- Nacimiento
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- Lugar
Sérgio Ricardo
João Lutfi (18 June 1932 – 23 July 2020), known professionally as Sérgio Ricardo, was a Brazilian actor, musician, playwright and filmmaker, better known for being responsible for the soundtrack of Glauber Rocha's "Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol" ("Black God, White Devil").
Born in a Lebanese-Brazilian family in Marília, São Paulo, and brother to famed director of photography Dib Lutfi, João got his stage name from TV businessmen who wanted to rebrand him as a leading man with an iconic name during his early gigs as an actor. He's maily associated with the Cinema Novo (Brazilian New Wave) movement, but stayed active until 2018.
During the Cinema Novo days, Ricardo directed short film "Menino da Calça Branca" (1961) and "Esse Mundo É Meu" (1963), his feature-length debut. Among other notorious works in his career as a filmmaker is "A Noite do Espantalho", which shows Ricardo's talent as a polymath by mixing filmmaking with folk music and other elements of Brazilian popular culture, such as "cordel" literature.
Ricardo moved to the Vidigal slum, in Rio de Janeiro, by choice in the 1970s, where he lived until his death in 2020. "Bandeira de Retalhos" (2018), his last film, was adapted by a theatre play also written by him and chronicles the life in 1970s Vidigal.
Como dirección
Como intérprete
Sérgio Ricardo: Uma Outra História do Cinema Novo
Favela do Papa
Sérgio Ricardo AKA João Lutfi
Na Rota do Vento
Bandeira de Retalhos
Pitanga
Pé Sem Chão
Calabouço 1968 - Um tiro no coração do Brasil
2 Coelhos
Uma Noite em 67
Milagrez
Depois do Transe
Coisa Mais Linda - Histórias e Casos da Bossa Nova
Descobrindo Waltel
Glauber o Filme, Labirinto do Brasil
Enquanto a Tristeza não Vem
Zelão
Dib
Para Viver Um Grande Amor
Un animal doué de déraison
O Tempo e o Som
Esse Mundo é Meu
Menino da Calça Branca
Pluft, o Fantasminha
Pé na Tábua