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'''Vinicius de Moraes''' (], ] - ], ]), born as '''Marcus Vinícius da Cruz de Melo Morais''' in ], was a seminal figure in contemporary Brazilian music. As a poet, he wrote lyrics for a great number of songs that became all-time classics. As a composer, he wrote some good music, and as an interpreter, he left several important albums.
{{Short description|Brazilian poet and lyricist (1913–1980)}}
==Early life==
{{Portuguese name|Cruz|Mello Moraes}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Vinícius de Moraes
| image = Vinicius.jpg
| caption = Vinícius de Moraes in Paris (1970)
| pseudonym = "O Poetinha"
{{Cslist|"O Diplomata"}}
| birth_name = Marcus Vinícius da Cruz e Mello Moraes
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1913|10|19|df=y}}
| birth_place = ], Brazil
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1980|7|9|1913|10|19|df=y}}
| death_place = Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
| occupation = {{hlist|Poet|]|]|playwright|]}}
| alma_mater = ]
| movement = ]
| native_name_lang = pt
| honorific_prefix = Vossa Excelência, o Embaixador
| genre = Bossa Nova
}}


'''Marcus Vinícius da Cruz e Mello Moraes'''<ref name="auto">{{cite web|url=http://www.releituras.com/viniciusm_bio.asp|title=Vinícius de Moraes - Biografia|first=Arnaldo Jr.|last=Nogueira|website=www.releituras.com}}</ref> (19 October 1913 – 9 July 1980), better known as '''Vinícius de Moraes''' ({{IPA|pt-BR|viˈnisjuʒ dʒi moˈɾajʃ|lang}}) and nicknamed "'''O Poetinha'''" ("The Little Poet"), was a Brazilian poet, diplomat, lyricist, essayist, musician, singer, and playwright. With his frequent and diverse musical partners, including ], his lyrics and compositions were instrumental in the birth and introduction to the world of ] music. He recorded numerous albums, many in collaboration with noted artists, and also served as a successful Brazilian career diplomat.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Vinicius de Moraes: Biography and Poems {{!}} Brazilian Poetry|url=https://www.brazilianpoetry.com/2021/05/vinicius-de-moraes-biography-and-poems.html|access-date=2021-05-28}}</ref>
From a musical family, de Moraes began writing poetry early in life. At the age of 14, he became friends with the brothers Paulo and Haroldo Tapajós, and with the latter composed "Loura ou Morena", his first song. In ], de Moraes enrolled in law school in Rio de Janeiro. Starting at ], he wrote lyrics for ten songs that were recorded by Tapajós brothers. When he finished his studies, he released his books ''Caminho Para a Distância'' (]) and ''Forma e Exegese''. Later, he became a cinema censor for the health and education cabinet (]) and wrote his third book ''Ariana, a Mulher'' (]).


== Early life ==
==Advanced studies and early career==
]
Moraes was born in ], a neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro, to Clodoaldo da Silva Pereira Moraes, a public servant, and Lidia Cruz, a housewife and amateur pianist. In 1916, his family moved to ], where he attended ] Primary School. Fleeing the ], his parents moved to ] while Moraes remained at his grandfather's home in Botafogo to finish school. During visits with his parents on weekends and holidays, he became acquainted with the accomplished composer Ary Barroso.


Beginning in 1924, Moraes attended St. Ignatius, a Jesuit high school, where he sang in the choir and wrote theatrical sketches. Three years later, he became friends with the brothers Paulo and Haroldo Tapajós, with whom he wrote his first musical compositions, which were performed at friends' parties. In 1929, he completed high school and his family moved back to Gávea.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.viniciusdemoraes.com.br/vida/index.php |title=Vinicius de Moraes |website=viniciusdemoraes.com.br |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091001000443/http://www.viniciusdemoraes.com.br/vida/index.php |archive-date=1 October 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> That same year, he was admitted to the Faculty of Law at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (]). At the "School of Catete", he became friends with essayist and future novelist ], an activist ] and leader of a group of right-wing Catholics organized around ], a think-tank created by ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abril.com.br/noticia/diversao/no_288599.shtml|title=Abril.com -|website=www.abril.com.br|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091021090929/http://www.abril.com.br/noticia/diversao/no_288599.shtml|archive-date=21 October 2009}}</ref> shortly before his death.
Heading to ] (]) with an English government ] to study ] at ], he wrote ''Novos Poemas''. At that time he was married by proxy. With the winds of the ], de Moraes returned to Rio in ], and began to write film reviews and critiques in newspapers and magazines. Two years later, he joined Brazil's diplomatic service and released his book ''Cinco Elegias''. In ], he was sent to ] as vice-consul in his first diplomatic assignment, and released his work ''Poemas, Sonetos e Baladas''.


