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Jose de Abreu Biography, Age, Net worth, Gay, Wife, Movies, Actor, Education

Last Updated on January 6, 2025: By Andrew

Jose de Abreu Biography

Jose de Abreu (José Pereira de Abreu Júnior ) is a Brazilian actor and the 39th president of Brazil. He was born on May 24, 1946 in Santa Rita do Passa Quatro Brazil.

Jose de Abreu Age

Jose de Abreu was born on May 24, 1946 (he is 72 years old as of 2018)

Jose de Abreu Net worth

Jose de Abreu has an estimated net worth of $130 million.

Jose de Abreu Family

José de Abreu was born to a single parent Gilda Abreu (mother).

Jose de Abreu Gay

José de Abreu proved to be a man free of any prejudice. The actor posted messages defending homosexuals on Twitter on Monday night. “I relate to people, not labels: gay, homo, heterosexual, sexuality, sexuality, sexual choice, walking. If there is love or horny, it was. “, Stated the actor in his microblog.

The controversy did not stop there, delicately, José de Abreu even pinned religions, which preach love to one’s neighbor, but do not exercise it. “I think it’s just a matter of sharing the world between gay and non-gay people, nobody taught me to love that way, I learned to love in the Church,” he said.

In addition to showing his militant side against prejudice, the actor opened his heart and said: “In 1989 I fell in love with a bi.We stayed together and resolved to” try. “It lasted 9 years our relationship. His last dating had been a woman “. And for those who think Jose de Abreu will care about the malicious comments on his statements, the actor went ahead and said: “I am an artist, I am only committed to my art. I must. “

Jose de Abreu Wife

José de Abreu married several wives by course of divorcing them one at a time. His divorced wives are Camila Paola Mosquella, Priscila Petit, Nara de Abreu , Neuza Serroni and Andrea Spot. He married Priscila Petit from 2016 -2016 and he later married Camila Paola Mosquella from 2003 -2014. He married Priscila Petit from 2016 -2016 and Camila Paola Mosquella was
married from 2003 -2014.

Jose de Abreu Children

Jose de Abreu has five children Christiano de Abreu, Bernardo de Abreu, Theo de Abreu Rodrigo de Abreu and Ana de Abreu the only daughter.

Jose de Abreu Education

He studied Law at Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, where he began theater career at Teatro da Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, with the play Morte e Vida Severina by João Cabral de Melo Neto and Chico Buarque.

Jose de Abreu Actor

Jose de Abreu started acting at his early age. He moved to state’s capital, São Paulo city, where he worked as a lab assistant and office-boy for a law firm. He released several movies which got a large mass of viewers around the world. He was has actered as a star in movies, but his acting career came to a first quick halt because of his political activism.

He was arrested during a meeting in the União Nacional dos Estudantes, belonged to the Ação Popular and gave logistical support to the Vanguarda Armada Revolucionária Palmares, a leftist group that fought against the military regime. He would also join the hippie movement during that time, in contrast with his militaristic actions. He was forced into exile in Europe in 1968, he returns in 1974 to live in Pelotas, state of Rio Grande do Sul, his wife’s homeland. They both teach at the federal university in that city, but soon move to Porto Alegre, where he produces musicals and stars in child plays.

It’s his, alongside his wife, the first staging of the musical Os Saltimbancos in that state. After his success movie of A Intrusa (The Intruder) (1979), filmed in Uruguaiana, RS, he starts working as an actor in TV Globo’s soap-operas. In 2006 he partners with director Luiz Arthur Nunes to create Fala, Zé!, a theatrical monologue in which he critically reflects on his generation, crossing biography and fiction.

In 2011 he plays Milton in the soap-opera Insensato Coração and, in 2012, the character Nilo in Avenida Brasil. In 2013 the character ernest in joia rara, appeared in 2015 in the play of villain gibson stewart and regra do jogo. He has prormed in over 24 movies and 47 television shows, of which most are soap-operas.

