Julio Zanotta
Julio Zanotta Vieira was a Brazilian playwright, short-story writer, and novelist.
Recognized as one of the most representative playwrights of Rio Grande do Sul, he was the author of powerful plays marked by parody and iconoclasm. He was one of the founders of the group Ói Nóis Aqui Traveiz, a reference in Porto Alegre's theater scene. Among his most acclaimed works are the award-winning Milkshakespeare and Uma Fada no Freezer.
Over the course of his career, he published more than a dozen books, including novels and fictional novellas.
Due to the controversial and rebellious nature of his work, he was persecuted by the military dictatorship in Brazil and subjected to censorship.
Biography
Zanotta grew up in the city of Pelotas, surrounded by the old book collections of his grandmother and father, which fostered his appreciation for literature from an early age. During this time, he gave up playing in the streets with other children to read a wide range of classic works, having read Lady Chatterley's Lover at the age of nine—a book that had a direct impact on his personal development.His behavioral disorders led to psychiatric consultations from childhood, and at the age of eleven, he was admitted to a clinic by his parents.
He began his writing career during his teenage years, and after moving to Porto Alegre, he achieved his first professional success at the age of 19 when his short story "Pequeno" won the first edition of the Vivita Cartier Prize, held in Caxias do Sul in 1969.
At 20, he was already working as a journalist for Diário de Notícias and studying philosophy. During this period, he became involved in student movements and left the country in 1973 due to political issues.
Zanotta became involved in theater in the second half of the 1970s, founding the group Ói Nóis Aqui Traveiz in Porto Alegre, of which he was a member until 1978. He wrote and directed plays until 2019, presenting them throughout Brazil and in other Latin American countries. Due to the anarchic and subversive nature of his work, he was censored and persecuted during the military dictatorship.
In the 1990s, alongside his theater career, he opened his own bookstore, Ao Pé da Letra. He became known as one of the most respected booksellers in the capital of Rio Grande do Sul and published his first works of fiction. During this time, he also coordinated the Porto Alegre Book Fair and served as president of the Rio Grande do Sul Book Chamber. In 2023, he returned to the book business by opening Livraria Absurda in Porto Alegre.
He died on November 19, 2024, due to liver cancer.
Zanotta had four children with four different women.
Death
Before his passing, Zanotta had overcome prostate cancer, but was soon after diagnosed with liver cancer, which ultimately proved fatal. He died on November 19, 2024, in a clinic where he spent his final days.True to his personal view of death, he built his own coffin and instructed the gravediggers on the rituals he wanted performed around him.
Posthumous Projects
Upon learning he had only a few weeks left to live, Zanotta wrote the script for a feature film about his own death. One month before passing, he spent two weeks filming scenes in Porto Alegre with his son, filmmaker Bernardo Zanotta, and a small crew. The production included visits to cemeteries and funeral homes, but due to the progression of his illness, parts of the script could not be filmed. Bernardo Zanotta continues working to complete the film, tentatively titled The Joy of Dying, with a release planned for 2026.Zanotta also left his son at least three unpublished works: a collection of short stories written during his time living in Trancoso in the early 1980s; a novel based on his diary from the Marília play tour across Latin America; and an unfinished novel titled Destruction and Collapse of the City of Porto Alegre, with over 500 pages, which Zanotta began in the 1970s.