Faria encouraged Moraes' literary vocation, and tried to recruit him to the conservative cause. Moraes received his college degree in Legal and Social Sciences in 1933. Soon after, he published his first two collections of poetry: ''Caminho para a distancia'' ("Path into the Distance") (1933) and ''Forma e exegese'' ("Form and Exegesis"). Both collections were composed and published under Octavio de Faria's informal editorship. The collections were ] concerned with Catholic mysticism and the search for redemption of sexual seduction.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://educaterra.terra.com.br/literatura/temadomes/2003/03/26/001.htm|title=Vinicius de Moraes - parteI|website=educaterra.terra.com.br}}</ref>
Beginning ], de Moraes returned to Brazil due to his father's death. His first ] (composed along with musician ]), was ''Quando Tu Passas por Mim'', released in ], a year in which he moved to ] as Brazil's embassy second secretary. His play ''Orfeu da Conceição'' won the IV ] Centennial Contest in ]. The next year he wrote lyrics for some of ]'s chamber music pieces, and later he staged ''Orfeu da Conceição'', later translated to cinema as ''Black Orpheus'' (''Orfeu Negro'', ], ]), co-produced between ], ], ] and ]. He was then introduced to an unknown pianist, ], who was commissioned with writing the music for the play. Jobim composed the music of ''Se Todos Fossem Iguais a Você'', ''Um Nome de Mulher'', and several others songs, that were recorded with ], between others. Following a return to another diplomatic assignments at France and Uruguay, he released his books ''Livro de Sonetos'' and ''Novos Poemas II''.
==The early Bossa nova==


In his essay "Two Poets" (1935), Faria compared Moraes' poetry to that of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.academia.org.br/abl/cgi/cgilua.exe/sys/start.htm?infoid=1944&sid=376&tpl=printerview|title=Academia Brasileira de Letras|website=Academia Brasileira de Letras}}</ref> The tension between Faria's and Moraes' shared Catholic activism and Faria's unrequited attraction to Moraes strained their friendship. Faria attempted suicide because of this unrequited love.<ref>Cf. Jose Castello, ''Vinicius de Moraes - O Poeta da Paixao'', São Paulo: Cia. das Letras, 1994, {{ISBN|85-7164-355-5}}</ref> Despite their estrangement, Moraes wrote two sonnets, the first in 1939 ("Sonnet to Octavio de Faria"), the second during the 1960s ("Octavio") in carefully couched praise of his friend.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/7023046/Vinicius-de-Moraes-Poesia-Completa-e-Prosa|title=Both available at|access-date=17 September 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121023173824/http://www.scribd.com/doc/7023046/Vinicius-de-Moraes-Poesia-Completa-e-Prosa|archive-date=23 October 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref>
In ], the singer ] released her album ''Canção do Amor Demais'', marking the beginning of ]. She included on it five compositions by the duo "Jobim-de Moraes": ''Canção do Amor Demais'', ''Luciana'', ''Estrada Branca'',''Chega de Saudade'', and ''Outra Vez'', in a production that also brought ] onto two last tracks. After that record, the careers of all of them had great impulse, at time that the songs written by Jobim and de Moraes became disputed by singers.


In 1936, Moraes became a film censor for the Ministry of Education and Health. Two years later, he won a British Council fellowship to study English language and literature at ], ]. He abandoned his use of ] and ] in favor of the ], both the Italian form used in Portuguese poetry (two ], two ]s) and the English form (three quatrains and a ]).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www2.fpa.org.br/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1620 |title=Culture: A poem by Vinicius de Moraes |date=31 December 2001 |work=Perseu Abramo Foundation |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071028095621/http://www2.fpa.org.br/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1620 |archive-date=28 October 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref> He was considered one of the most prominent of the "Generation of '45", a group of Brazilian writers in the 1930s and 1940s who rejected early modernism in favor of traditional forms and vocabulary.<ref>Cf. Alfredo Bosi,''Historia Concisa da Literatura Brasileira'', São Paulo: Cultrix,1997, p. 464, {{ISBN|85-316-0189-4}} , partially available at </ref> If ]'s works and technique served the depiction of objective reality, those of Moraes served the depiction of the subjective mood of sexual love.<ref>Cf. Bosi, ''Historia Concisa'', 458/459</ref> The basic meter in Moraes' love poetry is the ], taken mostly from ]'s lyric poetry.<ref>Bosi, ''Historia Concisa'', 459</ref>
==Cinema recognition and collaborations==


During his stay in England, Moraes wrote the verse collection ''Novos poemas'' ("New Poems"). While there, he married (by proxy) Beatriz Azevedo de Mello, with whom he subsequently had two children: filmmaker Suzana de Moraes and Pedro. In 1941, he returned to Brazil and worked as a film critic for the newspaper ''A Manhã'' ("The Morning"), as a contributor to the literary journal ''Clima'' ("Climate"), and at the Banking Employees' Institute of Social Security, the public pension fund for workers in banking institutions.
Meanwhile, '']'' won an ] for best foreign movie, and also was awarded with the ''Palme d'Or'' official award in the ], and the 60' ]. De Morais, Bonfá and Jobim composed the original music for the movie.


