Señor Wences

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Wenceslao Moreno (April 17, 1896April 20, 1999), popularly known as Señor Wences, was a prominent 20th century ventriloquist likely best known for his frequent appearances on CBS's Ed Sullivan Show. Moreno was born in Salamanca, Spain.

Señor Wences was known for his speed, skill, and grace as a ventroliquist. His stable of characters included "Johnny", a childlike face drawn on Wences' hand, which he would place atop an otherwise headless doll, and with whom Wences conversed while switching his voices between Johnny's falsetto and his own at amazing speed. Wences would create Johnny's face on stage to open his act, placing his thumb next to, and in front of, his bent first finger; the first finger would be the upper lip, and the thumb the lower lip. He would use lipstick to draw the lips onto the respective fingers, and then draw eyes onto the upper part of the first finger, finishing the effect with a tiny long-haired wig on top of the entire hand. Flexing the thumb would move the 'lips.'

Another popular Wences character was the gruff-voiced "Pedro", a disembodied head in a box, who would, more often than not, simply growl "'s all right." Pedro would either 'speak' from within the closed box, or speak with moving lips when Wences opened the box's front panel with his free hand. A large part of Wences' comedy lay in the well-timed high-speed exchange of words between himself and his 2 creations, and in the difference in their voice pitches.

Señor Wences died just days after his 103rd birthday. He had been residing at New York City's Ameritania Hotel on 54th Street, just around the corner from the Ed Sullivan Theater. That section of 54th Street has been named "Señor Wences Way".

Popular culture references

  • Several episodes of the animated series Roger Ramjet are set in the fictional South American republic of San Domino, which is so small and impoverished that the President's Cabinet is literally a wooden cabinet. When the President wishes confirmation of some train of thought, he asks it "'S all right?" and a gruff voice from within replies "'S all right".
  • A reference to Señor Wences occurred in the 1979 movie The In-Laws. The dictator of the South American country in which the action takes place, at one point talks to the main protagonists indirectly, via a "Johnny"-like character drawn on his hand named "Señor Pepe." At that point, any doubts they may have had about his sanity are confirmed.
  • In "Fat Butt and Pancake Head", an episode of the animated television series South Park, Eric Cartman creates a hand puppet identical in style to Señor Wences' "Johnny". Cartman's puppet is a parody of singer Jennifer Lopez, but the puppet still speaks like Johnny, with a high-pitched voice and stereotypical Spanish accent. Cartman and the puppet also go through several of Señor Wences' classic routines, such as having the puppet "kiss" a real person and enjoying it tremendously. Final proof of the writers' knowledge of Señor Wences comes when Cartman and "Miss Lopez" share the trademark "'s all right" routine Wences used to do with his "Pedro" puppet.
  • In Disney's Aladdin, there are two references to Señor Wences. The first happens when Aladdin first meets the Genie: when the Genie (Robin Williams) describes himself as "often imitated", the voice he uses is a high-pitched, Spanish-accented voice similar to "Johnny" (he's also seen as a ventriloquist, though with a traditional dummy). The second is in the song "Friend Like Me", during the "scat" portion: this time, the Genie's hands are seen as "Johnny"-type puppets (with eyes painted on the fist), though the voice is not like "Johnny".eo:Señor Wences