The attraction prepared tributes with the participation of friends and family
November 6, 2022 6:25 p.m
(updated at 21:12)
Galvão Bueno cried at different times (Photo: Reproduction/Globo)
Photo: Launch!
Seller of emotions, Galvão Bueno felt this Sunday what he was trying to convey to viewers throughout his career. The narrator who retires from television after the World CupShe cried more than once in the tribute she received with TV Globo’s Huck on Sunday.
The attraction prepared tributes with the participation of friends, family and the 94yearold mother herself, who, despite agerelated difficulties, made it a point to make a statement about her son.
Right at the start, Tino Marcos, a former Globo reporter, narrated a story that tells the story of the narrator. Another who recounted Galvão’s childhood was Arnaldo Cezar Coelho. The program also included a statement from King Pelé.
The narrator commented on the friendship he has with Globo’s two former colleagues.
“I started working with Tino in 1989, he was a little boy. Our relationship was very special. (…) Arnaldo, I spoke badly about him when he was a judge, then he said goodbye to a friend . He became a brother, spectacular person. I can’t believe I did all this (shown in the reports),” he said, moved.
The narrator also spoke of his friendship with Pelé, who is battling cancer and undergoing chemotherapy.
Pele, my friend, my brother, you know how much I love you. The pleasure and honor of being able to broadcast you playing and three World Cups. You’re playing the game of your life, you’ve won everything you could in this sport. You will win this fight and I will hug you.
Galvão also declared the end of his career as a storyteller, but said he will not stop working.
“I’m going to turn a page, not close the book. I have a few things to do over the next few years. December 18 will be my last story, in the World Cup final. I hope Brazil are there. But I have no idea what I’m going to say,” he said.
“After the World Cup, I will take my wife and disappear for a while. There will be no Christmas or New Year,” he concluded.
Galvão cried a lot, all the more when Viviane Senna, Ayrton Senna’s sister, appeared to talk about the narrator’s friendship with the threetime Formula 1 champion.
“When Galvão spoke about my brother’s races, he said he was the ‘Ayrton Senna of Brazil’. And that was clear. He (Senna) knew he was being watched by millions of Brazilians at that moment and Galvão expressed our feelings Sunday morning off,” Viviane said.
“I miss him a lot. A friend of his said to me: ‘Do you know that he changed his name? Did he change from Ayrton Senna da Silva to Ayrton Senna from Brazil? I had no idea about that. (.. . ) He was my younger brother who I used to give advice to. If I say I talk to him sometimes, would you believe it? It’s true that he doesn’t answer me, but I’m sure his light shines brightly inside another dimension,” he joked.
Galvão also spoke of the difficulty he had in his career in balancing himself in order to convey emotions that did justice to the characters.
“I’ve been a tightrope walker for 48 years. I sell emotions but I can’t escape reality. I’ve been unfair a few times, but I’ve always tried not to be rude. I have never interfered in anyone’s private life because I don’t allow them to interfere in mine. Some were upset along the way and I apologize to them. I tried not to harm anyone and I succeeded,” he said.
+Free the best content in your email. Choose your favorite Terra newsletter. Click here!