During the following year, he failed the admission test for a diplomatic career at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MRE). Shortly after, he was hired to accompany American writer ], a literary acquaintance, on tour across northern Brazil. In Moraes' words, it was contact with both Frank and "appalling poverty" that turned him into "a man of the Left".<ref name="tirodeletra">{{cite web |title=Vinicius de Moraes |url=http://www.tirodeletra.com.br/entrevistas/ViniciusdeMoraes.htm |website=www.tirodeletra.com.br |access-date=2 September 2018}}</ref>
In the 1960s, de Moraes extended his collaborations to many renowned Brazilians singers and musicians, particularly with ] (de Moraes' most frequent partner and closest friend). His songs ''Para uma Menina com uma Flor'' and ''Samba da Bênção'' (with music of ]) were included on the soundtrack of ''A Man and a Woman'' (''Un Homme et une Femme'', ], ]), a winner movie in the Cannes festival.


In 1943, Moraes passed the MRE admission test on his second attempt and as his first posting was assigned as vice-consul at the Brazilian Consulate in Los Angeles, California. There, he published a book of poems, ''Cinco elegias'' ("Five Elegies"), followed by ''Poemas, sonetos e baladas'' ("Poems, Sonnets, and Ballads"). After his father died in 1950, he went to Brazil, then returned to Los Angeles and published two more books: ''Livro de sonetos'' ("Book of Sonnets") and ''Novos poemas II'' ("New Poems II"). Continuing his diplomatic career, during the 1950s, Moraes worked for the Brazilian consular service in Paris and Rome. In Rome, he often visited historian ] (father of the musician ]), who was teaching in Italy as a visiting scholar.
Beside his Brazilians partners, hundreds of international performers have been recorded his more than 400 songs. Vinícius de Moraes died in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the age of 66.


]]]
==His most popular songs==


In 1951, Moraes married his second wife, Lila Maria Esquerdo e Boscoli. He wrote film reviews for ]'s ] paper '']''. He was named a delegate to the ] film festival and was given a commission to study the management of film festivals at Cannes, Berlin, ], and Venice, in view of the forthcoming São Paulo Cinema Festival, which was to be a part of the commemoration of the city's 400th anniversary.<ref>Cf. official website, "Life" section</ref>
* A arca de Noé
* A felicidade
* A flor da noite
* A porta
* A tonga da mironga do kabuletê
* Água de beber
* Algum lugar
* Amigos meus
* Amor em paz
* Arrastão
* Ausência
* Berimbau
* Bom dia, amigo
* Bom dia, tristeza
* Broto triste
* Caminho de pedra
* Canção da canção que nasceu
* Canção da noite
* Canção do amanhecer
* Canção do amor e paz
* Canção do amor ausente
* Canção do amor demais
* Canto de Ossanha
* Canto de Oxum
* Canto de Xangô
* Canto triste
* Carta ao Tom 74
* Chega de saudade
* Chora coração
* Chorando pra Pixinguinha
* Coisa mais linda
* Como dizia o poeta
* Consolação
* Cotidiano nº 2
* Deixa
* Ela é carioca
* Estrada branca
* Eu não tenho nada a ver com isso
* Eu sei que vou te amar
* Formosa
* ]
* Insensatez
* Janelas abertas
* Labareda
* Lamento
* Lamento de um homem só
* Lamento no morro
* Lembre-se
* Loura ou morena
* Luciana
* Maria
* Mais um adeus
* Medo de amar
* Menina das duas tranças
* Menininha
* Meu pai Oxalá
* Minha namorada
* Modinha
* Morena flor
* Mulher carioca
* Mulher, sempre mulher
* O astronauta
* O bem-amad
* O filho que eu quero ter
* O grande amor
* O morro não tem vez
* O nosso amor
* O pato
* O poeta aprendiz
* O tempo da flor
* Onde anda você
* Outra vez
* O velho e a flor
* Minha namorada
* Pobre menina rica
* Por toda a minha vida
* Pra que chorar
* Pra viver um grande amor
* Primavera
* Rancho das namoradas
* Regra três
* Rosa dos Ventos
* Sabe você
* Samba da Benção
* Samba da rosa
* Samba da volta
* Samba do avião
* Samba do carioca
* Samba do Pouso
* São demais os perigos desta vida
* Se o amor pudesse
* Se todos fossem iguais a você
* Sei lá (A vida tem sempre razão)
* Se você disser que sim
* Sem você
* Serenata do adeus
* Só danço samba
* Só por amor
* Tarde em Itapoã
* Tatamirô
* Teleco-teco
* Tem dó
* Um nome de mulher
* Uma rosa em minha mão
* Valsa do bordel
* Valsa de Eurídice
* Valsa para uma menininha
* Valsinha


In 1953, his third child, Georgiana, was born, and his fourth child with Lila Maria was born in 1956. He went to Paris as the second secretary at the Brazilian embassy in France. He released his first ], "Quando tu passas por mim" ("When You Pass By"), which was composed with ]. During the next year, he wrote lyrics to chamber music pieces by ]. He became a well-known playwright with the staging of his musical '']'' ("Orpheus of the Conception") in 1956 and for the film made of it called '']''. He met pianist ], who was commissioned to write music for the play. Jobim wrote "Se todos fossem iguais a você" ("If Others Were Like You"), "Um nome de mulher" ("A Woman's Name"), and other songs included in the production. The play was staged in 1956 in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, having its text published in a deluxe edition illustrated by Carlos Scliar. At the end of 1956, Moraes returned to France, having been transferred in 1957 from the Brazilian embassy to the Brazilian representation at UNESCO. In 1958, he was transferred to the Brazilian embassy in ], returning to Brazil in transit. While in Brazil, he married Maria Lucia Proença.<ref name="auto"/>
==Brazilian performers==


