ABC Day 10/04/2011 OTERO IN REAL DEMOCRACY AND
"Never give up" Paco Otero is a versatile man, a true showman who has made you laugh and think thousands of spectators along its carrera.Ha performed at international theater festivals and has trained with the best teachers of interpretation. In Madrid, during the 90's, the Libertarian Cabaret attracted public attention. Born in Carcabuey, in a family of laborers who had to leave her village for food. - When he realized he wanted to be an artist? "At the moment I realized my body was the pile and nobody did me any attention. As a young man not have a vocation as an artist. What you want is to stand out and be popular. But over the years that nonsense is over. Many leave and seek careers that will guarantee a comfortable economic situation. Others, however, we continue and we can not quit. - Do you like taking risks? "More than the'm running them. Without them I could not live. I never wanted to be an officer or have not secured the flowers will be on my tombstone. - What is an artist? "A person who makes others think what you do and feel the satisfaction of being useful to others. - Should I have any special qualities? "The only requirement is needed is a desire to communicate what they feel and what you think. There are techniques to do and can learn. It is true that only those born with a gift to be artists. Anyone, if he tries, is capable of doing. Now I'm taking drama classes and housewives are now able to excite the public reading poems from Lorca. - What is on stage? "The possibility of transmitting a message and the opportunity to have an hour everyone quiet while I speak. And do not think that's small. In normal life the artists not heard before. - What do you have bohemian? "Let's be serious, the word Bohemian is a CANTAMAÑANAS affectionately call someone. And that I never have been. I was born in Carcabuey and my father was a laborer. My family had to leave town to eat, out of sheer survival. We arrived in Madrid in 62. My sisters had to be employed as maids and I in a workshop. My mother taught us to love our culture and free time going to the theater and read books. We rebel and never give up. - Rebelled against what? "Maybe against our own destiny. Those were hard years. The worker then had no more obligation than eating, working, do the military, going to football and start a family. I was 15, he read Ortega y Gasset in the workshop and I convinced my colleagues that reading was fun. At the end we had just talking about books. - Do you not fear the crisis? "I belong to that breed of Andalusian exiles who had to leave their homes and sought to survive life outside. Compared with the current crisis that makes me laugh. It is the economic crisis which terrifies me. - Is there any worse? "The crisis of conscience, the crisis of culture and of our own civic responsibility. The economic crisis of the occult and these are much worse. - What did you ashamed? -To mourn the weak and needy.
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