Origins By 1971, Gómez Bolaños was already well known in Mexico for his self-titled
sketch comedy show,
Chespirito, which was produced by Televisión Independiente de México and aired on XHTIM-TV, channel 8 (now
XEQ-TV channel 9,
Nueve). He had already introduced
El Chapulín Colorado and other characters. The first drawing of the show, created by Gómez Bolaños, premiered in 1972, and depicted an 8-year-old child competing with a balloon seller in a park. Character development was given much attention in the program, and each character was given a unique personality. Even though the program was about adults playing children, Gómez Bolaños decided from the start that El Chavo would be aimed at an adult audience.
Development and casting (Quico). Chespirito is leaning on Chavo's trademark barrel at the center of the photo.|294x294px Gómez Bolaños was the show's main creator and star. He first called Florinda Meza to act in the show; Chespirito and Meza later married. Vivar was the second actor chosen for the show. A mutual friend recommended Vivar to Gómez Bolaños when he started casting. Gómez Bolaños cited Vivar at Forum 8 at Telesistema Mexicano – where the shooting was taking place. Vivar showed up as a scene was shooting; he laughed, and the scene had to 'cut'. Gómez Bolaños approached him, asked him if he was Vivar, and told him they would not be using an earpiece, to which Vivar responded that he didn't know what he was talking about. He hired him on the spot. Gómez Bolaños recruited Valdés because he had known Valdés for years and had seen multiple movies Valdés had made. Then, Aguirre was cast in the show as the character of "Profesor Jirafales". Aguirre and Gómez Bolaños had been working on scripts together for years, and Aguirre had already been playing the character of Profesor Jirafales on another Chespirito show,
Supergenios de la Mesa Cuadrada, which spoofed current events panel discussion. Villagrán just happened to be a friend of Aguirre and a newspaper reporter, and he went to a party hosted by Aguirre. Villagrán did a comedy step where he blew his cheeks out of proportion, and Aguirre told Gómez Bolaños about his friend's hidden talent. Villagrán was promptly hired for the show. Antonieta de las Nieves was a voice-over-only actress who used to go to Televisa to make announcements. Hearing her voice, Roberto Gómez Bolaños thought she was perfect for the show. At first, she refused by telling him she was not a comedy actress. However, Gómez Bolaños' retort challenged her: "Then you're not a good actress; there are no dramatic or comic actors—there are only actors." The last additions to the show were
Angelines Fernández, a former film actress, and
Horacio Gómez Bolaños, Gómez Bolaños' younger brother who had never considered acting before, was tasked to oversee the show's marketing. The first
El Chavo sketch was "El ropavejero", broadcast on May 11, 1972, it was created to replace the sketch Los Chifladitos, in which
Chespirito and
Rubén Aguirre played two madmen, Chaparrón Bonaparte and Lucas Tañeda. As
Rubén Aguirre had left the program, the sketch needed to be replaced, and that was when
Chespirito created El Chavo Del Ocho. Several "Chavo" sketches produced before the start of the half-hour series were grouped into half-hour segments and are shown before the "official" half-hour episodes in syndication. Many of these were also re-written and re-shot as half-hour-long shows later in the show's life.
Broadcast history The TV show
Chespirito, created by
Televisión Independiente de México (TIM), debuted El Chavo as a skit in 1972. On January 8, 1973,
Telesistema Mexicano and
Televisión Independiente de México merged to become
Televisa. After the merger, on February 26, 1973,
El Chavo del Ocho premiered as a half-hour weekly television series. The first two episodes of the main character were intercut with a skit at the start that included Dr. Chapatín, El Chómpiras, or another character created by Roberto Gómez Bolaños. In reality, those were sketches shot in 1972–1973, most likely intended for "Chespirito," the canceled sitcom. Following a few of those early seasons, the show started with an almost thirty-minute episode preceded by a sketch featuring Roberto Gómez Bolaños and his characters. This was the format of the first season. Due to her pregnancy, Antonieta de las Nieves departed the show at the end of the first season. It was observed that Antonieta de las Nieves, who was the first actor credited after Chespirito, primarily played the female protagonists in the first season's episodes, including those shot in 1972–1973. When Florinda Meza filled in for her, El Chavo and Quico became a fantastic comedy duo for the non-Chavo del 8 sketches. While she was not a part of the series, there was a contention that Chilindrina was residing in Celaya, Guanajuato, with her aunts. The character returned in an episode dedicated to her: El Regreso de la Chilindrina. During this absence, Bolaños introduced new characters: Ñoño, La Popis, Malicha, and Godínez. The second season began with El Chavo and Quico as the comic child characters and Don Ramón as the charismatic adult character. During that season, the classroom scenes began to appear alongside other child characters like Ñoño (the son of Señor Barriga, both characters played by
Edgar Vivar), Popis (one of Florinda Meza's other characters), and the relaxed Godínez (played by
Horacio Gómez Bolaños, brother of Roberto Gómez Bolaños). Antonieta de las Nieves was given "distinctive" last billing when she returned in 1975. After Villagrán and Valdés left in 1978 and 1979, respectively, she was moved to top billing after Chespirito again. On the hour-long "Chespirito", De las Nieves was often given third billing behind Chespirito and Florinda Meza if playing another character besides Chilindrina. Otherwise, she always got the special final credit. When Carlos Villagrán left the show, it was explained that Quico had gone to live with his rich grandmother. "He couldn't stand the riffraff anymore", Doña Florinda explained. Not long after, Ramón Valdés also left the series. Chilindrina explained that Don Ramón left the city to look for a job and wouldn't return until he was a millionaire. With the loss of two of its major supporting characters, the ratings for the show slid, and Televisa canceled
El Chavo on January 7, 1980. On August 1, 2020, all broadcasters showing
El Chavo and other shows by Chespirito in several countries had to suspend the broadcast of the series in their services due to deadlocks between Televisa and Grupo Chespirito, which owns the characters and the scripts for the episodes. Grupo Televisa is in talks with several studios to distribute past and future projects, including
El Chavo. On September 7, 2024, Meza announced on Twitter/X that
El Chavo del Ocho and
El Chapulín Colorado would return to television after a four-year absence. Both shows would return to
Univision and
UniMas and stream on
Vix beginning on September 21, 2024, for Univision and two days later for UniMas. The show would return to Las Estrellas in Mexico a month later.