== Bossa nova ==
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]'s '']'' -- a seminal album in the development of bossa nova -- consists of compositions by Jobim and Moraes, either working together or solo ("Canção do Amor Demais", "Luciana", "Estrada Branca", "]", "Outra Vez"...). The recording also included a relatively unknown ] on two tracks. With the release of this record, Moraes's career in music had begun.
* ]
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In August 1962, Moraes performed for the first time as a singer with Jobim and Gilberto at the Au Bon Gourmet in Rio. This was the first of his "pocket-shows", performances made to small audiences where he presented new compositions, some of which became international hits, such as the "Garota de Ipanema" ("]"), as well as "]". Moraes introduced promising singers of the time, such as ]. Moraes wasn't a natural singer. He had a flat, nasal baritone voice, but he used background vocalists to sweeten the sound. His first undertaking as entertainer ended in 1963, when he returned to his post in the Brazilian representation at UNESCO, after his marriage to Nelita Abreu Rocha, his fourth wife.<ref name="auto"/>
==Jazz performers==


== Cinema recognition and collaborations ==
*]
His play ''Orfeu da conceição'' (''Orpheus of the Conception''), a reworking of the story of Orpheus and Eurydice set in the carnival of Rio, was adapted into the film '']'', which won an ] in 1959 as Best Foreign Language Film. It was awarded the '']'' at the ] and the 1960 ]. De Moraes hated the film, however, leaving mid-screening and shouting that his play had been "disfigured"; the film has been criticized in Brazil since release for its exoticism and stereotyping of Brazilians. The film was a co-production among France, Italy, and Brazil and included "]" ("Happiness"), a song by Jobim and Moraes, which became an international hit. His song "Samba da bênção" ("The Blessing Samba") was included on the soundtrack of '']'' (''Un homme et une femme'', 1966), another Cannes film festival winner.
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==Latin performers== == Later life ==
During the 1960s and 1970s, Moraes collaborated with ] on a series of songs known as the '']''. He collaborated with ] on the ] hit song "Arrastão".


During a purge at the Ministry of Foreign Relations, he was forcibly retired in 1969 at the age of 55. Although taken aback by his forced retirement, he laughed at the case against him. When it was made known that the ministry purge was directed against "homosexuals and drunks", he jokingly retorted that his alcoholism was public knowledge.<ref>"Vinícius: vida boêmia vigiada de perto", ''O Globo'', 28 June 2009</ref>
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In the 1970s, Moraes collaborated with Antônio Pecci Filho, a guitarist and vocalist nicknamed ] on musical and literary works. He married three women in succession: Cristina Gurjão, with whom he had a daughter, Maria; the actress Gesse Gessy; and the Argentinian Marta Rodrigues Santamaria.<ref name="auto"/> He toured Europe with ] and ], and Argentina with ] and ]. His most stable musical partnership, however, remained with Toquinho, with whom he released popular albums. Their live performances in Brazil and Europe were often conducted as intimate meetings with the public. Moraes sat onstage at a table with a checked tablecloth and a bottle of whiskey, chatting and telling amusing stories to the audience in French, English, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese.
==Pop performers==


==Death and legacy==
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{{Integralism |expanded=people}}
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Moraes was a chain smoker and alcoholic who said, ''O uísque é o melhor amigo do homem—é o cão engarrafado'' ("Whiskey is man's best friend, it's the dog in a bottle"),<ref>João Carlos Pecci (1994), ''Vinicius sem ponto final'', Rio de Janeiro: Saraiva, page 40, {{ISBN|85-02-01391-2}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.brazzil.com/cvrmay99.htm|title=Brazil - BRAZZIL - Vinicius de Moraes Poet Emmeritus - Brazilian Culture - Cover May 1999|website=www.brazzil.com}}</ref> After a long period of poor health, which included several visits to rehabilitation clinics, he died at his home in Rio de Janeiro on 9 July 1980, at the age of 66, in the company of his ninth wife, Gilda de Queirós Mattoso, and the faithful Toquinho. He is buried in Rio de Janeiro's ].
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In 2006, Moraes was posthumously reinstated to the Brazilian diplomatic corps. In February 2010, Brazil's lower house, the ], approved his posthumous promotion to Ambassador.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://oglobo.globo.com/pais/mat/2010/02/09/camara-aprova-promocao-de-vinicius-de-moraes-morto-em-1980-ministro-de-primeira-classe-915829218.asp |title=Câmara aprova promoção de Vinicius de Moraes, morto em 1980, a ministro de primeira classe|date=10 February 2010}}</ref>
==Life facts==


