Paulo.

From requests generated by publishers, Verissimo no longer the "great writer of short texts" and amended a series of novels and romances: "Gula- O Clube dos Anjos" (1998)- Objetiva , " Borges e os Orangotangos Eternos (Borges and the Eternal Orangutans)" (2000), to the collection " Literatura e Morte (Literature and Death)" of Cia. das Letras, "O opositor (The Opposable) "(2004) to the collection " Cinco dedos de Prosa (Five Fingers of Prose) " Objetiva, "A Décima Segunda Noite (The Twelfth Night) "(2006) for the collection "Devorando Shakespeare (Devouring Shakespeare) " , and even "Sport Club Internacional, Autobiografia de uma Paixão (Autobiography of a Passion)" (2004), for collection "Camisa 13" of Ediouro.

In 2003, a cover story in Veja magazine said Verissimo as "the writer's best-selling books in Brazil." At the same time, the English version of "Clube dos Anjos" ("The Club of Angels") is chosen by the New York Public Library as one of the 25 best books of the year.

In 2004, in France, he received the Prix Deux Oceans Latin Culture Festival of Biarritz.

In 2006, Verissimo reached 70 years of age established as one of the greatest contemporary Brazilian writers, having sold a total of more than 5 million copies of his books. In 2008, her daughter Fernanda gave birth to his first granddaughter, Lucinda, born on the anniversary of the Sport Club Internacional, April 4.

Quotes

Literary works

Short stories

A velhinha de Taubaté

Analista de Bagé

Ed Mort

Novels

Poetry

References