Rico Tipo
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''Rico Tipo'' was a weekly
Argentine Argentines, Argentinians or Argentineans are people from Argentina. This connection may be residential, legal, historical, or cultural. For most Argentines, several (or all) of these connections exist and are collectively the source of their ...
comic magazine that appeared from late 1944 until 1972, founded and directed by Guillermo Divito. It was among the main comic magazines in Argentina, others being ''
Patoruzú Patoruzú is a Comics, comic character created in 1928 by Dante Quinterno and is considered the most popular hero of Argentina, Argentine comics. Patoruzú is a wealthy Tehuelche people, Tehuelche ''cacique'' with great estate properties in Pat ...
'' (launched in 1936) and '' Satiricón'' (founded in 1972). Rico Tipo was much more successful, adapting to changing tastes through a period of 36 years.


Origins

José Antonio Guillermo Divito joined the stable of artists at the Patoruzú weekly as a young man, where he began drawing his first illustrations of ''Chicas'' (Girls). The magazine's director, Dante Quinterno, disapproved of the great sensuality of the ''Chicas'', and suggested tweaks and longer skirts. Tired of this interference, and unable to get a raise of pay, Divito decided to create his own magazine Rico Tipo, which was launched on 16 November 1944. By the next year it had a weekly print run of around 350,000 copies.


Contents and contributors

In addition to the ''Chicas'', Divito included in Rico Tipo a whole series of characters that portrayed aspects recognizable to the average citizen: Pochita Morfoni, an obese woman who only thinks about food; Fulmine, an ugly man dressed in black who brings bad luck and misfortune; Fallutelli, prototype sycophantic employee and traitor to his fellows; Bombolo, a fat good-natured and naive man who cannot understand figurative speech and always take things literally; Gracielita, a very modern, waspish girl. The most important character was Dr. Merengue, whom Pablo de Santis in his book ''Rico Tipo y las Chicas de Divito'' called "a sort of criollo
Mr. Hyde Dr. Henry Jekyll and his alter ego Mr. Edward Hyde are the central character of Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novella ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde''. In the story, Dr. Jekyll is a good friend of main protagonist Gabriel John Utterso ...
". Dr Merengue behaved as required by the more conservative social conventions: serious, formal, fair, accurate and dispassionate, never losing his composure. But in the last square of the strip, his alter ego revealed his true feelings or thoughts. Besides Divito, Rico Tipo included the cream of Argentine humorous writing and graphics at the time, and trained future generations of writers and artists who took their first steps at the magazine. These included
Oscar Conti Oscar "Oski" Conti (191430 October 1979) was a prominent Argentine cartoonist and humorist. Life and work Oscar Esteban Conti was born in Buenos Aires in 1914. Enrolling at the National Fine Arts School, he helped finance his studies by creating ...
("Oski"), Alejandro del Prado ("Cale"), Rodolfo M. Taboada, Horacio S. Meyrialle, Miguel Angel Bavio Esquiú, Abel Ianiro,
Joaquín Lavado Joaquín Salvador Lavado Tejón (17 July 193230 September 2020), better known by his pen name Quino (), was an Argentine cartoonist. His comic strip ''Mafalda'' (which ran from 1964 to 1973) is popular in many parts of the Americas and Europe ...
("Quino"), Tomás Elvino Blanco, Rafael Martínez, Guillermo Guerrero and many others. Adolfo Mazzone's character
Piantadino ''Piantadino'' is a 1950 Argentine comedy film directed by Francisco Múgica during the classical era of Argentine cinema. The film is based on the cartoon character of the same name created by Adolfo Mazzone. Plot While working for an insuranc ...
appeared in the magazine.


Peak of popularity

Rico Tipo had two decades of glory, the 1940s and 1950s, during which the magazine had huge popular acceptance. The adult population enjoyed the drawing, characters and humor in which passions and sensuality were not entirely absent. The '' Chicas de Divito'' (Divito Girls), especially, distinguished the magazine from its rivals. The magazine was so successful and popular that it influenced fashion in
Buenos Aires Buenos Aires, controlled by the government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southwest of the Río de la Plata. Buenos Aires is classified as an Alpha− glob ...
at the time. Women wanted to look like the Divito Girls who often appeared on the covers of the magazine. Men admired that style of woman, and also adopted the costumes of the Divito's male characters, with double-breasted suits with long jackets and many buttons.


Decline and disappearance

The emergence of a more liberal attitude to sexuality in the late sixties began to weaken the influence of the magazine. Political events in the country also affected the magazine. Survival of the publication by the end of the sixties depended on Divito's changing his style. Divito, who died in 1969, never saw the demise of the magazine, which came three years later, nor a change in style that probably he would not have liked.


References

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External links


Divito por Geno DíazChicas de Divito, Pedro Seguí y Torino
* ttp://www.historieteca.com.ar/Historietas/drmerengue.htm El otro yo del Dr. Merenguebr>Blog en que se muestran muchísimos trabajos de DivitoNota periodística en el diario La Capital, de Rosario, a raíz de una exposición de dibujos de DivitoBlog dedicado al humor con muchos dibujos de grandes artistasBlog sobre el curso de dibujo de Chicas ! de Divito
1944 establishments in Argentina 1972 disestablishments in Argentina Comics magazines published in Argentina Defunct magazines published in Argentina Magazines established in 1944 Magazines disestablished in 1972 1944 comics debuts 1972 comics endings Satirical magazines published in Argentina Spanish-language magazines Weekly magazines