In December 2014, following a three-week public vote, the ] of the ] was named after him.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic mascots named Vinicius and Tom by public vote |url=https://www.rio2016.com/en/news/rio-2016-olympic-and-paralympic-mascots-named-vinicius-and-tom-by-public-vote |website=Rio 2016 |access-date=8 August 2016 |date=14 December 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160808020617/https://www.rio2016.com/en/news/rio-2016-olympic-and-paralympic-mascots-named-vinicius-and-tom-by-public-vote |archive-date=8 August 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Johnston|first1=Abby|title=What Does Vinicius Mean? The Rio Olympics Mascot Pays Tribute To A Famous Brazilian |url=http://www.bustle.com/articles/175805-what-does-vinicius-mean-the-rio-olympics-mascot-pays-tribute-to-a-famous-brazilian|website=Bustle|access-date=8 August 2016|date=30 July 2016}}</ref>
* A detailed look about his life in the music, books, poetry, prose, theater, music, cinema critic, and photos with several musicians and singers, can be seen at his official website.


==References== == Discography ==
*McGowan, Chris and Pessanha, Ricardo. "The Brazilian Sound: Samba, Bossa Nova and the Popular Music of Brazil." 1998. 2nd edition. Temple University Press. ISBN 1-56639-545-3


{| class="wikitable sortable"
==External link==
|-
*
! Year !! Album !! Partnership !! Label
*
|-
| 1956 || '']'' || ] || ]
|-
| 1963 || ''Vinícius e Odete Lara'' || ], ] || ]
|-
| 1965 || ''De Vinícius e Baden especialmente para Ciro Monteiro'' || Baden Powell || Elenco
|-
| 1965 || ''Vinícius e Caymmi no Zum Zum'' || ] || Elenco
|-
| 1966 || '']'' || Baden Powell ||Elenco
|-
| 1966 || ''Vinícius: poesia e canção'' || || Forma
|-
| 1967 || ''Garota de Ipanema'' (film soundtrack) || || ]
|-
| 1967 || ''Vinícius'' || || Elenco
|-
| 1969 || ''Vinícius em Portugal'' || || Festa
|-
| 1970 || '']'', rereleased with the Spanish title ''Grabado en Buenos Aires con Maria Creuza y Toquinho'' ("Recorded in Buenos Aires with Maria Creuza and Toquinho")|| Maria Creuza, Toquinho || Diorama
|-
| 1970 || ''Amália/Vinícius'' ||] ||
|-
| 1971 || ''Como dizia o poeta...'' || ], Marília Medalha || RGE
|-
| 1971 || ''Toquinho e Vinícius'' || ]|| RGE
|-
| 1971 || ''En La Fusa'' || ], Toquinho || Trova
|-
| 1972 || ''Marilia/Vinícius'' || Marilia Medalha || RGE
|-
| 1972 || ''Nossa filha Gabriela'' || ] || ]
|-
| 1972 || ''São demais os perigos desta vida'' || Toquinho || RGE
|-
| 1973 || ''O Bem-Amado'' || || ]
|-
| 1974 || '']'' || Toquinho || Philips
|-
| 1974 || ''Saravá Vinícius!'' || ], ] || ]
|-
| 1975 || ''Vinícius/Toquinho'' || Toquinho || Philips
|-
| 1975 || ''O poeta e o violão'' || Toquinho || RGE
|-
| 1976 || '']'' || ], Toquinho || Vanilla
|-
| 1976 || ''Deus lhe pague'' || ] || ]
|-
| 1977 || ''Antologia poética'' || || Philips
|-
| 1977 || ''Tom, Vinícius, Toquinho e Miúcha'' || ], Toquinho, ] || Som Livre
|-
| 1979 || ''10 anos de Toquinho e Vinícius'' || Toquinho|| Philips
|-
| 1980 || ''Um pouco de ilusão'' || Toquinho || ]
|-
| 1980 || ''Testamento (album)|Testamento...'' || || RGE
|-
| 1980 || ''A arca de Noé'' || Toquinho || ]
|-
| 1981 || ''A arca de Noé 2'' || Toquinho || PolyGram
|-
| 1991 || ''Poeta, moça e violão'' || Clara Nunes, Toquinho || Collector's Editora LTDA
|-
| 2006 || ''Vinícius & Amigos'' || || ]
|-
| 2015 || ''Um encontro no Au bon gourmet'' || Joao Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim || Doxy
|}


== References ==
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Latest revision as of 18:32, 15 December 2024

Brazilian poet and lyricist (1913–1980) In this Portuguese name, the first or maternal family name is Cruz and the second or paternal family name is Mello Moraes.
Vossa Excelência, o Embaixador
Vinícius de Moraes
Vinícius de Moraes in Paris (1970)Vinícius de Moraes in Paris (1970)
BornMarcus Vinícius da Cruz e Mello Moraes
(1913-10-19)19 October 1913
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Died9 July 1980(1980-07-09) (aged 66)
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Pen name"O Poetinha"
  • "O Diplomata"
Occupation
Alma materFederal University of Rio de Janeiro
GenreBossa Nova
Literary movementModernism

Marcus Vinícius da Cruz e Mello Moraes (19 October 1913 – 9 July 1980), better known as Vinícius de Moraes (Brazilian Portuguese: [viˈnisjuʒ dʒi moˈɾajʃ]) and nicknamed "O Poetinha" ("The Little Poet"), was a Brazilian poet, diplomat, lyricist, essayist, musician, singer, and playwright. With his frequent and diverse musical partners, including Antônio Carlos Jobim, his lyrics and compositions were instrumental in the birth and introduction to the world of bossa nova music. He recorded numerous albums, many in collaboration with noted artists, and also served as a successful Brazilian career diplomat.

