Xavier Cugat
Biography
Xavier Cugat was a catalan musician and bandleader, born in Spain (Girona, 1 January 1900 – Barcelona, 27 October 1990) who spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba. A trained violinist and arranger, he was a leading figure in the spread of Latin music. In New York City, he was the leader of the resident orchestra at the Waldorf–Astoria before and after World War II. He was also a cartoonist and a restaurateur. The personal papers of Xavier Cugat are preserved in the Biblioteca de Catalunya (Barcelona). His family emigrated to Cuba when he was three years old. He studied classical violin and worked as a violinist at the age of nine in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education. He was first chair violinist for the Teatro Nacional Symphonic Orchestra. When he was not performing, he started drawing caricatures. On 6 July 1915 he and his family arrived in New York City on the SS Havana. Cugat appeared in recitals with Enrico Caruso, playing violin solos. In the 1920s, he led a band that played often at the Coconut Grove, a club in Los Angeles. Cugat's friend, Charlie Chaplin, visited the club to dance the tango, so Cugat added tangos to the band's performances.[5] Seeing how popular the dance was becoming, Cugat convinced the owner to hire South American dancers to give tango lessons. This, too, became popular, and Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra. In 1928 he turned his act into the film Xavier Cugat and His Gigolos. He worked for the Los Angeles Times as a cartoonist. His caricatures were nationally syndicated. They appeared in Photoplay magazine beginning with the November 1927 issue, under the byline "de Bru." His older brother, Francis, was an artist of some note, having painted cover art for F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby. In 1931, Cugat took his band to New York for the 1931 opening of the Waldorf–Astoria hotel. He replaced Jack Denny as leader of the hotel's resident band. For sixteen years, he led the Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra (1933-1949), shuttling between New York and Los Angeles for most of the next 30 years.[8][9] One of his trademark gestures was to hold a Chihuahua while he waved his baton with the other arm. His music career led to appearing in the films In Gay Madrid (1930), You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Bathing Beauty (1944), Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), Holiday in Mexico (1946), A Date with Judy (1948), On an Island with You (1948), and Chicago Syndicate (1955). Cugat owned and operated the Mexican restaurant Casa Cugat in West Hollywood. The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play diners' favorite songs upon request. The restaurant began operations in the 1940s and closed in 1986. The restaurant's exterior and a fanciful depiction of its interior can be found in scenes in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter in which Cugat has a substantial role playing himself. A brief scene revolving around the restaurant can also be seen in the earlier 1943 film The Heat's On, also starring Cugat as himself. Cugat spent his last years in Barcelona, living in a suite at Hotel Ritz. He died of heart failure at age 90 in Barcelona and was buried in his native Girona. He was posthumously inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame in 2001.
Known For

The Merv Griffin Show

What's My Line?

The Ed Sullivan Show

The Colgate Comedy Hour

The Steve Allen Show

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

That's Entertainment!

The Merry Widow
All Movies (30)
- Sex, Maracas & Chihuahuas2016 · as Self - Musician (archive footage)
- That's Entertainment! III1994 · as (archive footage)
- A Rose in the Wind1984 · as Xavier Cugat
- Nunca en horas de clase1978 · as El presidente
- That's Entertainment!1974 · as (archive footage) (uncredited)
- The Phynx1970 · as Xavier Cugat
- The Monitors1969 · as Bug for Culture
- Susanna and Me1957 · as Xavier Cugat
- Donatella1956 · as se stesso
- The Eddy Duchin Story1956 · as Xavier Cugat (uncredited)
- A sud niente di nuovo1956
- The Bachelor1955 · as Xavier Cugat
- Chicago Syndicate1955 · as Benny Chico
- Mighty Manhattan, New York's Wonder City1949 · as Self
- Neptune's Daughter1949 · as Xavier Cugat
- Luxury Liner1948 · as Xavier Cugat
- A Date with Judy1948 · as Xavier Cugat
- On an Island with You1948 · as Xavier Cugat
- This Time for Keeps1947
- Holiday in Mexico1946 · as Xavier Cugat
- Week-End at the Waldorf1945 · as Xavier Cugat
- Bathing Beauty1944 · as Orchestra Leader
- Two Girls and a Sailor1944 · as Xavier Cugat
- The Heat's On1943 · as Xavier Cugat
- Stage Door Canteen1943 · as Xavier Cugat
- You Were Never Lovelier1942 · as Xavier Cugat
- Go West Young Man1936 · as Orchestra Leader
- The Lash1930 · as Orchestra Leader (uncredited)
- The Merry Widow1926 · as Orchestra Leader (uncredited)
- The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse1921 · as Violinist in Tango Bar Scene (uncredited)
All TV Shows (8)
- The Merv Griffin Show1962 · as Self
- The George Burns Show1958 · as Self
- Art Ford's Greenwich Village Party1957 · as Self
- The Steve Allen Show1956 · as Self
- The Colgate Comedy Hour1950 · as Self
- What's My Line?1950 · as Self
- Cavalcade of Bands1950
- The Ed Sullivan Show1948 · as Self