Sérgio Porto

Sérgio Marcus Rangel Porto (January 11, 1923 in Rio de Janeiro – September 30, 1968) was a Brazilian columnist, writer, broadcaster and composer. He was better known by his pen name Stanislaw Ponte Preta.[1]

Sergio began his journalistic career in the late 1940s, working in publications such as Sombra and Manchete magazines and newspapers Ultima Hora, Tribuna da Imprensa and Diário Carioca. In the same period Tomás Santa Rosa also acted in several newspapers and newsletters as an illustrator. It was then that the character Stanislaw Ponte Preta and his satirical and critical chronicles was born, a creation of Sergio along with Santa Rosa - the character's first illustrator - inspired by the character Serafim Ponte Grande by Oswald de Andrade. Porto has also contributed to music publications and wrote musical shows for nightclubs, as well as composing the song "Samba do Crioulo Doido" for revue theater.

He was also the creator and producer of the beauty pageant's As Certinhas do Lalau, which featured vedettes such as Anilza Leoni, Diana Morel, Rose Rondelli, Maria Pompeo,and Irma Alvarez, and of the FEBEAPÁ - Festival de Besteira que Assola o País (Festival of Nonsense which Sweeps the Country),a news satire column where he made corrosive jokes against the military dictatorship, and the social moralism of his time.[2][3] Porto died in 1968, before the dictatorship's Institutional Act n°5, that established censorship in the Brazilian press.

Published works

As Stanislaw Ponte Preta

As Sérgio Porto

References

  1. Paulo Mendes Campos. "Meu amigo Sérgio Porto". Blog do IMS (in Portuguese). Instituto Moreira Salles.
  2. Jackson, K.David (August 2000). "Rogue Satire, Black Humor: Comedy and Criticism in Brazilian Literature from Quincas Borba to Ponte Preta". Ciberletras. 3. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  3. Moraes, Dislane Zerbinatti (2004). ""E foi proclamada a escravidão": Stanislaw Ponte Preta e a representação satírica do golpe militar". Revista Brasileira de História (in Portuguese). 24 (47). ISSN 1806-9347. Retrieved 14 June 2014.


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