Martins Pena
Martins Pena | |
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A photograph of Pena | |
Born |
Luís Carlos Martins Pena November 5, 1815 Rio de Janeiro City, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Died |
December 7, 1848 33) Lisbon, Portugal | (aged
Occupation | Playwright |
Nationality | Brazilian |
Ethnicity | White |
Alma mater | Escola Nacional de Belas Artes |
Literary movement | Romanticism |
Notable work(s) | O Noviço, Quem Casa Quer Casa, O Juiz de Paz na Roça |
Luís Carlos Martins Pena (November 5, 1815 – December 7, 1848) was a Brazilian playwright, famous for introducing to Brazil the "comedy of customs", winning the epithet of "the Brazilian Molière".
He is patron of the 29th chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.
Life
Martins Pena was born in Rio de Janeiro, to João Martins Pena and Francisca de Paula Julieta Pena. Losing his father when he was 1 year old, and his mother when he was 10, he was delivered to the care of tutors, who ingressed him at the world of commerce. However, seeing that it was not what he wanted, he entered at the Escola Nacional de Belas Artes in 1835, learning Architecture, Statuary, Drawing and Music. Entering at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1838, he travelled to many countries, such as England, where he contracted tuberculosis. Moving to Lisbon in an unsuccessful attempt of mitigating the disease, he dies in 1848.
Works
- O Juiz de Paz na Roça (1838)
- Itaminda, ou O Guerreiro de Tupã (1839)
- A Família e a Festa na Roça (1840)
- Vitiza, ou O Nero de Espanha (1841)
- O Judas no Sábado de Aleluia (1844)
- O Namorador, ou A Noite de São João (1845)
- Os Três Médicos (1845)
- A Barriga do Meu Tio (1846)
- Os Ciúmes de um Pedestre, ou O Terrível Capitão do Mato (1846)
- As Desgraças de uma Criança (1846)
- O Diletante (1846)
- Os Meirinhos (1846)
- Um Segredo de Estado (1846)
- O Caixeiro da Taverna (1847)
- Os Irmãos das Almas (1847)
- Quem Casa Quer Casa (1847)
- O Noviço (1853; posthumous)
- Os Dois e o Inglês Maquinista (1871; posthumous)
See also
External links
Portuguese Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
Preceded by New creation |
Brazilian Academy of Letters – Patron of the 29th chair |
Succeeded by Artur Azevedo (founder) |
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