- As with the giants, the
cabezudos typically represent archetypes of
their town.
Cabezudos from Zaragoza,
Spain A
cabezudo from Vitoria,
Spain Capgrossos...
- One of the most
iconic elements of the
festival is the
Comparsa de los
Cabezudos (Spanish for "parade of the Big Heads"), a
parade of large-headed figures...
- Juan José
Cabezudo, also
known as "El maricón" or "Comesuelas" (b. c. 1800, d. c. 1860) was a
famous Afro-Peruvian cook with a food
stall in Lima's Plaza...
- of the city.
There are ten "
cabezudos", with
different names, and all of them
wearing different costumes. The
cabezudos depict well
known local characters...
-
Spanish crime drama miniseries created by
Jorge Sánchez-
Cabezudo [es] and
Alberto Sánchez-
Cabezudo based on the
interview book by
Manuel Jabois [es] and...
- procession, its
pedestal garlanded with grapes;
figures of
giants and
cabezudos (figures with
gigantic heads)
parade in the
streets and
pyrotechnic figures...
-
Garcia de Videgain, to the most
successful of all his works,
Gigantes y
cabezudos (1898).
Entre el
alcalde y el rey (1875). La M****llesa (1876) es:Los...
- falls.
Every day,
during the morning,
there is a
parade of
gigantes y
cabezudos (English: "giants and big-heads"), with the
giant figures being more than...
- revoltosa; Agua,
Azucarillos y Aguardiente; Doña Francisquita;
Gigantes y
Cabezudos; La alegría de la huerta; La chulapona; Luis
Alonso (Giménez, 1896); and...
-
carried during Carnival. See also
Clown society and
Jester and
Gigantes y
cabezudos and Vejigante. In
traditional Germanic communities a
public Schlachtfest...