Irineo Leguisamo (Arerunguá, Salto, Uruguay, 20 October 1903 - Buenos Aires, 2 December 1985) was a Uruguayan jockey. Also known as El Pulpo ("the octopus"), El Eximio ("the illustrious") or El Maestro ("the master"), he competed for over 57 years at racecourses in Uruguay and Argentina and was considered the foremost South American rider of the 20th century.[1]
As of 2020, Leguisamo holds the record at Gran Premio Carlos Pellegrini with 10 wins.
In popular culture
edit- Leguisamo was a close friend of tango singer Carlos Gardel, whose tango song Por una cabeza is about horse racing.
- He is mentioned in Se dice de mí, a milonga by Francisco Canaro and Ivo Pelay (1954), sung by Tita Merello.
- In 1925, Tita Merello premiered the tango "Leguisamo Solo" by Modesto Papavero, which had been written as homage to Leguisamo.[2]
- Leguisamo was part of the cast in the film Hasta siempre Carlos Gardel.
References
edit- ^ Neustadt, Bernardo (1966). "Interview to Irineo Leguisamo" (in Spanish). Revista Extra. Archived from the original on 27 April 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
- ^ Cobian, Oscar (19 November 2010). "Voz Porteña con Silueta Arrabalera". De Tango en Tango (in Spanish). Argentina: De Tango en Tango.
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Irineo Leguisamo.