
Acting · 75 years old
Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
A Brazilian filmmaker, actor, producer and screenwriter, Jorge da Silva, better known by his stage name Zózimo Bulbul, is regarded as a household name of black Brazilian cinema. He was also the founder of Rio de Janeiro's Black Cinema Center ("Centro Afro Carioca de Cinema"). As an actor, he worked in over 30 features, and was directed by filmmakers such as Glauber Rocha (in "Terra em Transe"), Carlos Diegues ("Quilombo") and Antunes Filho ("Compasso de Espera"), becoming the first black man to play a main character in a Brazilian TV soap opera, in 1969's "Vidas em Conflito". His debut as a filmmaker was 1974's black and white short "Alma no Olho". With his work focusing in raising awareness to Brazilian black culture, Bulbul remained an active filmmaker until his death in 2013. His most well known film, as a director, is 1988's "Abolição", a lengthy documentary that gives critical thoughts on Brazil's 1888's ending of slavery and in what changed for the country's Black people over the course of a century.

Chico Anysio Show
Tonho Malvadeza

Compasso de Espera
Jorge de Oliveira

Soul in the Eye

Five Times Favela
(segment "Pedreira de São Diego")

Exu Rei - Abdias do Nascimento
Himself

Improvised and Purposeful: Cinema Novo
Self

Paper and Sea
João Cândido

Entranced Earth
Repórter

Natal da Portela

Garden of War

Quilombo
Stone Man

Satan's Feats in the Village of Take-and-Bring

Our Lady of Compassion
Jesus

Ganga Zumba

The Suns of Easter Island
Helvio

The Girl from Ipanema
Jovem na Praia

Daughters of the Wind
Marquinhos

The Forest
Procópio

The Palace of Angels
Embaixador

The Girl and the Rapist
Pedro