Early life

Sculpture of Vinicius, commemorating his work "Uma tarde em Itapuã".

Moraes was born in Gávea, a neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro, to Clodoaldo da Silva Pereira Moraes, a public servant, and Lidia Cruz, a housewife and amateur pianist. In 1916, his family moved to Botafogo, where he attended Afrânio Peixoto Primary School. Fleeing the Copacabana Fort revolt, his parents moved to Governador Island while Moraes remained at his grandfather's home in Botafogo to finish school. During visits with his parents on weekends and holidays, he became acquainted with the accomplished composer Ary Barroso.

Beginning in 1924, Moraes attended St. Ignatius, a Jesuit high school, where he sang in the choir and wrote theatrical sketches. Three years later, he became friends with the brothers Paulo and Haroldo Tapajós, with whom he wrote his first musical compositions, which were performed at friends' parties. In 1929, he completed high school and his family moved back to Gávea. That same year, he was admitted to the Faculty of Law at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). At the "School of Catete", he became friends with essayist and future novelist Otávio de Faria, an activist integrist Catholic and leader of a group of right-wing Catholics organized around Centro Dom Vital, a think-tank created by Jackson de Figueiredo shortly before his death.

Faria encouraged Moraes' literary vocation, and tried to recruit him to the conservative cause. Moraes received his college degree in Legal and Social Sciences in 1933. Soon after, he published his first two collections of poetry: Caminho para a distancia ("Path into the Distance") (1933) and Forma e exegese ("Form and Exegesis"). Both collections were composed and published under Octavio de Faria's informal editorship. The collections were symbolist poetry concerned with Catholic mysticism and the search for redemption of sexual seduction.

In his essay "Two Poets" (1935), Faria compared Moraes' poetry to that of Augusto Frederico Schmidt. The tension between Faria's and Moraes' shared Catholic activism and Faria's unrequited attraction to Moraes strained their friendship. Faria attempted suicide because of this unrequited love. Despite their estrangement, Moraes wrote two sonnets, the first in 1939 ("Sonnet to Octavio de Faria"), the second during the 1960s ("Octavio") in carefully couched praise of his friend.

In 1936, Moraes became a film censor for the Ministry of Education and Health. Two years later, he won a British Council fellowship to study English language and literature at Magdalen College, Oxford University. He abandoned his use of blank verse and free verse in favor of the sonnet, both the Italian form used in Portuguese poetry (two quatrains, two tercets) and the English form (three quatrains and a couplet). He was considered one of the most prominent of the "Generation of '45", a group of Brazilian writers in the 1930s and 1940s who rejected early modernism in favor of traditional forms and vocabulary. If João Cabral de Melo Neto's works and technique served the depiction of objective reality, those of Moraes served the depiction of the subjective mood of sexual love. The basic meter in Moraes' love poetry is the decasyllable, taken mostly from Camões's lyric poetry.

During his stay in England, Moraes wrote the verse collection Novos poemas ("New Poems"). While there, he married (by proxy) Beatriz Azevedo de Mello, with whom he subsequently had two children: filmmaker Suzana de Moraes and Pedro. In 1941, he returned to Brazil and worked as a film critic for the newspaper A Manhã ("The Morning"), as a contributor to the literary journal Clima ("Climate"), and at the Banking Employees' Institute of Social Security, the public pension fund for workers in banking institutions.

During the following year, he failed the admission test for a diplomatic career at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MRE). Shortly after, he was hired to accompany American writer Waldo Frank, a literary acquaintance, on tour across northern Brazil. In Moraes' words, it was contact with both Frank and "appalling poverty" that turned him into "a man of the Left".

In 1943, Moraes passed the MRE admission test on his second attempt and as his first posting was assigned as vice-consul at the Brazilian Consulate in Los Angeles, California. There, he published a book of poems, Cinco elegias ("Five Elegies"), followed by Poemas, sonetos e baladas ("Poems, Sonnets, and Ballads"). After his father died in 1950, he went to Brazil, then returned to Los Angeles and published two more books: Livro de sonetos ("Book of Sonnets") and Novos poemas II ("New Poems II"). Continuing his diplomatic career, during the 1950s, Moraes worked for the Brazilian consular service in Paris and Rome. In Rome, he often visited historian Sergio Buarque de Holanda (father of the musician Chico Buarque de Holanda), who was teaching in Italy as a visiting scholar.

