"Pedro Navaja" | ||||
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Single by Willie Colón & Rubén Blades | ||||
from the album Siembra | ||||
Language | Spanish | |||
Released | March 1979 | |||
Recorded | May – June 1978 | |||
Studio | La Tierra Sound Studios (New York) | |||
Genre | Salsa | |||
Length | 7:22 | |||
Label | Fania | |||
Songwriter(s) | Rubén Blades | |||
Producer(s) |
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Willie Colón & Rubén Blades singles chronology | ||||
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"Pedro Navaja" (English: Peter Blade) is a salsa song written and performed by Rubén Blades from the 1978 collaboration with Willie Colón, Siembra, about a criminal of the same name.[1] Navaja means "folding knife" in Spanish. Inspired by the song "Mack the Knife",[2] it tells the story of a panderer's life and presumed death. The song is recognized throughout Hispanic America, as it retells scenes and stories common to these countries, although the story takes place in New York City. The song deals with life, death and the unexpected with dark humor.
A film titled Pedro Navaja based on the song was filmed in Mexico in 1984, starring Andrés García as the title character, Maribel Guardia as his girlfriend, and Resortes as his best friend.[3] It was made without Blades's input and he responded by recording the song "Sorpresas" (Surprises), which continues the story, turning the movie plot by revealing that Navaja was alive and had killed another panderer while he was being searched by the panderer, provided that the other panderer believed Navaja was dead. The 1984 film had a 1986 sequel, El Hijo de Pedro Navaja (The Son of Pedro Navaja) starring Guillermo Capetillo. The story is believed to take place in the New York neighborhood of Queens.
The musical La verdadera historia de Pedro Navaja is based on John Gay's "The Beggar's Opera"[4] and Bertolt Brecht's "The Threepenny Opera."[5] The book and lyrics are by Pablo Cabrera,[5] and music is by Pedro Rivera Toledo.[5] It was first produced by Teatro del Sesenta in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1980 at the Teatro Sylvia Rexach; toured to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and, opened the Joseph Papp's Latino Festivals of 1985 and 1986, where José Félix Gómez and Idalia Pérez Garay played the title role with Darysabel Isales playing "Doña Pura Buenaventura";[6] it was also produced by the Teatro Musical de La Habana, Cuba; produced by the Compañía de Teatro Nacional de Venezuela (1986 & 1991); Lolyn Paz produced it three times: in Caguas, Puerto Rico (2003),[7] with Yolandita Monge in the lead female part,[7] San Juan, Puerto Rico (2004), and Fort Lauderdale, Florida (2004); Lima, Peru, starring, among others, Camila Mac Lennan. In 2019 it was staged in Miami with Beatriz Valdés and Manolo Ramos in the lead parts.[8][9]
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