Moraes was born in
Gávea, a neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro, to Clodoaldo da Silva Pereira Moraes, a public servant, and Lidia Cruz, a housewife and amateur pianist. In 1916, his family moved to
Botafogo, where he attended
Afrânio Peixoto Primary School. Fleeing the
Copacabana Fort revolt, his parents moved to
Governador Island while Moraes remained at his grandfather's home in Botafogo to finish school. During visits with his parents on weekends and holidays, he became acquainted with the accomplished composer Ary Barroso. Beginning in 1924, Moraes attended St. Ignatius, a Jesuit high school, where he sang in the choir and wrote theatrical sketches. Three years later, he became friends with the brothers Paulo and Haroldo Tapajós, with whom he wrote his first musical compositions, which were performed at friends' parties. In 1929, he completed high school and his family moved back to Gávea. That same year, he was admitted to the Faculty of Law at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (
UFRJ). At the "School of Catete", he became friends with essayist and future novelist
Otávio de Faria, a Catholic militant and leader of a group of right-wing Catholics organized around
Centro Dom Vital, a think-tank created by
Jackson de Figueiredo shortly before his death. Faria encouraged Moraes' literary vocation, and tried to recruit him to the conservative cause. Moraes received his college degree in Legal and Social Sciences in 1933. Soon after, he published his first two collections of poetry:
Caminho para a distancia ("Path into the Distance") (1933) and
Forma e exegese ("Form and Exegesis"). Both collections were composed and published under Octavio de Faria's informal editorship. The collections were
symbolist poetry concerned with Catholic mysticism and the search for redemption of sexual seduction. In his essay "Two Poets" (1935), Faria compared Moraes' poetry to that of
Augusto Frederico Schmidt. The tension between Faria's and Moraes' shared Catholic activism and Faria's unrequited attraction to Moraes strained their friendship. Faria attempted suicide because of this unrequited love. Despite their estrangement, Moraes wrote two sonnets, the first in 1939 ("Sonnet to Octavio de Faria"), the second during the 1960s ("Octavio") in carefully couched praise of his friend. In 1936, Moraes became a film censor for the Ministry of Education and Health. Two years later, he won a British Council fellowship to study English language and literature at
Magdalen College,
Oxford University. He abandoned his use of
blank verse and
free verse in favor of the
sonnet, both the Italian form used in Portuguese poetry (two
quatrains, two
tercets) and the English form (three quatrains and a
couplet). He was considered one of the most prominent of the "Generation of '45", a group of Brazilian writers in the 1930s and 1940s who rejected early modernism in favor of traditional forms and vocabulary. If
João Cabral de Melo Neto's works and technique served the depiction of objective reality, those of Moraes served the depiction of the subjective mood of sexual love. The basic meter in Moraes' love poetry is the
decasyllable, taken mostly from
Camões's lyric poetry. During his stay in England, Moraes wrote the verse collection
Novos poemas ("New Poems"). While there, he married (by proxy) Beatriz Azevedo de Mello, with whom he subsequently had two children: filmmaker Suzana de Moraes and Pedro. In 1941, he returned to Brazil and worked as a film critic for the newspaper
A Manhã ("The Morning"), as a contributor to the literary journal
Clima ("Climate"), and at the Banking Employees' Institute of Social Security, the public pension fund for workers in banking institutions. During the following year, he failed the admission test for a diplomatic career at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MRE). Shortly after, he was hired to accompany American writer
Waldo Frank, a literary acquaintance, on tour across northern Brazil. In Moraes' words, it was contact with both Frank and "appalling poverty" that turned him into "a man of the Left". In 1943, Moraes passed the MRE admission test on his second attempt and as his first posting was assigned as vice-consul at the Brazilian Consulate in Los Angeles, California. There, he published a book of poems,
Cinco elegias ("Five Elegies"), followed by
Poemas, sonetos e baladas ("Poems, Sonnets, and Ballads"). After his father died in 1950, he went to Brazil, then returned to Los Angeles and published two more books:
Livro de sonetos ("Book of Sonnets") and
Novos poemas II ("New Poems II"). Continuing his diplomatic career, during the 1950s, Moraes worked for the Brazilian consular service in Paris and Rome. In Rome, he often visited historian
Sergio Buarque de Holanda (father of the musician
Chico Buarque de Holanda), who was teaching in Italy as a visiting scholar. In 1951, Moraes married his second wife, Lila Maria Esquerdo e Boscoli. He wrote film reviews for
Samuel Wainer's
Vargoist paper
Última Hora. He was named a delegate to the
Punta del Este film festival and was given a commission to study the management of film festivals at Cannes, Berlin,
Locarno, and Venice, in view of the forthcoming São Paulo Cinema Festival, which was to be a part of the commemoration of the city's 400th anniversary. In 1953, his third child, Georgiana, was born, and his fourth child with Lila Maria was born in 1956. He went to Paris as the second secretary at the Brazilian embassy in France. He released his first
samba, "Quando tu passas por mim" ("When You Pass By"), which was composed with
Antônio Maria. During the next year, he wrote lyrics to chamber music pieces by
Cláudio Santoro. He became a well-known playwright with the staging of his musical
Orfeu da Conceição ("Orpheus of the Conception") in 1956 and for the film made of it called
Black Orpheus. He met pianist
Tom Jobim, who was commissioned to write music for the play. