Otto de la Rocha


Otto Benjamín de la Rocha López was a Nicaraguan singer, songwriter and radio actor, best known for his characterization of the picaresque persona Aniceto Prieto.

Biography

Otto de la Rocha was born to Benjamín de la Rocha and Graciela López in Jinotega, Nicaragua, on 23 August 1933. Although he never studied music, he inherited his love of music from his maternal grandfather, Juan Fajardo, who was related to the brothers Carlos and Luis Enrique Mejía Godoy.
He was married three times and fathered 10 children. He worked alongside his third wife, radio actress Georgina Valdivia, appearing together in radio plays and television commercials.

Early life

At 13 years of age de la Rocha travelled to the capital Managua in search of a radio station where he would be able to perform- even though at the time it was extremely difficult to break into the then newly available radio broadcasting.
According to de la Rocha in 1948 he began to find fame via the broadcast of "Voz de la Victoria" on an amateur talent program hosted by the well known baccalaureate Oscar Pérez Valdivia, after he began to listen to the music of Nicaraguan greats such as Camilo Zapata.

Pancho Madrigal

It was thanks to this trio that de la Rocha was able to create one of the characters that would bring him nationwide fame. After the three performed on a live radio program hosted by radio entrepreneur Fabio Gadea Mantilla, he was asked to read a script in the style of a peasant farmer- thus "Pancho Madrigal" was born. The program, also called Pancho Madrigal, was broadcast on Radio Mundial, replacing the character Tío Popo played by Rodolfo Arana Sándigo who, due to health issues, was unable to continue performing.
The program was subsequently transferred to Radio Corporación where de la Rocha continued to work for 20 years. De la Rocha continued creating much loved characters, the most well known of which include Aniceto Prieto , Indio Filomeno , Filito, as well as La Chepona, Mustafá the Turk and Policarpio Matute among others.
The character of Aniceto Prieto is much loved in Nicaragua, according to de la Rocha.
Due to his work on the program "El Indio Filomeno" de la Rocha was sued on three occasions by the then head of National Guard radio and television Colonel Alberto Luna Solórzano.
De la Rocha maintained that the program did not express the names of figures from the then present era of repressive politics in Nicaragua.
He recalls that at Radio Corporación he, along with Carlos Mejía Godoy, ran a program called "Corporito" and
The fine was for 10,000 córdobas, which the populace helped to fund out of affection for the characters and actors.

Radio production

After the triumph of the Sandinista Revolution in 1979, de la Rocha created a program called "El tronco de los mensajeros " at the recently opened "Radio Sandino", as well as an agricultural program for farmers.
In 1982 he transferred to radio broadcasting station "Voz de Nicaragua" with the programs "La Palomita Mensajera " and "Lencho Catarrán ". In 1990 he and his programs moved to Radio Ya.
In "Lencho Catarrán", his current wife plays the role of "Lupita", whom his character Aniceto Prieto is constantly trying to seduce. He and Lupita together appear in various television commercials.
In his musical career, de la Rocha has composed at least 100 songs, although he hasn't recorded them all. His repertoire comprises only around 30 tracks. They include: "Una Canción", "La Pelo’e Mais", "Managua, linda Managua", "A Mi Mama", "Primera Dama", "Plutarco Malpaisillo", "Soledad", "El Peón", "Pancho Madrigal", "Lencho Catarrán" and "Amor Florecido", among others.
Some of his tracks have gained international recognition. His track "Una Canción" from the album of the same name was covered by Cuban singer Elsa Baeza in 1978 which gained her a golden disc in Spain; however, de la Rocha did not receive any recognition as the composer.
De la Rocha lived in Managua where he continued his work in music and radio.

List of radio programs