Walcyr Carrasco

Walcyr Carrasco
Born
Walcyr Rodrigues Carrasco

(1951-12-01) 1 December 1951 (age 72)
NationalityBrazilian
Occupation(s)Writer
Screenwriter
Journalist
Known forChocolate com Pimenta
Alma Gêmea
Verdades Secretas
Êta Mundo Bom!
O Outro Lado do Paraíso
A Dona do Pedaço
AwardsInternational Emmy Award[1]

Walcyr Carrasco (born 1 December 1951) is a Brazilian author, film writer and television writer.[2]

Career[edit]

Walcyr Rodrigues Carrasco was born on 1 December 1951, in Bernardino de Campos, São Paulo. Writer, playwright and screenwriter, began his professional career as a journalist. His first published book was Quando Meu Irmãozinho Nasceu. Since then, still in children's literature, he wrote and published several works, among them A Menina que Queria Ser Anjo, Cadê o Super-herói?, Abaixo o Bicho Papão, Quem Quer Sonhar, Meu Encontro com Papai Noel and O Mistério da Gruta. As a playwright, Walcyr Carrasco wrote success stories such as Batom (1995), which revealed the actress Ana Paula Arósio, and Êxtase (1997), for which he received the Shell award for best author.

He made his debut writing for television in the late 1980s, with the telenovela Cortina de Vidro, produced and aired by SBT. Then, in the Rede Manchete, wrote three mini-series: Rosa-dos-Rumos (1990), O Guarani (1991) and Filhos do Sol (1991). Hired by Globo, he worked as a text supervisor on the series Retrato de Mulher (1993), starring actress Regina Duarte.

Walcyr Carrasco was also, along with Mário Teixeira, the author of the telenovela Xica da Silva (1996), produced and also aired by the extinct Manchete TV, under the direction of Walter Avancini. He was required to sign the plot under the alias Adamo Angel at the time because he had been hired by SBT. He wrote Fascinaço (1998) while still a student at SBT.

Carrasco returned to work at Globo in 2000, when he also - with Mário Teixeira - signed his first telenovela on the station, O Cravo e a Rosa (2000). Inspired by the Shakespearean classic The Taming of the Shrew, with references sought in A Indomada, Ivani Ribeiro's novel, screened in 1965 by TV Excelsior, and Sérgio Jockyman's O Machão, aired in 1974 by TV Tupi. O Cravo e a Rosa was a great success at 6:00 pm with Eduardo Moscovis and Adriana Esteves in the roles Julião Petruchio and Catarina Batista. Walter Avancini was the director, with whom Walcyr Carrasco would also work on his next work, the telenovela A Padroeira (2001). Set in the 18th century, A Padroeira debuted three months after O Cravo e a Rosa, and starred Luigi Baricelli and Deborah Secco in the lead roles, the telenovela turned out to be the latest work by director Walter Avancini, who died in July 2001.

Then Walcyr Carrasco was one of the authors of the second version of the series Sítio do Picapau Amarelo (2001), based Monteiro Lobato's novel. He returned to write telenovelas in 2002, replacing - from episode 149 - the author Benedito Ruy Barbosa ahead of Esperança (2002).

Filmography[edit]

Telenovela[edit]

Title Year Credited as Note
Author Co-author Supervisor
Cortina de Vidro 1989 Yes
Xica da Silva 1996 Yes Under the pseudonym Adamo Angel
Fascinação 1998 Yes
O Cravo e a Rosa 2000 Yes with Mário Teixeira
A Padroeira 2001 Yes
Esperança 2002 Yes with Benedito Ruy Barbosa
Chocolate com Pimenta 2003 Yes
Alma Gêmea 2005 Yes
O Profeta 2006 Yes with Duca Rachid and Thelma Guedes
Sete Pecados 2007 Yes
Caras & Bocas 2009 Yes
Morde e Assopra 2011 Yes
Gabriela 2012 Yes
Amor à Vida 2013 Yes
Verdades Secretas 2015–2021 Yes International Emmy Award for Best Telenovela
Êta Mundo Bom! 2016 Yes
O Outro Lado do Paraíso 2017 Yes
A Dona do Pedaço 2019 Yes
Terra e Paixão 2023 Yes

Series[edit]

Title Year Credited as Note
Author Collaborator/screenwriter
Sítio do Picapau Amarelo 2002 Yes with Mário Teixeira and Thelma Guedes.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Carrasco, Walcyr (November 29, 2016). "Ganhei o Emmy!". Época magazine (in Portuguese). Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  2. ^ Abos, Márcia (18 June 2010). "Walcyr Carrasco, festejado autor de novelas, será um dos curadores da Bienal do Livro de SP". O Globo (in Portuguese). Retrieved 15 February 2013.

External links[edit]