Vinicius with Pierre Seghers

In 1951, Moraes married his second wife, Lila Maria Esquerdo e Boscoli. He wrote film reviews for Samuel Wainer's Vargoist paper Última Hora. He was named a delegate to the Punta del Este film festival and was given a commission to study the management of film festivals at Cannes, Berlin, Locarno, and Venice, in view of the forthcoming São Paulo Cinema Festival, which was to be a part of the commemoration of the city's 400th anniversary.

In 1953, his third child, Georgiana, was born, and his fourth child with Lila Maria was born in 1956. He went to Paris as the second secretary at the Brazilian embassy in France. He released his first samba, "Quando tu passas por mim" ("When You Pass By"), which was composed with Antônio Maria. During the next year, he wrote lyrics to chamber music pieces by Cláudio Santoro. He became a well-known playwright with the staging of his musical Orfeu da Conceição ("Orpheus of the Conception") in 1956 and for the film made of it called Black Orpheus. He met pianist Tom Jobim, who was commissioned to write music for the play. Jobim wrote "Se todos fossem iguais a você" ("If Others Were Like You"), "Um nome de mulher" ("A Woman's Name"), and other songs included in the production. The play was staged in 1956 in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, having its text published in a deluxe edition illustrated by Carlos Scliar. At the end of 1956, Moraes returned to France, having been transferred in 1957 from the Brazilian embassy to the Brazilian representation at UNESCO. In 1958, he was transferred to the Brazilian embassy in Montevideo, returning to Brazil in transit. While in Brazil, he married Maria Lucia Proença.

Bossa nova

Elizete Cardoso's Canção do Amor Demais -- a seminal album in the development of bossa nova -- consists of compositions by Jobim and Moraes, either working together or solo ("Canção do Amor Demais", "Luciana", "Estrada Branca", "Chega de Saudade", "Outra Vez"...). The recording also included a relatively unknown João Gilberto on two tracks. With the release of this record, Moraes's career in music had begun.

In August 1962, Moraes performed for the first time as a singer with Jobim and Gilberto at the Au Bon Gourmet in Rio. This was the first of his "pocket-shows", performances made to small audiences where he presented new compositions, some of which became international hits, such as the "Garota de Ipanema" ("The Girl from Ipanema"), as well as "Samba da Benção". Moraes introduced promising singers of the time, such as Nara Leão. Moraes wasn't a natural singer. He had a flat, nasal baritone voice, but he used background vocalists to sweeten the sound. His first undertaking as entertainer ended in 1963, when he returned to his post in the Brazilian representation at UNESCO, after his marriage to Nelita Abreu Rocha, his fourth wife.

Cinema recognition and collaborations

His play Orfeu da conceição (Orpheus of the Conception), a reworking of the story of Orpheus and Eurydice set in the carnival of Rio, was adapted into the film Black Orpheus, which won an Academy Award in 1959 as Best Foreign Language Film. It was awarded the Palme d'Or at the Cannes International Film Festival and the 1960 British Academy Award. De Moraes hated the film, however, leaving mid-screening and shouting that his play had been "disfigured"; the film has been criticized in Brazil since release for its exoticism and stereotyping of Brazilians. The film was a co-production among France, Italy, and Brazil and included "A felicidade" ("Happiness"), a song by Jobim and Moraes, which became an international hit. His song "Samba da bênção" ("The Blessing Samba") was included on the soundtrack of A Man and a Woman (Un homme et une femme, 1966), another Cannes film festival winner.

Later life

During the 1960s and 1970s, Moraes collaborated with Baden Powell on a series of songs known as the Afro sambas. He collaborated with Edu Lobo on the Elis Regina hit song "Arrastão".

During a purge at the Ministry of Foreign Relations, he was forcibly retired in 1969 at the age of 55. Although taken aback by his forced retirement, he laughed at the case against him. When it was made known that the ministry purge was directed against "homosexuals and drunks", he jokingly retorted that his alcoholism was public knowledge.

In the 1970s, Moraes collaborated with Antônio Pecci Filho, a guitarist and vocalist nicknamed Toquinho on musical and literary works. He married three women in succession: Cristina Gurjão, with whom he had a daughter, Maria; the actress Gesse Gessy; and the Argentinian Marta Rodrigues Santamaria. He toured Europe with Chico Buarque and Nara Leão, and Argentina with Dorival Caymmi and Oscar Castro-Neves. His most stable musical partnership, however, remained with Toquinho, with whom he released popular albums. Their live performances in Brazil and Europe were often conducted as intimate meetings with the public. Moraes sat onstage at a table with a checked tablecloth and a bottle of whiskey, chatting and telling amusing stories to the audience in French, English, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese.

Death and legacy

Vinícius de Moraes street in Rio.
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Moraes was a chain smoker and alcoholic who said, O uísque é o melhor amigo do homem—é o cão engarrafado ("Whiskey is man's best friend, it's the dog in a bottle"), After a long period of poor health, which included several visits to rehabilitation clinics, he died at his home in Rio de Janeiro on 9 July 1980, at the age of 66, in the company of his ninth wife, Gilda de Queirós Mattoso, and the faithful Toquinho. He is buried in Rio de Janeiro's Cemitério São João Batista.

