Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pancho López is a hit 1955 song by Lalo Guerrero based on the 1954 TV theme The Ballad of Davy Crockett.The song sold more than 500,000 copies in the US. Guerrero performed the song on the Tonight Show and Art Linkletter's show.
Una Familia Con Suerte is a soap opera about Francisco "Pancho" López (de la Torre) and his family. Pancho is a humble, low-income man with strong characteristics. He is a generous, widowed family man, always lending a hand, a public market vendor. Although he has intuitive business sense, he believes that money is the root of all evil.
Pancho Lopez's most important series of performance are "Picnic Formal", [6] presented since 1997 until 2007 in Mexico, USA and Canada; "Sal de Mesa", presented in Mexico, Venezuela, Uruguay and the Dominican Republic; and "Ira (Rabia Contenida), made in Mexico, China, Canada and Poland.
Pancho López may refer to: Pancho López, a parody of Pancho Villa in The Bad Man 1920, and three film versions of the play; Pancho López (comics), early ...
His first American hit was "Pancho López", a parody of the popular 1950s hit "The Ballad of Davy Crockett". Guerrero used the Davy Crockett melody and wrote his own lyrics, telling the story of a legendary Mexican character. Due to criticism he received over this song, he never performed it publicly, not wanting to contribute to an ...
George Lopez's latest look had a few fans do a double-take. On Thursday, Feb. 13, the George Lopez star, 63, appeared on The Jennifer Hudson Show, but his hairdo surprised a few viewers. The ...
Pancho López is a Mexican boy from the fictional village of Chapango, which partakes in charro and lives on a ranch with his horse "Chihuahua"; hen named Felicia; and cat named Valentín. As the song goes, "chiquito, pero matón", although he goes to school everyday, he still protects the village from the abuse of Caporal Hermino, and smokes ...
Several parodies were issued in 1955, including "Duvid Crockett" by Mickey Katz; "Pancho Lopez" by Eduardo Lalo Guerrero; "Ole Svenson" by Yogi Yorgesson; and "The Ballad of Davy Crew-Cut" by Homer and Jethro.