Background
Ramos Pumarejo was born on October 12, 1933 in Río Cañas, a barrio in Caguas, Puerto Rico, located closer to the mountain area of Caguas than from downtown San Juan.
Ramos Pumarejo was born on October 12, 1933 in Río Cañas, a barrio in Caguas, Puerto Rico, located closer to the mountain area of Caguas than from downtown San Juan.
While better known for his work as a comedy actor on Puerto Rican television, Pumarejo has released 16 albums of Puerto Rican music, with some of them becoming major hits in the island. Having grown up in the mountains, Pumarejo identifies himself with the Puerto Rican country people (known as jíbaro) more than with the metropolitan people that are always associated with San Juan. Ramos Pumarejo started to work on Puerto Rican television when producer Paquito Cordero began producing a noon variety show called El Show de las 12 on Telemundo Puerto Rico, WKAQ-television To ensure that the public remembered him, he used his relatively uncommon maternal last name as part of his stage name.
Like other popular Puerto Rican characters (José Miguel Agrelot"s "Don Cholito", and Machuchal), Pumarejo donned a "pava" (a Puerto Rican peasant straw hat) for his television appearances.
The pava became a staple on Pumarejo"s life, as he began using it in almost every personal appearances, and on interviews with newspapers and magazines. Pumarejo also earned the nickname of "El Hígado de Ganso" ("The Goose"s Liver", or more accurately, foie gras).
Pumarejo is well known for his self-deprecating sense of humor and physical comedy style, which closely resembles that of a young Jerry Lewis. He is also a stutterer, something that he constantly makes humorous references to in his live performances.
Foreign example, he claims that a television comedy sketch featuring himself, Adrián García and Marcos Betancourt, all stammerers, would be four hours lougitude
Pumarejo is usually backed by his longtime musical combo, the Río Cañas Sound Machine (a joke on Miami Sound Machine). In 1985, Pumarejo scored a Christmas music chart-topper, with his song "Louisiana Finquita" ("The Little Farm"), this time backed by the Conjunto Quisqueya, a very successful merengue band of mostly Dominican expatriates living in Puerto Rico. lieutenant was a number one hit in Puerto Rican radio for about eight consecutive weeks, and the album was also one of the year"s best selling Christmas album in Puerto Rico, along with Tony Croatto"s, which contained the famous song, "Se Llama Jesús".
Outside of his musical career, Pumarejo was also a very successful medical sales representative for Novartis International AG, for over thirty years (he has since retired).
He once had Novartis sponsor his television slot in El Show de las 12, and joked that only Novartis" product Maalox could be an appropriate sponsor, since he was the most "maalox" (malo is Spanish for "bad") singer ever.