Luis
Eduardo Aute was born in Manila, the capital of the Philippines, on
September 13, 1943. His father, a Catalan (from Catalonia, Spain),
had been working in that country since 1919, for a tobacco company, and was
married to a Filipina of Spanish descent. In his childhood,
Aute studied at the De La Salle School, where he learned English and Tagalog,
which is used within his family. At an early age he showed great ability as a
painter and sketcher. Another childhood passion was cinema; his interest in
filmmaking was abetted by his parents' giving him an 8 mm camera, which he
used to produce home-made movies with his friends.
At
8 years old, he traveled to Spain for the first time. In Madrid, with the Hotel
Avenida Orchestra, he sang for the first time in public, interpreting the song Las
hojas muertas (The Dead Leaves). At age 9 he watched "On the
Waterfront", a movie that had a powerful influence on him and inspired him
to write his first poems in English. Another cinematic influence at that age
was the movie Niagara, where he discovered the eroticism and sensuality of Marilyn
Monroe.
Return
to Spain
In 1954 after a short stay in Barcelona,
Aute returned definitively to Madrid, where he studied in the
"Colegio Nuestra Señora de las Maravillas" (Catholic School). At 15
years old, with his new guitar received as a birthday present, he performed at
an end of school party, as part of a trio with two friends. During these years
he was very influenced by German Expressionism, and dedicated most of his
time to paint, winning a silver medal in a Spanish 'Juvenile Art Contest'.
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