Jose de Abreu Movies

  • Before I Forget 2017

  • O Casamento dos Trapalh… 1988

  • My Sweet Orange Tree 2012

  • The Filmmaker O… 1997

  • Time and the Wind 2013

  • Did You Score 2012

  • A Intrusa 1979

  • O Preco da Paz 2003

  • Luz del Fuego 1982

  • Bela Noite Pora Voar

  • Fulaninha 1986

  • Radio Pirata 1987

  • Oswaldianas

Jose de Abreu for President

On February 25, veteran Brazilian character actor José de Abreu announced on Twitter that he was thinking of taking Juan Guaidó’s lead and declaring himself President of Brazil. Minutes later, in the midst of an avalanche of support which transformed him into the most popular topic on Brazilian Twitter, the actor made the announcement. With a quickly photoshoped self portrait in a presidential sash, he said, “I hereby declare myself President of Brazil. Let’s give the same level of respect to my presidency as they are giving to the Venezuelan, why not?”

His next tweet was, “As self-proclaimed President of Brazil, I demand that Lula is released to assume to position of Minister of the Just”. On February 28, Juan Guaidó arrived in Brasilia to meet with Bolsonaro in a PR event that 247news was quick to label, “The encounter of the fakes”. Abreu immediately challenged Guaidó to a debate. In an interview with Carta Capital, he called Bolsonaro an illiterate and said, “The fact that ex-Judge Sérgio Moro accepted the Minister of Justice position in exchange for removing Lula from the presidential race is unacceptable.

There is no legitimacy for a government that removed a candidate without evidence. Lula can save the national economy with his political sensibility.” When asked if his government would support the new pension reforms, he said, “First we have to verify if there is even really a deficit in order to discuss the theme properly. If there really is a deficit, I will eliminate it without penalizing the Brazilian people, using the royalties from Petroleum and creating a law to tax large fortunes, like they do in France.

The government needs to tax its richest citizens. There are thousands of things that can be done to fix this deficit without forcing the bill on the poor.” Although it began as a social media joke, Abreu’s proclamation touched a nerve with the 61% of the Brazilian population who are not satisfied with the way that Jair Bolsonaro is doing his job – a recent poll shows him as having the least popular start of a Brazilian presidency in the 21stCentury.

As his coalition crumbles due to multiple corruption scandals and ideological differences between the generals in his cabinet and his mediocre, right-wing extremist ideologues, the government has gridlocked on key issues like support for Trump’s Venezuelan coup and pension reform. Dissatisfaction with Bolsonaro and a sense that he is taking orders from the Generals is growing both in the media and on the streets.

As Carnaval begins in São Paulo, the Baixo Augusta street bloco, which is expected to draw a crowd of hundreds of thousands, has announced that this year’s theme will be, “Hey, Bolsonaro, take it in the ass!” Abreu, who is now giving interviews to Brazilian and foreign papers in character and imitating Lula’s voice, is expected to arrive in Brazil from Greece next week. Thousands of people are planning go to the airport to cheer the arrival of their new President.

Jose de Abreu Twitter

Tweets by zehdeabreu

Jose de Abreu Cuspida

Jose de Abreu You tube Interview

Jose de Abreu News

On February 25, 2019, Brazil found itself with two presidents. José de Abreu, 72, an actor and minor celebrity who has long been active in left-wing politics, proclaimed himself the president of the country on Twitter. He then followed this tweet with a series of others, moving the capital of Brazil, naming his Cabinet, forming a “party,” and freeing ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, currently in jail on charges of money laundering and corruption. To be clear, two presidents is one more than Brazil normally has, yet a constitutional crisis does not appear to be forthcoming.

His proclamation is a tongue-in-cheek reference to the political crisis in Venezuela, criticizing the opposition leader Juan Guaidó’s decision to proclaim himself interim president of Venezuela on January 23. If Guaidó could declare himself president, Abreu argued, then he could do the same in Brazil. Yet this novelty seems to say more about the fractures within the left in Brazil — and indeed Latin America — than it presages a robust opposition to newly elected President Jair Bolsonaro. The left in Latin America, after a resurgent “pink tide” in the 2000s spearheaded by Lula, has suffered badly over the past few years.

