BAJA Racing HALL Of Fame
2022 INDUCTEES
Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes (12 August 1911 – 20 April 1993), known by the stage name Cantinflas (Spanish pronunciation: [kanˈtiɱflas]), was a Mexican comedian, actor, filmmaker and the most important Baja racing fanatic in the world.
He is considered to have been the most widely-accomplished Mexican comedian and is celebrated throughout Latin America and in Spain as a popular icon. His humor, loaded with Mexican linguistic features of intonation, vocabulary, and syntax, is beloved in all the Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America and in Spain and has given rise to a range of expressions including cantinflear, cantinflada, cantinflesco, and cantinflero. Though some of his films were translated into English and French, the wordplay was so particular to Mexican Spanish that it was difficult to translate.
He often portrayed impoverished farmers or a peasant of pelado origin. "The peladito is the creature who came from the carpas* with a face stained with flour or white paint, dressed in rags, the pants below the waist and covered with patches, the belt replaced by an old tie, the peaked cap representing a hat, the ruffled underwear that shows at any provocation, the torn shirt, and gabardine across his left shoulder". – Cantiflas. The character allowed Cantinflas to establish a long, successful film career that included a foray into Hollywood. Charlie Chaplin once commented that he was the best comedian alive and Moreno has been referred to as the "Charlie Chaplin of Mexico".
To audiences in most of the world, he is best remembered as co-starring with David Niven in the Oscar-winning film Around the World in 80 Days, for which Moreno won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. As a pioneer of the cinema of Mexico, Moreno helped usher in its golden era.
In addition to being a business leader, he also became involved in Mexico's tangled and often dangerous labor politics. His reputation as a spokesperson for the downtrodden gave his actions authenticity and became important in the early struggle against charrismo, the one-party government's practice of co-opting and controlling unions. Moreover, his character Cantinflas, whose identity became enmeshed with his own, was examined by media critics, philosophers, and linguists, who saw him variously as a danger to Mexican society, a bourgeois puppet, a verbal innovator and a picaresque underdog.
*In Mexico and the Southwestern United States, the carpa theater flourished during the 1920s and 1930s. Like its American counterpart vaudeville, performance materials were varied, including comedic sketches, puppet shows, political satire, acrobatics and dance.*
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Friend of NATIONAL PowerHouse
He started out as an intelligence officer in the U.S. military during the Vietnam War, which led him to a career in information security. He was quite daring too, having participated in various international off-road racing events, numerous times.
He not only raced, he funded and organized efforts at the highest international and overseas levels.
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OFFICIAL
**INDUCTIONS**
Today, Thursday, June 2, 2022
BAJA Racing HALL Of Fame
Our Esteemed Members
2011 Don Francisco [No. 1]. 2012
Ray Moon, Mark Smith, Dick Cepek, Brian Chuchua, Pete Condos, Charlie
Erickson, James Garner, Vic Hickey, Parnelli Jones, Steve McQueen, Bruce
Meyers, Drino Miller, Ed Pearlman, Malcolm Smith, Bill Stroppe,
Thurston Warn, Vic Wilson, Edo Ansaloni, William Bryan, Gilmon George,
Richard Landfield, Walter Lott, Mickey Thompson, Frank Vessels, Clark
Collins, Salvatore Pesca, Bob Hamm, Corky McMillin, Ivan Stewart, Scott
McKenzie, Ak Miller, Larry Minor, Roy Spuhler, Ed Waldheim, Herman Booy,
John Buffum, Eugene Chappie, Edward Dunkley, Walker Evans, Harry
Bushert, Bud Ekins, John Lawlor, Jerry Penhall, David Ashley, Nye
Frank, Bill Sanders, Larry Bergquist, Bob Chandler, Frank DeAngelo,
Jerry Herbst, Bob Steinberger, Larry Roeseler, Ron Bishop, Rob
MacCachren, Peter Brown, Chris Haines, JN Roberts, Joe MacPherson, Nico
Saad, Larry Ragland, Bud Feldkamp, Jim Ober. 2014 Donny Robertson, Javier Tiznado, Nick Nicholson, Rich Minga, Javier Espinosa, Mark Stahl. 2016 Mike Leon, Mike Overcast, Robert "BAJA BOB" Gordon and his son Robby Gordon. 2017
Spirit Of Ensenada Racing Team, Dr. Ramon Murrillo, Geraldo Novelo,
Gustavo "Gus" Vildosola, Gerardo "Niño" Rojas, José David Ruvalcaba,
Eric "Panda" Fisher, Ernesto "Tito" Arámbula, Arnoldo "Cone" Ramírez,
Lupito "El Rey" Murillo. 2018 Dave
Ekins SPECIAL Inductee, [No. 100], Ray Brock, Bruce and his son, Dana
Brown, Kurt Caselli, Jack Cooperman, Ray Harvick, Donald Lee Hatz, Sr.
Tono Hernandez, Michael Noval, Hector Eliseo Garcia Araujo, Presidente Marco Antonio Novelo Osuna, GENERAL MOTORS Brands, FORD Motorsports, VOLKSWAGEN Motorsports. 2019 Bob and Pistol Pete Sohren 2020 Baja Sureno Sr. Alberto "Pato" Ayala and Jimmie Johnson 2021 BAJA Racing Memorial [No. 1]
Mark Luhtalla, Bob Renz, BAJA Racing Family Norm Johnson, Baja Sureno
Don Edmundo "Mundo" Yuen González, BAJA Racing Historical [No. 1] Barney
Oldfield.
2022 Mario Fortino Alfonso Moreno Reyes - Cantinflas, Ronn Bailey, Captain Alberto Ayala Luken, Arturo Nava Peralta, BAJA Racing Memorial [No. 2] John Langley.
BAJA Racing Memorial Inductees are Members who died while racing in BAJA MEXICO.
BAJA Racing Historical Inductees are Members who *Built The Foundation of The Sport*
Edited by: Gary Newsome, Publisher
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