Carlos Villagrán

Carlos Villagrán Eslava (born 12 January 1944) is a Mexican actor, comedian, and former journalist best known for playing Quico in the Televisa sitcom El Chavo del Ocho and the Telerey sitcom ¡Ah cabellos!

Carlos Villagrán
Villagrán in 2012
Born
Carlos Villagrán Eslava

(1944-01-12) 12 January 1944
Mexico City, Mexico
OccupationActor, comedian, journalist (former)
Notable work
Quico in El Chavo del 8
Children6

Life and career

He was a newspaper writer for Mexico City. As a writer, he became friends with screenwriter and future co-star Rubén Aguirre. Aguirre was hired by Chespirito (Roberto Gómez Bolaños) to play Professor Jirafales in the then upcoming El Chavo del Ocho Televisa television series. Aguirre held a party for family and friends at his house, and Villagrán impressed him after expanding his cheeks out of proportion during one of the party's comic steps. As a matter of a fact, that movement would later become a trademark of the character he'd play in El Chavo.

Aguirre recommended Villagrán to Chespirito, and Villagrán was given the Quico character in the show. He also appeared on Chespirito's other hit show, El Chapulín Colorado. Both of Chespirito's shows became major international hits all over Latin America and in the United States, Spain, and other countries. Villagrán acquired great fame with these shows.

Villagrán left the shows in 1978, mostly because he and Chespirito were engaged in a legal battle over the rights of the Quico character. At that same time, Ramón Valdés also left the two shows. This marked the beginning of the end for both productions, although they are still seen on many countries around the world with re-runs.

Villagrán went to Venezuela, where he acted in various Radio Caracas Televisión shows: El niño de papel (1981), Kiko Botones (1981), Federrico (1982), Las nuevas aventuras de Federrico (1983), and El circo de monsieur Cachetón (1985).[1] These were not successful as Chespirito's productions had been in Mexico. He and Valdés were reunited in Mexico when Telerey hired them to make the short-lived television show Ah que Kiko!.[1] Chespirito was not able to prevent the name Kiko, with its different spelling, from being used in the new show. The show was successful until Valdés died of stomach cancer in 1988. For a brief time a local comic Sergio Ramos was brought in as Don Cejudo, but the chemistry was no longer there, so the show soon was taken off the air.

Like many of his co-stars in the Chespirito shows, Villagrán went on to enjoy a circus career, touring with his El circo de Kiko.

Villagrán later did what his friend Aguirre had done before, moving to Argentina, where Chespirito had no rights over the Quico character, and playing his old character there.

In 2000, in an El Chavo del Ocho special which reunited all the actors from the series (except Ramón Valdés, Angelines Fernández, Raúl Padilla, Horacio Gómez Bolaños, and Ana Lilian de la Macorra, who was not present), Villagrán and Chespirito reconciled their differences.

In 2017, the Brazilian movie "Como se Tornar o Pior Aluno da Escola" (literally translated: "How to become the worst student in the school") is announced, which was released in October in the same year and with Carlos Villagrán in the role of Ademar, the director of the school and antagonist of the film. It was based on the eponymous book by comedian and Brazilian TV presenter Danilo Gentili.[2]

Personal life

Villagrán has three sons and three daughters.

gollark: Why would slightly better fake news generation suddenly cause a massive upsurge? They have smaller GPT models *now*.
gollark: Not enough for a huge impact? Have you *not* already heard of people going on about the big issues with fake news?
gollark: And? There are lots now.
gollark: Humans can write that fine. We already have such issues. The solution isn't limiting ability to automatically write things but people actually checking facts.
gollark: Like what? Is there much evilness actually limited by ability to generate slightly higher quality text than is possible now?

References

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