Juan Carlos Copes
Juan Carlos Copes | |
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Copes performs at the 2011 Tango Day, in Buenos Aires, with his daughter Johanna | |
Born |
Buenos Aires, Argentina | May 31, 1931
Occupation | Tango dancer, coreographer, and instructor |
Years active | since 1945 |
Juan Carlos Copes (born May 31, 1931) is an Argentine tango dancer, choreographer, and performer. He contributed to worldwide revival of tango as a dance form after 1970.[1]
Life
Copes was born in Buenos Aires, he debuted at age 14 in a Luna Park Stadium competition where he won first prize by popular acclaim. His first professional performances were with Francisco Canaro's orchestra in 1955, and in 1958 he debuted in Europe and the United States with Maria Nieves as his partner.
They later starred in a 1962 production at the Alvin Theatre on Broadway as well as appearing on numerous episodes of The Ed Sullivan Show from 1962 to 1964.[2]
Copes returned to Argentina and was instrumental during the 1960s in creating the modern tango show concept in Buenos Aires. He married one of his dance partners, and also performed regularly with her two sisters.[2] Copes choreographed Tango Argentino in Paris in 1983, which contributed to worldwide revival of tango; his notable stage credits also include his work as chief choreographer of Ástor Piazzolla's María de Buenos Aires (1968), in the Spanish National Dance Company's Dance Icons series (1993), and a leading role in Manuel González Gil's Entre Borges y Piazzolla (Between Borges and Piazzolla, 1997).[3] His second wife was also a dance partner, and their daughter Johanna joined her father in his troupe in 1994.[2]
Copes' film credits include Raúl de la Torre's musical, Funes, un gran amor (1993), and in a role as chief choreographer in Tango, la película (Tango, the Movie), a 1998 film by Carlos Saura.[3]
Copes has received numerous artistic awards. His pupils include Robert Duvall and Liza Minnelli.[3]
References
- ↑ Totango
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Juan Carlos Copes". To Tango.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Juan Carlos Copes
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