Félix B. Caignet
Félix Benjamín Caignet Salomón, known as Félix B. Caignet, was a Cuban radio writer, broadcaster, poet, novelist, journalist, theater critic, singer and musical composer. He is known as a pioneer of radio broadcasting in Cuba, and as one of the creators of Latin American soap operas.
He was known for his ability to make radio audiences cry. He purposely wrote to make people cry, as he realized that "many were born with pain and misery tattooed on their souls and had so much pain and bitterness in their lives that they never cried for themselves."
Caignet believed that the audiences "took on the feelings of one or another character who was suffering and, without being aware of it, associated their own pain with that of the fictitious figure, and cried with him or her."
Félix B. Caignet’s radio dramas were broadcast throughout Central and South America and brought stories of social reality and the "speaking in metaphors" narrative style into popularity.
Life
Santiago de Cuba
Félix Benjamín Caignet Salomón was born on a coffee plantation in Santa Rita de Burene, San Luis, in the eastern region of Cuba. Poverty forced the family to move to Santiago de Cuba. There, Félix was exposed to the itinerant story tellers who made the streets their home and he became interested in writing, first with sentimental poems. At the age of 20 he became a journalist and began to contribute to the cultural magazine Teatro Alegre.The newspaper El Diario de Cuba took him on in 1918 and within two years he had his own theatre column, "Vida teatral" with the byline of Salomón.
By 1920 he was also contributing to magazines and newspapers such as El Fígaro, Bohemia and El Sol under a series of bylines. Journalists of the time often protected themselves from retaliation, official or unofficial, through the use of pseudonyms. Caignet at various times signed himself as Doña To Masa, Miss T. Riosa and A. L. Khan Ford, among many others.
He published a children’s story in 1925 called Las aventuras de Chilín y Bebita en el país azul. He continued to write stories for children and, in the early 1930s, broadcast them on the radio on Cuba’s first radio program for children, "Buenas tardes, muchachitos" on station CMKC of the Grupo Catalán. Some of the stories were invented on the air.
Caignet's suspenseful, episodic story style, learned from the itinerant story tellers of his childhood, was well suited to radio. He adapted "The Adventures of Chilín and Bebita in the Blue Country" as a serial for radio called "Chilín y Bebita" and would conduct his own listener surveys by going out into the streets to ask people about the show. From this he got an idea of how many people listened to the program and what they thought of the plot developments. By concentrating on the parts of the story people liked best, he increased the popularity of the series and changed the name from "Chilín y Bebita" to "Chilín, Bebita y el enanito Coliflor".
Also a composer of children’s songs, his song "El ratoncito Miguel" was used as a fundraiser in the fight against the regime of President Gerardo Machado. The song was performed several times at the Teatro Rialto in Santiago de Cuba in 1932 until it was banned and Caignet arrested. Imprisoned for three days, he was released when his fans, including children, demonstrated outside the Moncada garrison.
Caignet enjoyed great success in 1934 with the detective dramas of "Chan Li Po", based on the American Charlie Chan movies, broadcast on CMKD of the Palacio de la Torre. Caignet acted as narrator for the series. The first episode, "La serpiente roja", featured Aníbal de Mar and Nenita Viera.
Havana
Deciding to move to Havana, he took a job with millionaire Desiderio Parreño, who hired him to paint stones, called "cromolitos", for his estate in San Miguel de los Baños, Matanzas while he looked for work in the capital. He pitched his Chan Li Po series, but the radio stations didn’t feel it would appeal to the Havana audience.The only work he could find was reciting and singing with radio station CMQ, either alone or in duets with Rita Montaner or Carmelina Pérez. Eventually Radiodifusión O´Shea broadcast a test airing of "Chan Li Po y la Serpiente Roja," narrated by Marcelo Agudo and starring Mercedes Díaz and Carlos Badías. It became the most listened to program of the time.
Seven months later, Caignet was hired by the firm Ypana and moved to Argentina. Returning to Cuba in 1938, he put a new season of Chan Li Po on the air with COCO Radio. The program ran with great success until 1941. Caignet’s other dramas and adaptations also drew large audiences, such as "Aladino y la lámpara maravillosa", El ladrón de Bagdad, Peor que las víboras, all broadcast by RHC Cadena Azul.
Circuito CMQ S.A. aired El precio de una vida, Ángeles de la calle, Pobre juventud and La madre de todos.
Circuito CMQ S.A. also produced Caignet’s most popular drama, "El derecho de nacer" recounting the sad tales of Albertico Limonta and Mamá Dolores. Making its debut on April 1, 1948, with stars María Valero and Carlos Badías, it quickly displaced "Novela del aire" of RHC Cadena Azul as the most popular program. RHC Cadena Azul had been offered "El derecho de nacer", but turned it down due to the controversial subject matter.