He says he has a separate God and that no medical prognosis can with him. Hannibal Pacano She’s made a dramatic change in her life and confesses that the formula is simple: you just have to ask yourself one question: “For what?” and not “why?”
When specialists told him he couldn’t do the summer theater season because he had to undergo surgery for a malignant tumor on his headhe insisted and did the same.
And it was with that job, so i come backa sort of imaginary journey through different moments of his life, with which he won 7 Carlos Awards, 7 Hugo Awards and a few days ago, 3 ACE Awards and the Gold Award.
“It was a surprise that I didn’t expect and an impressive emotion because so many things come together, so many years of work and effort”, he reflects in a chat alone with clarion.
“my job is doneit’s one of the top theater awards and I’m proud to have the Gold. I thank life,” added the artist, who finally underwent surgery in September.
Now he poses with a painting in which he won Can we talk (Telefe, Saturday at 10pm) and as soon as the camera appears, the artist wakes up. And, of course, their prisons appear. Fuchsia, yellow, black and animalier. “Do you want some tea?”he asks from the living room of his home in Almagro.
Later he will go through the strict upbringing of his childhood, remembering his mother’s mud baths embroidering lace, and complaining about the three daily changes of clothes she made for him and his siblings. Is this where your devotion to fashion was born?
Already It’s not the seasoned Pachano and the controversyhe from Dancing for a dream where he had strong live fights. Now he seems more peaceful and wiser.
whatHe will continue to comment on politics and the media circus from Big BrotherWanda Nara and L-Gante, who he knows well from his years blessed?
-18 awards won with “Así vuelvo”. And now the golden ace…
-I am very grateful to all the people of ACE for this recognition which fills me with pride. I dedicated it to my old lady who was the creative pillar I had in my life.
-At what point in your life are you?
-I have a successful career, I don’t know what failure is. Already working on what you like is a pleasure. Having been able to materialize my two professions of architect and artist. Everything has been chained to achieve what I am today. I take from this life that I have done everything and everything has been enjoyable and supported by my family.
-How do you remember your childhood?
-My mom understood what I liked to do as a child, she was very attentive. It’s not normal for a child to draw architectural things at 7 years old. And I painted, I did it in Indian ink, in watercolour. And I saw my mother making macramé, tatting, which is lace, all very beautiful.
-You inherited your taste for aesthetics from her…
-Yes, but mine developed through drawing. Also, I was a gaucho at school and developed dance. I wear 38 and they made me special shoes because there was no such small size. I’ve always been focused on my inner life, I’ve never played sports. I did artistic gymnastics because I was attracted by the movement of bodies in the air.
– Was your mother very detailed?
-He produced us three times a day.
-Did you have 3 daily makeovers when you were a kid?
He bathed in it three times a day. In the morning, in the afternoon and in the evening. It wasn’t easy sitting on the sidewalk like pie dolls. It was somewhat illogical. It was a dirt road, so we got dirty. We were 3 brothers, my father had two previous marriages. He got us up, got us ready for school. We had lunch, there was time to play, he prepared clay tubs, very strange things.
-And your father?
-My father was the chief of police in the province of Santa Fe and was in charge of human trafficking (that’s what human trafficking used to be called). My father wanted to get to the bottom of everything and when he got there we had to leave. Dady Brieva’s father saved him
-Because?
-He was the general commissioner, they had conflicting ideologies but they were careful, it was the Peronism and anti-Peronism of another era. Due to my father’s job we had to leave Santa Fe and moved to Córdoba.
-Have you always had a strong personality like now?
-Yes, I planted myself with my parents. Once they wanted me to study what a submarine was like from some encyclopedia. And I told them, “I don’t care, it’s something I’m not going to use in my life.”
Set your limits.
And she cried a lot. I felt relieved. One day my mom told me “stop crying” and I said, “It’s your problem if you don’t like hearing me cry. I’ll cry every time my balls break. Don’t ever tell me not to cry again.” Because it felt like a castration, because crying is releasing, letting go.
-And that “men don’t cry”…
-Yes, those were my father’s nonsense, it was logical because he was born in 1907, he lived in another conception. And that they were liberals. My father married twice to women he never wanted and had children we don’t know how much love there was.
-How were you in health when you went to do the season of “Así vuelvo” in Carlos Paz with work?
-Before going to Carlos Paz they told me not to play the season. I was having a treatment that caused the tumor to reduce the inflammation, but it got complicated at some point. They told me just before the season, I couldn’t not go. We created a wonderful theater in Carlos Paz, but everything was complicated, so I decided to do the theater in the galley. Let’s bank a company with a house, with everything.
