César Alfredo Miró Quesada Bahamonde (1907–1999), more commonly known as César Miró, was a Peruvian writer and composer. He wrote novels, stories, manuscripts, essays, and poetry.
Biography
César Miró was born on 7 June 1907, in the
Miraflores District in Lima, Peru. He studied in the San Agustín and La Inmaculada schools. He used to escape from his college classes to go visit the
Biblioteca Nacional del Perú
The National Library of Peru ( es, link=no, Biblioteca Nacional del Perú) is the national library of Peru, located in Lima. It is the country's oldest and most important library. Like the majority of Peruvian libraries, it is a non-circulating ...
(the National Library of Peru) and submerge himself in books. At the age of 15, he published the school newspaper “Lightning” and later published his first poems in the magazine “Amauta”. He was friends with
José Carlos Mariátegui
José Carlos Mariátegui La Chira (June 14, 1894 - April 16, 1930) was a Peruvian writer, journalist, politician and Marxist–Leninist philosopher.
A prolific author despite his early death, El Amauta (from Quechua: hamawt'a, "teacher", a nam ...
, but they only discussed art and literature, since they had disagreeing political views.
In May 1927, he was arrested with
Jorge Basadre Grohmann
Jorge Alfredo Basadre Grohmann (February 12, 1903 – June 29, 1980) was a Peruvian historian known for his extensive publications about the independent history of his country. He served during two different administrations as Minister of Educa ...
by an accusation of a forming a conspiracy against the president
Augusto Leguía
Augusto is an Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish given name or surname. Notable people with the name include:
*Augusto Aníbal
*Augusto dos Anjos
* Augusto Arbizo
*Augusto Barbera (born 1938), Italian law professor, politician and judge
*Augusto Ben ...
. He was taken as a prisoner to San Lorenzo Island, where he passed his birthday and within a month was deported to Montevideo, like Basadre. Basadre later stated that no such plot of conspiracy had ever existed.
In 1932, with Calonge y Castillo, he helped form the trio “Sudamericano”, but it quickly disintegrated after a tour in Chile.
In 1936, Miró wrote the
waltz
The waltz ( ), meaning "to roll or revolve") is a ballroom and folk dance, normally in triple ( time), performed primarily in closed position.
History
There are many references to a sliding or gliding dance that would evolve into the wa ...
“Se va la Paloma” (“The Dove Goes”) which with the music of Filomeno Ormeño paid homage the traditional Procession of the
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, or Virgin of Carmel, is the title given to the Blessed Virgin Mary in her role as patroness of the Carmelite Order, particularly within the Catholic Church. The first Carmelites were Christian hermits living on Mount Ca ...
from the High Neighborhoods of Lima.
Later in Los Angeles, California, he received permission to film a movie showing the feelings of the Latin-Americans that lived in the USA on their returned native land. The movie was called “Gitanos en Hollywood” (“Gypsies in Hollywood”) and César Miró had taken the load of work upon himself as the leader. However, when he had started to work on the film, the manager that was financing the movie was discouraged from carrying it out. However, César had already written the first verses to a song for the movie, and upon his return to Lima he finished his poesy.
In 1941,
Jesús Vásquez
María de Jesús Vásquez Vásquez (December 20, 1920 – April 3, 2010), known by the pseudonym La Reina y Señora de la Canción Criolla, was a virtuoso Peruvian singer.
She was daughter of Pedro Vásquez Chávez and María Jesús Vásquez V ...
performed this song for the first time, and it was called “Todos Vuelven” (“Everybody Returns”), and as he started to sing the first verses of the song, he knew that Miró had written a glorious new page as a native song... “Todos vuelven a la tierra en que nacieron, / al embrujo incomparable de su sol, / todos vuelven al rincón donde vivieron, / donde acaso floreció más de un amor…” (“Everyone returns to the land where they were born, / to a bewitching incomparable of its sun, / everyone returns to the corner where they lived, / where perhaps more than one love had flourished…”).
His
tondero
Tondero is a dance and guitar rhythm from Peru that developed in the country's northern coastal region (Piura– Lambayeque).
Geographical origin of tondero and cumananas
The Tondero is a Peruvian dance and rhythm born in the north coast adj ...
“Malabrigo” had similar luck to “Todos Vuelven,” and when
José María Arguedas
José María Arguedas Altamirano (18 January 1911 – 2 December 1969) was a Peruvian novelist, poet, and anthropologist. Arguedas was an author of Spanish descent, fluent in the Native Quechua language, gained by living in two Quechua househ ...
wanted to film a movie about the lives of fishermen, he searched for an adequate port and arrived at the port of Malabrigo. This movie, however, also could not filmed, but the song had already been composed, and like with Todos vuelven, with the music of Alcides Carreño it became very popular.
For the rest of his life, César Miró worked with newspapers, radios, and televisión, showing his many outstanding qualities, and he was also the president for life of APDAYC and was an
ambassador for Peru in UNESCO, a special organization with a goal to contribute to world peace and to security. He died on 8 November 1999, at the age of 92 in Lima, Peru.
Awards
* National Cultural Award (Peru)
Songs
* Todos Vuelven
* Malabrigo
* Se va la Paloma
Books
* La Masacre de los Coroneles (The Massacre of the Colonels)
* Cielo y Tierra de Santa Rosa (Sky and Land of Santa Rosa)
* La Mariscala (The Marshall's Wife)
* Los íntimos de La Victoria (The Secrets of La Victoria)
* Ricardo Palma
* El Patriarca de las Tradiciones (The Patriarch of Traditions)
* La Ciudad del Río Hablador (The City of Río Hablador)
* Mariátegui, el tiempo y los hombres (Mariátegui, the Time and the Men)
Family
Cesar Miro has had one child, by the name of Cesar Gabriell Miro Quesada. His grandson, Cesar David Miro Quesada now lives in Maui and is the father of Cesar Valentin Miro Quesada, now 17.
References
Todos vuelvenVals
* This article draws heavily from the
corresponding article in the
Spanish-Language Wikipedia.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Miro, Cesar
1907 births
1999 deaths
People from Lima Province
Peruvian people of Catalan descent
Peruvian musicians
Peruvian male writers