Silvio Horta
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Silvio Horta (August 14, 1974 – January 7, 2020) was an American screenwriter and television producer widely noted for adapting the hit Colombian telenovela '' Yo soy Betty, la fea'' into the ABC series '' Ugly Betty''. Horta served as head writer and executive producer on the series.


Background and death

Horta, a first-generation Cuban-American, was born and raised in Miami. He was a popular performer and playwright in high school, attending both International Baccalaureate Theater, and Experimental Theater programs at Coral Gables Senior in Miami. After graduating in 1992, he attended the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, majoring in film. Horta was openly gay, coming out to his family at 19. He was found dead in a Miami hotel room on January 7, 2020. '' Variety'' reported that he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He was 45 years old.


Career

Horta penned many as yet unproduced screenplays including "Even Exchange" and "The Furies" (with '' Nip/Tuck'' creator Ryan Murphy). Prior to '' Ugly Betty'', Horta wrote the screenplay for the 1998 teen satirical hit slasher film '' Urban Legend'' and he can be heard on the DVD commentary. Before ''Legend'', he was working as a perfume spritzer. Horta was also creator of two short lived sci-fi television shows '' Jake 2.0'', which starred Christopher Gorham, who would later join the cast of ''Ugly Betty'', and '' The Chronicle''. In 2007, he accepted the Golden Globe for Best Comedy Series ''Ugly Betty'', stating, "Like most of us up here, Betty is an immigrant and The American Dream is alive and well and in reach of anybody who wants it". Horta started the production company "Silent H Productions", named as a tongue-in-cheek acknowledgement of the common mispronunciation of the silent H in Horta's last name. In 2011, his production company signed a deal with Sony.


Filmography


Crew


References


External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Horta, Silvio 1974 births 2020 deaths 2020 suicides American television producers American television writers American writers of Cuban descent American gay writers Coral Gables Senior High School alumni LGBTQ Hispanic and Latino American people LGBTQ people from Florida LGBTQ television producers American LGBTQ screenwriters American male television writers Screenwriters from Florida American showrunners Gay screenwriters Suicides by firearm in Florida Tisch School of the Arts alumni Writers Guild of America Award winners Writers from Miami