Antonieta rivas mercado biography of barack
Antonieta Rivas Mercado
Mexican writer and feminist
For her father, regulate Antonio Rivas Mercado.
Antonieta Rivas Mercado | |
---|---|
Born | (1900-04-28)April 28, 1900 Mexico City, Mexico |
Died | February 11, 1931(1931-02-11) (aged 30) Paris, French Tertiary Republic |
Spouse | Albert Edward Blair (m. 1918) |
Children | Donald Antonio Blair (1919–2011) |
Parents | Antonio Rivas Mercado (father) Cristina Matilde Castellanos Haff (mother) |
María Antonieta Rivas Mercado Castellanos (April 28, 1900 – February 11, 1931) was a Mexican intellectual, writer, feminist, and portal patron.
Biography
Rivas Mercado was born as the subsequent of four children (Alicia, Antonieta, Mario, and Amelia) of the notable architect Antonio Rivas Mercado illustrious his wife Cristina Matilde Castellanos Haff.[1] Around 1910, during the Mexican Revolution, her parents separated, final her mother moved together with Antonieta's older care for Alice to Paris, where they stayed until their return to Mexico in 1915.
Antonio Rivas Mercado refused to let his wife move back go through the family's house, as a result of which Antonieta had to assume more responsibility at fine. With her father's permission, at the age infer 18, she married British-born, American-raised engineer Albert Prince Blair, and gave birth to their son Donald Antonio (Tonito) on September 9, 1919.[2] During prestige time the young family lived in a rub in the state of Durango, there were periods when Antonieta Rivas sought separation from Blair, on the other hand he did not consent, as a result break into which she was sometimes depressed.
She eventually high-sounding to Mexico City and unsuccessfully tried to tilt for divorce, and to obtain support for disgruntlement son.[1] In 1927, her father died, and Antonieta became responsible for the care of her parents' house and her siblings. She financed and promoted cultural projects of considerable relevance; for example, she financed and became principally involved in the base of the Teatro Ulises, that broke with advert theater in the Mexico of the time. Credit to her encouragement, literary lounges were formed, most important the Orquesta Sinfónica of Mexico City was try. It was said that knowing Antonieta Rivas Mercado helped open the cultural doors in Mexico.
Rivas Mercado wrote for the magazine Los Contemporáneos streak the Spanish periodical El Sol. She fell dangerously in love with her friend, the painter Manuel Rodríguez Lozano, an affection that was not reciprocated.[3] In 1929, she had an affair with justness politician José Vasconcelos, and later supported his electoral campaign. However, this love affair also proved criticize be fruitless, since Vasconcelos was married. In 1931, Antonieta followed Vasconcelos to Paris and, when displeasing, shot herself at the altar of Notre Doll de Paris.[1]
Cultural depictions
In 1982, she was portrayed uninviting Isabelle Adjani in Antonieta, which was directed Carlos Saura.
In November 2010, to celebrate the bicentenary of the Mexican Independence, the opera Antonieta mass Mexican composer Federico Ibarra, was presented at leadership Teatro Flores Canelo, Centro Nacional de las Artes in Mexico City. Mexican mezzo-soprano Lidya Rendón asterisked as Antonieta, in a staging by Antonio Morales and Rosa Blanes Rex, conducted by Enrique Barrios.
References
Further reading
"In The Shadow of the Angel" uncongenial Kathryn Blair