Dino Armas

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Dino Armas
Dino Armas in 2018.
Born
Matías Armas Lago

(1941-11-20) 20 November 1941 (age 82)
Montevideo, Uruguay
Occupation(s)Theater director, writer
Awards

Matías "Dino" Armas Lago (born 20 November 1941) is a Uruguayan theater director and writer.[1]

Biography[edit]

Matías Armas was born in the Montevidean neighborhood of Villa del Cerro, where he lived until he was 20 years old. His parents were Matías Armas, a port worker of socialist extraction, and Nicanda Lago Méndez, a housewife. He owes the pseudonym "Dino" to his father, who started calling him that after the first name of an Italian footballer.[2]

The neighborhood, the early years of his life, and his family have important presence in his written work. It was during his adolescence that he first approached a theater group that worked at the Rampla Juniors Fútbol Club in his neighborhood.[2]

He studied teaching and worked for 30 years as a teacher of primary education, until he retired with the position of school director.[2]

In 1965 his first work, En otro y último ardiente verano, won one of the first three prizes in a theater contest organized by the El Tinglado Theater.[2]

He is one of the most prolific Uruguayan playwrights, and his works have been staged in Latin America, the United States, and Europe.[3] The 2009 film El novio de la muerta is based on two of his plays: Sus ojos se cerraron (1992) and Mujeres solas.[4]

Armas has produced and directed adaptations of texts by authors such as Prosper Mérimée, Saint-Exupéry, and Henry Miller. He is the author of more than 60 plays. In addition to directing them in person, they have also been directed by Elena Zuasti, Jaime Yavitz [es], Omar Varela, Carlos Aguilera, Gloria Levy, Lucila Irazábal, Lucía Sommer, Antoine Baldomir, Marcelino Duffau, and others.[1]

He has won numerous prizes, such as the 1993 Florencio Award [es] for best national author text for Se ruega no enviar coronas, the 2006 Silver Morosoli Award [es] for career achievement,[4] first prize in the unpublished theater-drama category of the Ministry of Education and Culture's 2011 Annual Literature Prizes for Ave Mater,[5] the 2015 Florencio for 50-year career and in the comedy category for Sus ojos se cerraron,[6] and the 2015 Golden Candelabrum Award [es] from the Uruguayan branch of B'nai B'rith.[7] He has also received awards for plays for children.[4]

Works[edit]

  • 1965 En otro y último verano
  • 1974 Carlitos del Mar
  • 1977 ¿Conoce usted al Doctor Freud?
  • 1979 Susana's Tango
  • 1980 Juana de siempre
  • 1981 Los soles amargos
  • 1983 De las pequeñas cosas
  • 1983 Todos los juegos, el juego
  • 1985 Alias el Manco
  • 1988 Pentágono
  • 1989 Feliz Día, Papá
  • 1990 Queridos cuervos
  • 1990 Votar es un placer
  • 1990 Montevideo, reír y llorar te veo
  • 1990 La canción del soltero
  • 1991 Se ruega no enviar coronas
  • 1992 Sus ojos se cerraron
  • 1992 Se ruega no enviar coronas
  • 1992 Petunias Salvajes
  • 1992 Gente como nosotros
  • 1995 Apenas ayer
  • 1996 La vida es una milonga
  • 1996 Manos a la obra
  • 1997 Atrás del MERCOSUR
  • 1997 Dios salve a la señora
  • 1999 Cosmópolis
  • 1999 Día libre
  • 2000 Extraños por la calle
  • 2001 ¿Y si te canto canciones de amor?
  • 2003 Rifar el Corazón
  • 2003 Pagar el Pato (Tango para dos)
  • 2004 Todos los juegos, el juego
  • 2004 El clú de la Ivonne
  • 2006 Cuentos al atardecer
  • 2006 Para servirte mejor
  • 2007 Trampas para divorciadas
  • 2007 Pentágono
  • 2007 Dos en la carretera
  • 2007 La lujuria según Ramiro
  • 2008 Red Velvet
  • 2009 Los raros
  • 2009 Nelson Pino y las mujeres del tango
  • 2009 La curva de la felicidad
  • 2011 Ave Mater
  • 2011 Esos locos, locos amores
  • 2011 Presente, señorita
  • 2014 Lucas o El contrato

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Loureiro, Álvaro (5 May 2016). "Una reconocida trayectoria" [A Career Recognition]. Brecha (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Martínez Puig, Lourdes (2015). "Temas y personajes principales en las obras 'Rifar el corazón' y 'Los raros', de Dino Armas" [Themes and Main Characters in the Works 'Rifar el corazón' and 'Los raros', by Dino Armas] (PDF) (in Spanish). Secondary Education Council. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  3. ^ Reyes, Carlos (10 November 2014). "El teatro uruguayo se hace ver en España" [Uruguayan Theater is Seen in Spain]. El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  4. ^ a b c "Dino Armas" (in Spanish). Dramaturgia Uruguaya. 1 September 2008. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  5. ^ "Llega a El Galpón 'Ave Mater', de Dino Armas". El País (in Spanish). 4 February 2014. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  6. ^ "Se entregaron los premios Florencio a lo mejor del teatro nacional" [Florencio Awards Given to the Best of the National Theater]. El Observador (in Spanish). 1 December 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Premio Fraternidad 2015" [2015 Fraternity Award] (in Spanish). B'nai B'rith Uruguay. 8 December 2015. Archived from the original on 3 January 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2017.

Further reading[edit]

  • Christian Toletti, Gabriela. Un acercamiento al teatro uruguayo. Migración y dictadura en la obra de Dino Armas.

External links[edit]