MATADOR JAIME BRAVO
Born: September 8, 1932
(Tepito District, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico)
Died: February 2, 1970
(Car accident near Zacatecas, Mexico) |
Taking
his Alternativa in Valencia, and later Confirmed in Madrid, Jaime Bravo was a super star
matador who, at the same time, might
well be considered a classic example
of a star that never burned. Known for
his death-defying style, in the late
1960s he was clearly being groomed for
Hollywood movie roles. Then tragedy
struck and he was killed in a 1970 auto
accident in Zacatecas, Mexico. Who knows
how far he might have gone or if he
would have even been the hit that some
hoped.
During
the 1950s and 1960s, Mexico was full
of crossover movie stars. You had the
singer, Antonio Aguilar, making western
films, usually singing in them like
a Latin version of Elvis, the scripts
groomed to fit his more high-profile
career. You had Gaston
Santos, the rejoneador, making movies.
You had wrestlers like Blue
Demon, El
Santo, Chanoc, Mil
Mascaras and Nathaniel
Leon making horror films. Then you
had bullfighters like Carlos
Arruza, Luis
Procuna, Manuel
Capetillo, and David
Liceaga entering the field. Like
the last group, Jaime Bravo was a bullfighter
for many years, especially popular with
the ladies and with the border town
crowds. He had the looks and the charm,
if not the talent, to make it on the
screen and to some producers, that's
all that mattered.
Bravo played a small part in a movie
called "Un Toro Me Llama" (1968), which was available
through a California distributor some
years ago in both English and Spanish. (English title, "Call Of A Bull").
The film starred the late Emilio
Fernandez and a cast of Americans,
the main theme being about a woman wanting
to be a bullfighter. Bravo was there,
for more reason than not, just to see
how he looked on the screen.
Another
film, which was scandalous for the time,
"Love
Has Many Faces" (1965) featured
Bravo as what else... a matador. Starring Lana
Turner, Cliff
Robertson, Hugh
O'Brian, Ruth
Roman, and Stefanie
Powers, the film was rife with repeated
affairs... seemingly Bravo was typecast.
Although Bravo spoke English very well,
the film's producers used another actor's
voice to dub over Bravo's thick accent.
He
was also the topic of a (currently unavailable)
documentary directed by the American,
Art Swerdloff. This film, titled "The
Story Of A Matador" (1962), was
a David
Wolper (read an article
about Mr. Wolper) production,
with Bravo demonstrating what a bullfighter
went through as he rose to stardom in
the rings. "It is one of my favourite
half hour films," Swerdloff commented
recently when asked about it. "One of
the best I've done."
Away
from the bullrings, Bravo already had
the making of a big screen movie idol,
if only by his - often scandalous s-
behaviour. Numerous affairs with Hollywood's
most beautiful and biggest names, his
reputation as a romantic was and is
still well-known... and more often than
not, caused him trouble. To this day,
he is remembered for frequently having
more than several of any of his girlfriends
mixed throughout the crowd, at any particular
bullfight, and unbeknownst to one another.
Quite
the character, Bravo was a true showman.
Although a top matador, Bravo's fame
was moreso driven by his persona and
his unrelenting bravery. Always pushing
the envelope of drama and danger just
a little bit further than his contemporaries,
Bravo drew tremendous crowds who were
mesmerized by his repeatedly placing
himself in and then ripping himself
out from the jaws of death. As one journalist
put it, "The bull was probably
scared of Jaime."
“Jaime
was gored more than 50 times in his
career." Larry Jones, an official
of a Tijuana ring, said when informed
of the bullfighter’s death, “He
was very daring and thought he had to
get injured to please the fans.”
“Bravo delighted
in challenging the bull to the fullest
extent. He was popular in Tijuana because
he was flashy and colorful. Few bullfighters
took more chances than Jaime."

Bravo
was a circus aerialist (a "trapezista")
in Mexico before
turning to bullfighting. Fans thought
that saved his life in the bull ring
many times. A native of Mexico City,
Jaime seldom fought there because he
was so popular in border towns like
Tijuana.
Bravo
also had the uncanny knack of utilizing
scandal to make sure that he received
the best headlines. During an August 1968
corrida, playing to the Tijuana, non-aficionado tourists, Bravo "requested the animal be spared. This, in turn, was denied, and the torero [Bravo] who refused to kill the bull was was escorted to the local jail and fined". Of course, Bravo received headlines for his defiance. Only one month earlier, at a July 1968 corrida, Bravo had, once again, used a similar press-grabbing tactic, when he was not performing his best and another matador's superior
performance was going to gain the next
day's headlines. Before that corrida
ended, Bravo made sure to curse at the
bullring's judge, just enough to infuriate
the judge so that Bravo was immediately
arrested and jailed. Cameras captured
countless photos of Bravo being cuffed,
escorted from the bullring, taken to
the jail, and locked in a cell. Bravo
accomplished his goal. The next day,
the newspapers' headlines boldly declared
that Jaime Bravo had been jailed. Much
further down the page, and in much smaller
type, only a few sentences stated that
the other matador had performed brilliantly.
Never
a dull moment for the crowds, gossip
was further promulgated by such actions
as his behavior during a 1957 Tijuana
bullfight, during which he tossed flowers
to Ava
Gardner, from the ring. She was
at the corrida with actor Gilbert
Roland.
One of the biggest scandals concerning
Bravo and his misadventures related
to Arabella
Arbenz, daughter of Guatemala's
leftwing president Jacobo
Arbenz, who was ousted long ago.
This woman was a top fashion model,
who eventually committed suicide in
front of the matador, shooting herself
on October 5, 1965.
Although
he had a ridiculously large amount of
short-term relationships, he did try
his hand at marriage, twice. In 1957,
Bravo married an actress named Ann
Robinson (visit Ann's
official Website), by whom
he had his first two sons, named Jaime
and Estefan. In 1967, two years after appearing in a 1965 Las Vegas promotional bullfight, he married a Las
Vegas showgirl named Monica Lind (from
"Les
Folies Bergere"), by whom
he had his third and final son, named Aleco Jaime Bravo ("Aleco Bravo") .
Clearly, this bullfighter made the rounds.
By the late 1960s, Bravo was a seasoned
bullfighter, who still had his looks
and, as such, was looking to the film
world for a career that might suit him
once he would retire from the bulls.
There were a variety of production companies
keen on giving him a go. He had a high
enough profile that his name could draw
the people, both within the Mexican
interior and in the USA. Keep in mind
that he had a large following in the
border towns, such as Tijuana, Nogales,
Juarez and Matamoras, making his name
easily recognizable in states such as
California, Arizona, and Texas. But
such was not to be.
In
the 1970 auto accident, that killed
Jaime Bravo, were his driver and another,
much younger matador, Eloy Cavazos,
whom Jaime had taken under his guidance.
His driver died in the accident; Eloy
Cavazos is currently one of Mexico's
top matadors. (Continuing the legacy of greatness, Matador Eloy Cavazos has taken under his wing, the prominent, up-and-coming Matador Alejandro Amaya, who was featured by ESPN in November 2006.)
Jaime died shortly
after the accident, spelling an end
to whatever hopes there might have been
for him to establish himself as a movie
star.