Monday, February 23, 2009

Conchita Cintron, Pioneering Female Bullfighter, dies at age 86

Conchita Cintron

Conchita Cintron, who has died of a heart attack aged 86, broke into the male-dominated sport of bullfighting at the age of 13 and became one of the world's first famous woman matadors.
Cintron, was a Peruvian who became known as La Diosa Rubia, or The Blonde Goddess. Famous for her bullfighting skills on foot and on horseback, Cintron reportedly killed more than 750 bulls during her career in Europe, Central America and South America.


"She made an indelible mark on a period of bullfighting history," Hugo Ferro of the Portuguese Bullfighters' Union said. "She was probably the best-known woman bullfighter," he said.
Born in 1922 as Concepcion Cintron Verrill, daughter of a Puerto Rican father and an American mother, she faced her first bull at 13 and made her debut in 1937 at the main arena in Lima, Peru.
During the 1940s, Cintron became one of the most famous women in bullfighting at a time when few females became matadors, whose job it was to manoeuvre around the animal at close range, then to stab it to death with a sword.
"She wasn't the first woman, but she kept going season after season and made a name for herself," Ferro said.



Cintron was seriously injured in 1949 in Guadalajara, Mexico, when a bull gored her in the thigh. Carried to the ring's infirmary, she pulled away from doctors, returned to the ring and killed the bull. She then fell unconscious and was rushed into emergency surgery.
That same year in Spain, where a law prohibited women bullfighters from dismounting their horse and fighting on foot, she simulated the kill by touching the bull on the shoulders - where the sword would go - as it passed her, drawing cheers from the crowd. She fought in more than 400 events in Portugal, Spain and several South American countries before retiring in 1949.
Cintron learned bullfighting with Ruy Zarco da Camara, a Portuguese who ran a riding school in Lima. He taught her the Portuguese form of bullfighting on horseback. After fighting in Spain she made her debut in Portugal in 1945.
She retired aged 27 and married a Portuguese, Francisco de Castelo Branco. She is survived by a son. 

3 comments:

Fashion Serial Killer said...

ooh nice! my friend Allison will love this. I will forward it along to her.

Anonymous said...

I love her! I might just want to be the bull
What a fierce, fabulous, fighter!
Your blog is so interesting, thanks for your pioneering spirit.

Anonymous said...

I hate Corridas. Anyway i respect this Lady ...

Viva el TORO!


Abajo las toradas !


http://Anitanosupermercado.vox.com

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