Posts Tagged With: Juan Duval

2021 – Tango Interview Exclusive

In 2001, during the global pandemic, there was a virtual lecture given by the NY Adventures Club titled “Dawn of Tango”, taught by Pierre Baston, tango teacher and lecturer.  I enjoy listening to vintage Tango Music and watching the Tango.  The lecture was the investigation into the black roots and evolution of tango. An analysis of today’s tango movements and how they are directly attributed to African dance and music. I was hoping he would talk about the tango movement in Europe. So, I sent Mr. Baston, an email and a link to a YouTube video that shows Rudolph Valentino in the tango scene in “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse”.  I asked the question “This was the beginning of the movie career of Rudolph Valentino. He was taught tango and apache by Juan Duval in Paris.  My question is what are your thoughts about this dance scene? The following was Mr. Baston’s answer “I enjoyed the performance by Valentino in the Four Horseman. I note that he uses the same grip with his left hand gently holding the fingers of his partner’s right hand in the manner that the great Argentine tango master ‘El Cachafaz’ was famous for.  It was considered a sign of respect for the woman’s daintiness that contrasted with the more domineering palm-to-palm grip with which a leader could push or pull his follower around. They execute plenty of quebradas in genuine Argentine style–bending the knees deeply and leaning forward or back in order to bring their bodies into closer contact. The move in which he throws her up in the air from one side to the other is strictly a show move invented for the camera, and I suspect that it comes from his apache experience, since you told me that Valentino danced apache. It was a staged tango dinner show with spectacular choreographed moves that first hooked me on tango. But stage tango and social tango are very different. This performance has strong elements of both”.

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The article in this blog post was recently sent to me by the son of Juan Duval.

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1922 – Juan Duval and Rudolph Valentino

In 1897, Juan Xicart Bellavista was born in Spain and became a well-known Hollywood entertainer who held many roles such as: screen writer, tango, flamengo, apache dancer and actor.  At the age of 22, Mr. Bellavista immigrated to this country, where he changed his name to Juan Duval and the rest was Hollywood history.  Mr. Duval started his career as a fight choreographer hired by Metro to help Rudolph Valentino, for a movie scene in “Blood and Sand”.  Then in the late 1920’s Mr. Duval toured the Vaudeville circuit with the Richards twins with skits that featured dancing and music.  During one skit called “The Cave of Sorrows”, Mr. Duval would dance Apache.

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From there Mr. Duval made local headlines when he joined the Hollywood Studios of Stage, Arts and Music as a Tango dance instructor.

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On Oct 1941, Mr. Duval opened a successful Spanish dance studio located at 2209 Van Ness Ave, San Francisco.  In 1942 Mr. Duval became an American citizen.  On Apr 1954, Juan Duval died and is buried at L.A. National Veterans Cemetery. Mr. Duval was serving in the Army, during WWI fighting in North Africa.  In 1958, Mr. Duval’s wife filed a lawsuit on behalf of her late husband concerning the 1956, Academy Award winning movie “The Brave One”.  Mrs. Duval believed her late husband who was a writer for this movie filed both a breach of contract and copyright lawsuit.   The story goes Juan Duval wrote the original screen play and died before film production started. Seems the King Brothers and Dalton Trumbo took credit and got the oscar.  Of interest Dalton Trumbo was a blacklisted writer and one of the Hollywood 10 during the communistic period. To this day, google searches show Juan Duval’s family are still bitter about the fact their father never received the movie credit and Oscar he deserved.  There is not allot of facts that show Mr. Duval and Rudolph Valentino were friends of any kind.

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