
Brandão Filho
Acting
Biography
Moacyr Augusto Soares Brandão (Espírito Santo do Pinhal, January 6, 1910 — Rio de Janeiro, March 22, 1998), better known as Brandão Filho, was a Brazilian actor and comedian.
Born: January 6, 1910
Place of Birth: Espírito Santo do Pinhal, São Paulo, Brazil
Known For

Feijão Maravilha

Bravo!
A widowed conductor rediscovers love when he meets a young woman from the countryside, but doubts about his music make him question his competence and distance himself from the woman he loves.

Chico Anysio Show

Saramandaia
Saramandaia is a Brazilian telenovela originally written by Dias Gomes in 1976. It's considered remarkable because of the Magic Realism (used by the author to subtly criticize the Military Regime of the time) and had 160 chapters. The story centers on the name change that the city undergoes, promoted by the younger citizens and reviled by the older ones. It also focuses on the lives of the city's quirky residents.

Escolinha do Professor Raimundo

Viva o Gordo

The Trapalhões
Os Trapalhões was a Brazilian comedy group and also a Brazilian television series created by Wilton Franco. Its members were Dedé Santana, Zacarias, Mussum and their leader Didi Mocó, that was played by Renato Aragão. The name Trapalhões is derived from the Portuguese verb atrapalhar, which means the opposite of helping, to do something the wrong way or to Those that confuse. The name is translated "Tramps" in English DVD subtitles. It was aired by Rede Globo from 1977 to 1999. On March 18, 1990, Zacarias died due to respiratory failure, but the group and the series didn't come to an end until July 29, 1994, when Mussum died due to an unsuccessful heart transplant.

O Salvador da Pátria

Sinal de Alerta

Chico Total
Filmography
as Self
as Sandoval Quaresma
as Padre Elísio
as Zé da Placa
as Seu Flô
as Various Characters
as Primo Pobre
as Various Characters
as Adolfo
as Jaime
as Prudêncio
as Polidoro Gonçalves
as Totó
as Simão
as Ele mesmo
as Maestro Cursino de Azevedo
as Santiago
as Seu Flô
as Primo Pobre
as Primo Pobre
as Repórter