The right has racked up victories in countries previously led by the center left over the past few years, such as Argentina in 2015, Chile in 2017, and Colombia and Brazil in 2018. The left, up to now, has offered little in the way of a counterattack. His statement might be an elaborate satire, but it does expose some divisions in the opposition to Bolsonaro. In addition to indignation from the right, Abreu has attracted flak from the left, especially after indicating that Rio city council member Marielle Franco, who was killed by gunfire in March 2018, would be his first lady in memoriam.

With characteristic tact, Abreu dismissed these criticisms by saying they were from a left with “bodies of the right,” disliking laughter and sex. Abreu exemplifies two deep-seated problems on the Brazilian left. First, the only recognizable standard-bearer at the moment is doing it for laughs. Second, mocking the Venezuelan opposition comes off as tone-deaf in the context of Venezuela’s struggle between democracy and authoritarianism, as well as the profound humanitarian crisis that is affecting, among other countries, Brazil itself. In the end, the message Abreu propagated, albeit somewhat unintentionally, is that Brazil’s left is quite literally a joke.

For one, Abreu is gaining more media coverage than just about any other figure on the left. Real-life politicians have actually attached themselves to Abreu; one agreed to be his vice president. It is difficult to know much they are truly in on the joke. This is likely because, despite the tempestuous beginning to Bolsonaro’s term, complete with corruption scandals, complications from a surgery, and ill-considered pornographic tweets, no leader has begun to emerge from the wreckage of the 2018 election.

The left, it seems, is in disarray. The Workers’ Party (PT) won the most seats in Congress, but it is still reeling from Lula’s imprisonment. Indeed, it lost seats in Congress, and opposition to its time in power also helped propel Bolsonaro to victory. Ciro Gomes of the Democratic Labor Party (PDT) finished third in the 2018 election but flew off to Europe after the first round, upset with a perceived betrayal by Lula and the PT; since then, he has largely disappeared from the political scene. The Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL), a smaller, more ideologically oriented party, did make gains in the 2018 elections but is still numerically small.

Nowhere is this lack of a standard-bearer more evident than with the crisis in Venezuela. As Bolsonaro and his government consider how to respond to the growing crisis in Venezuela, the left has sent out a divided message. Abreu’s satirical argument is typical of many within the PT, which has painted itself into a corner on Venezuela. Lula was an ally of Hugo Chávez when he was in office, and despite his imprisonment, his influence continues to be strong within the party. The president of the PT, Gleisi Hoffmann, a Lula surrogate, went to Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s inauguration, and the party has sent out signals that it will continue to support him for now. Despite a turn to authoritarianism and an economic and humanitarian disaster, the PT is more fixated on opposing a possible intervention from the United States than opposing Maduro.

Supporting Maduro, however, will neither win over center-left or center parties nor be a popular option. According to the most recent wave of the Las Américas y el Mundo survey on public opinion and foreign policy in Brazil in 2014-’15, based out of the University of São Paulo and the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas in Mexico City, the US had an average thermometer score of 60 out of 100 among Brazilians as opposed to 37 for Venezuela. Given that Bolsonaro ran his campaign touting close ties to the US, and given how Venezuela has deteriorated since then, this difference is likely larger as of now.

For a party looking to build an anti-Bolsonaro coalition, refusing to disavow Maduro’s regime is not a good look. Abreu’s satire shines a light on a divide between the sensibilities of the older, more traditional left in Brazil and other elements of a possible opposition to Bolsonaro. Abreu himself is unlikely to worsen these divides, but he shows the problems that could develop for the opposition if Bolsonaro, the US, or other regional actors opt to press the issue in Venezuela, with one element supporting the Maduro administration and another rather more ambivalent.

An escalation of the issue could drive a wedge between different tendencies of a fractious opposition in Brazil. Meanwhile, Abreu seems determined to keep the joke going. A prolific tweeter, he has continued to spread serious messages about left-wing politics on his account as well as satirical messages about Bolsonaro, Guaidó, and a variety of other targets. Bolsonaro tweeted in response that he plans to sue Abreu, while some of his supporters started a hashtag calling for Abreu to be imprisoned. None of this, however, stopped Abreu from announcing his own inauguration, taking office as “president” with a speech in front of well-wishers at the airport in Rio de Janeiro.

Source: www.vox.com

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