In 2006, Moraes was posthumously reinstated to the Brazilian diplomatic corps. In February 2010, Brazil's lower house, the Camara dos Deputados, approved his posthumous promotion to Ambassador.

In December 2014, following a three-week public vote, the mascot of the 2016 Summer Olympics was named after him.

Discography

Year Album Partnership Label
1956 Orfeu da Conceição Tom Jobim Odeon
1963 Vinícius e Odete Lara Odete Lara, Baden Powell Elenco
1965 De Vinícius e Baden especialmente para Ciro Monteiro Baden Powell Elenco
1965 Vinícius e Caymmi no Zum Zum Dorival Caymmi Elenco
1966 Os Afro-sambas Baden Powell Elenco
1966 Vinícius: poesia e canção Forma
1967 Garota de Ipanema (film soundtrack) Philips
1967 Vinícius Elenco
1969 Vinícius em Portugal Festa
1970 En La Fusa con Maria Creuza y Toquinho, rereleased with the Spanish title Grabado en Buenos Aires con Maria Creuza y Toquinho ("Recorded in Buenos Aires with Maria Creuza and Toquinho") Maria Creuza, Toquinho Diorama
1970 Amália/Vinícius Amália Rodrigues
1971 Como dizia o poeta... Toquinho, Marília Medalha RGE
1971 Toquinho e Vinícius Toquinho RGE
1971 En La Fusa Maria Bethânia, Toquinho Trova
1972 Marilia/Vinícius Marilia Medalha RGE
1972 Nossa filha Gabriela Toquinho Polydor
1972 São demais os perigos desta vida Toquinho RGE
1973 O Bem-Amado Som Livre
1974 Vinícius & Toquinho Toquinho Philips
1974 Saravá Vinícius! Quarteto em cy, Toquinho Mercury
1975 Vinícius/Toquinho Toquinho Philips
1975 O poeta e o violão Toquinho RGE
1976 La voglia, la pazzia, l'incoscienza, l'allegria Ornella Vanoni, Toquinho Vanilla
1976 Deus lhe pague Edu Lobo EMI
1977 Antologia poética Philips
1977 Tom, Vinícius, Toquinho e Miúcha Tom Jobim, Toquinho, Miúcha Som Livre
1979 10 anos de Toquinho e Vinícius Toquinho Philips
1980 Um pouco de ilusão Toquinho Ariola
1980 Testamento... RGE
1980 A arca de Noé Toquinho Universal
1981 A arca de Noé 2 Toquinho PolyGram
1991 Poeta, moça e violão Clara Nunes, Toquinho Collector's Editora LTDA
2006 Vinícius & Amigos Seleções/Reader's Digest
2015 Um encontro no Au bon gourmet Joao Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim Doxy

References

  1. ^ Nogueira, Arnaldo Jr. "Vinícius de Moraes - Biografia". www.releituras.com.
  2. "Vinicius de Moraes: Biography and Poems | Brazilian Poetry". Retrieved 28 May 2021.
  3. "Vinicius de Moraes". viniciusdemoraes.com.br. Archived from the original on 1 October 2009.
  4. "Abril.com -". www.abril.com.br. Archived from the original on 21 October 2009.
  5. "Vinicius de Moraes - parteI". educaterra.terra.com.br.
  6. "Academia Brasileira de Letras". Academia Brasileira de Letras.
  7. Cf. Jose Castello, Vinicius de Moraes - O Poeta da Paixao, São Paulo: Cia. das Letras, 1994, ISBN 85-7164-355-5
  8. "Both available at". Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  9. "Culture: A poem by Vinicius de Moraes". Perseu Abramo Foundation. 31 December 2001. Archived from the original on 28 October 2007.
  10. Cf. Alfredo Bosi,Historia Concisa da Literatura Brasileira, São Paulo: Cultrix,1997, p. 464, ISBN 85-316-0189-4 , partially available at google books
  11. Cf. Bosi, Historia Concisa, 458/459
  12. Bosi, Historia Concisa, 459
  13. "Vinicius de Moraes". www.tirodeletra.com.br. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  14. Cf. official website, "Life" section
  15. "Vinícius: vida boêmia vigiada de perto", O Globo, 28 June 2009
  16. João Carlos Pecci (1994), Vinicius sem ponto final, Rio de Janeiro: Saraiva, page 40, ISBN 85-02-01391-2
  17. "Brazil - BRAZZIL - Vinicius de Moraes Poet Emmeritus - Brazilian Culture - Cover May 1999". www.brazzil.com.
  18. "Câmara aprova promoção de Vinicius de Moraes, morto em 1980, a ministro de primeira classe". 10 February 2010.
  19. "Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic mascots named Vinicius and Tom by public vote". Rio 2016. 14 December 2014. Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  20. Johnston, Abby (30 July 2016). "What Does Vinicius Mean? The Rio Olympics Mascot Pays Tribute To A Famous Brazilian". Bustle. Retrieved 8 August 2016.

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