翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Antonio Cardile
・ Antonio Carini
・ Antonio Carlo Napoleone Gallenga
・ Antonio Carlos Barrios Fernández
・ Antonio Carlos da Silva Neto
・ Antonio Carlos Ortega
・ Antonio Carlos Vieira
・ Antonio Carluccio
・ Antonio Carmona Añorve
・ Antonio Carnicero
・ Antonio Carnio
・ Antonio Caro
・ Antonio Carpio
・ Antonio Carrillo de Peralta y de Velasco, 2nd Marquis of Falces
・ Antonio Carrillo Flores
Antonio Carrizo
・ Antonio Carvalho
・ Antonio Casado Ruiz
・ Antonio Casal
・ Antonio Casale
・ Antonio Casas
・ Antonio Casertano
・ Antonio Casimir Cartellieri
・ Antonio Caso Andrade
・ Antonio Cassano
・ Antonio Cassar-Torreggiani
・ Antonio Cassese
・ Antonio Castaneta
・ Antonio Castañón
・ Antonio Castejón Espinosa


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Antonio Carrizo : ウィキペディア英語版
Antonio Carrizo

Antonio Carrizo (born Antonio Carozzi, September 15, 1926) is a noted Argentine radio and television presenter.
==Life and work==
Born in General Villegas, in western Buenos Aires Province, his first experience in broadcasting was during his teens at the helm of a transit media vehicle, from which he could be heard hawking ''Mejoral'', a paracetamol analgesic, in General Villegas and surrounding Pampas towns. He arrived in Buenos Aires following a year of military service, and began on the radio as an ad announcer on Radio del Pueblo in 1948. He later co-hosted a program on ratings leader Radio Belgrano with Beatriz Taibo, in which the duo became known for announcing advertisements in the form of a dialogue. Taibo, for example, might ask: ''"Traffic's at a standstill. What do you think happened?"'' to which Carrizo would answer ''"A Sunlight girl must have walked by!"'' 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Antonio Carrizo )
The radio theater producer at Radio El Mundo, Julio César Barton, hired Carrizo in 1949. He worked with leading names in Argentine radio at the time such as Niní Marshall, Tita Merello, and Luis Sandrini, eventually becoming the station's programming director. Remaining on the radio, Carrizo debuted on Argentine television in the 1950s on Channel 7, and in cinema as a radio presenter in Luis César Amadori's ''El barro humano'' (1955). Carrizo was hired by Channel 9 director Alejandro Romay to host ''Sábados Continuados'' in 1964. He returned to Channel 7 as host of ''Bienvenido Sábado'' (''Welcome, Saturday''), a variety show that aired in 1965, and in the 1970s hosted ''Primera de la Noche'' (''Top of the Evening''). Carrizo also appeared from 1966 on Radio Rivadavia, which by then had become the nation's top radio network, working with Cacho Fontana, Héctor Larrea, and Juan Carlos Mareco, and in 1971 left El Mundo to become host of Rivadavia's ''La Vida y El Canto'' (''Life and Song'').〔 The urbane talk show, which ran for twenty years, drew guests from Argentine music, cinema, and literature (including Jorge Luis Borges, with whom he taped ''Borges, el Memorioso'' in 1979), as well as foreign guests such as Italian cinema great Vittorio Gassman.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Antonio Carrizo, el clásico del éter )〕 He also hosted ''Cíclo Los Intérpretes'' (''Performers' Series'') on Radio Rivadavia, devoted to folk and classical music, and appeared as a recurring guest commentator on the popular round table program ''Polémica en el Fútbol'' (''Controversies in Argentine Football''). Carrizo earned a Konex Award for his career as presenter in 1981.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Antonio Carrizo )
Carrizo was named President of the Society of Argentine Bibliophiles, and of the Argentine Chess Federation.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Antonio Carrizo recibió la Medalla del Bicentenario )〕 The accomplished chess player counted among his friends Grand Master Bobby Fischer. Fischer visited Argentina often, and Carrizo's home hosted numerous matches between the two, as well as with other noted players such as Tigran Petrosian and Miguel Quinteros; during one such match, which Fischer and Quinteros played for money, the unpredictable Fischer repeatedly slammed the Japanese forest glass coffee table, prompting Carrizo to urge Quinteros to lower the stakes, ''"lest that son of a bitch break my table!"'' 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=En la vida, un niño inmaduro. En el tablero, el más grande )
His later projects included serving as master of ceremonies at the 1980 OTI Festival, as well as the annual ''Ciclo Música en la Ciudad'' (''City Music Series''), a classical music festival, from 1987 onward.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Treinta años al lado del público )〕 He joined Juan Carlos Calabró as co-host of the radio comedy series, ''Calabromas'', and its long-running television counterpart: ''El contra'' (''The Jerk'', Calabró's stock character).〔 Carrizo served as Cultural Attaché to the Argentine Embassy in Spain during the 1990s, and was bestowed the Order of Isabella the Catholic.〔 He later hosted ''El Locutorio'' (''The Broadcast Room''),〔 a cultural program, and ''Papeles Sueltos'' (''Loose Papers''), an intellectual round table show.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=A la vez, nos educa y entretiene )〕 He also hosted, among other programs, ''Hecho en Argentina'', a geographic documentary series on the América 24 cable network, and from 2006 onward ''Tangos y Libros'' on Municipal Radio.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=El minirrepo a Antonio Carrizo (Conductor) )
Carrizo's health worsened, and in 2008 he underwent cardiopulmonary bypass and cerebrovascular surgery.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Internaron de urgencia a Antonio Carrizo )〕 He recovered, returned as host of ''Tangos y Libros'', and in 2010 was awarded the Argentina Bicentennial Medal by Buenos Aires Mayor Mauricio Macri.〔 Carrizo, whose career spanned seven decades, earned widespread respect among colleagues and listeners for his authoritative intonation and cultural breadth. He became known as ''el señor de la radio'' ("the lord of the radio") in Argentina.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Desde abajo y con sexto grado )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Antonio Carrizo, sí...ese gran locutor argentino )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Antonio Carrizo」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.