Chespirito Later, in 1980, Gomez Bolaños returned with a revived version of
Chespirito featuring El Chavo, El Chapulín Colorado, and other characters. The debut of El Chavo in this program was auspicious, with a wealth of new episodes being produced. Moreover, in 1981, Valdés joined
Chespirito after starring in some unsuccessful shows alongside Villagrán. However, he left again at the end of the year. The number of new episodes started to decline in the late 1980s and early 1990s, so once again, many early episodes were remade. Eventually, Chespirito's age began to catch up with him, and it became harder for him to adequately portray some of his characters, especially El Chavo and El Chapulín Colorado. In 1992, at 63, Chespirito retired the El Chavo character from his show (he did the same thing to El Chapulín Colorado one year later).
Conflict with Villagrán and death of Valdés In 1978, Villagrán left the show to start his own with Quico, with the permission of Gómez Bolaños. Within some time, he felt that the character's rights were his and sued Gómez Bolaños. The results of the lawsuit were favorable to the show's creator. Later on, Villagrán admitted that his exit was due to jealousy and envy between his character and El Chavo. According to Vivar, Chespirito was accustomed to writing all the best jokes in the show for Quico, whom he knew was very popular with the audience. Regardless of his conflict with Chespirito, Villagrán recorded his last episodes with his cast mates in 1978 with typical normalcy. Once he abandoned
El Chavo del Ocho, Villagrán wanted to use the character on another Televisa show. Gómez Bolaños denied his consent because Villagrán denied his authorship in creating Quico. Due to this, Azcárraga Milmo opted to cancel the independent project for Quico. Regardless, Villagrán continued to use Quico's character in Venezuela in 1981 in the show
Federrico. At that time, producers
Valentín Pimstein and Fabián Arnaud asked Gómez Bolaños to write a script for an adapted film of
El Chapulín Colorado or
El Chavo del Ocho. Gómez Bolaños denied this request due to his belief that El Chavo was uniquely developed in the vecindad and, therefore, would find it hard to provide a new storyline that would be relevant to what has already been shown in the series. In its place, they produced
El Chanfle, which used the same cast as
El Chavo del Ocho. In this movie, Villagrán also appeared, even though he was distanced from his fellow cast mates. Valdés resigned from El Chavo afterward, in 1979, citing personal reasons. Because of this, Chespirito hired
Raúl Chato Padilla to integrate into the vecindad in 1980, but Chespirito did not want to replace Don Ramón. Instead, Padilla would play a brand-new character named
Jaimito el Cartero, who served as Don Ramón's stand-in in various ways. Although Valdés returned to the cast in 1981, he made his television series debut with Villagrán in
Federrico in 1982. He collaborated with him again in
¡Ah qué Kiko!, which debuted six years later in 1988. Valdés was diagnosed with
stomach cancer at this period, which put his health at risk. He died on August 9 of that year.
Conflict with De las Nieves In 2002, Gómez Bolaños sued Antonieta de las Nieves due to disagreements over rights to La Chilindrina. In 1995, Antonieta de las Nieves proclaimed herself as the owner of the author's rights, to which Gómez Bolaños responded that he was the owner of the character being the creator. De las Nieves was not involved in the recording of
El Chavo and was replaced with Ñoño and Popis. De las Nieves won the lawsuit in 2013 and kept author rights over La Chilindrina. Due to this dispute, Gómez Bolaños and De las Nieves' friendship took a toll, and they stopped communicating. ==Seasons==