-And then you went back to Buenos Aires and did shows here until you finally had surgery in September.
-Then I had Covid for the second time. But it wasn’t serious. I have a separate God. From there I took a break, I did the study again and we realized that there was a motor problem in the left side of the body. The first operation was in 2017 and we knew this could happen.
-How do you deal with health problems? It always surprises how you are always ahead, despite every challenge that life presents you.
-Whim. I am never afraid or think about what happens or what can happen. I trust my doctors very much.
-And besides doctors, do you do spiritual cures?
-I did a year of work with my therapist, then decided he had completed his internship, he had nothing more to talk about. I had a treatment with the Health Foundation on the “for what”. Why do people who get sick think “why is this happening to me?” But the important thing is to ask yourself the “why”, to be able to enter the healing process, this has helped me to rebalance myself.
-You learned?
-I learned a lot from a woman named Lucía, who belongs to the Foundation. She has had ALS for 40 years, has written 6 books, writes with one finger, smiles, has an impressive head and a light in her eye that is rarely seen. When I saw that resilience it was a before and after and I saw mine as utterly insignificant.
-And what have you done?
-I was filled with love, with emotion. I took refuge in that and cut out with everything, work, people, drugs, situations of harmful things. And I’ve learned that some things don’t have to be repeated. And the job (so i come back) has to do with that, with getting back the way I wanted and also letting go.
Will there be a second season of the show?
We hope to be able to do a second phase of the work. I will go on stage until. I am now in a recovery phase. From the moment I was operated on until my return, it was 4 days, it was very fast. I went to collect myself at the home of Sofía (Pachano, her daughter) and Santiago (Ramundo, her son-in-law). It gave me life to know that my daughter is doing very well, she is happy. And knowing that we’re a stepfamily, that feeds my soul.
-What feelings did you have in the recovery process?
I felt that the priority was me. I needed to stop. I’ve never been afraid. I always try to convey that you need to run away from fear, anger, rage. You have to harmonize with beautiful things, with creativity, with the fact that everything will be fine. In fact, the prognosis was that after the operation he would have to be rehabilitated by Fleming. But the next day I was already walking.
-How is your life now?
I am focusing on my health. I cook. I don’t eat out and I don’t fart. I really like milanesas that I can’t eat. I am very concerned about diabetes. You should try a more vegetarian part. I can’t fruit because of the sugar. I’m also working on directing projects with Ana Sánz. We will get together again and make two projects.
-Which?
One, in a cabaret and then a masterclass on arts and crafts to teach people in general, not just dancers and actors. I collaborate with the Municipality and I have met people in their 20s, 80s, 90s who sing, paint and dance. You have to find out what your calling is, not just to be famous, like now in reality shows, which are tilingos.
– What a beautiful Tilingo term…
-She comes from the city, before we said “here comes the tilinga”. It’s that I see 90-year-old people making art and suddenly I see television, Big Brother, and I say: “Who are this bunch of idiots?”. In the Singing or Dance They were artists fighting for a place, but these are sitting around, eating popcorn, bloated on anabolics and zero neurons.
-How do you see the country?
-We will have to deal with people who will never work again and we have to cash in and keep. Hopefully all plans will be left out, just give it to people in need and children with disabilities. Politics is sinister. Those who run us must open the doors for young people to appear in politics.
-Are you aware of what is happening in the media, such as the relationship between Wanda and L-Gante?
Wanda has always been a bitch. We worked together on Dancing when Wanda’s fan was there. I have a love affair, it seems to me that she is a divine mother. She’s done business, she’s very much alive. I applaud her, I put the bow on her. But what happens with your partner, I don’t give a damn.
-L-Ghent what do you think?
-It’s something else, it’s a character who broke into the world of entertainment by telling stories that other people didn’t and that has value, whether you like it or not. He seems to me like a thinking little boy who spares no one.
-Did you participate in a campaign to free the orca Kshamenk, from Mundo Marino, and for the closure of all “marine prisons”?
-Is critical. No more zoos or aquariums. No more animals that are in captivity, that each animal is in its own habitat. We’ve already learned with this Covid thing that using animals…
– Do you have hobbies?
I watch TV, the news. I don’t watch Netflix, I don’t handle all of this.
Would you leave the country?
-For a while… In Spain, in New York… because it has to do with my profession. I like to travel, but it’s tricky now because I’m in a recovery period until March when I can’t do much until my brain calms down.
HAS
Source: Clarin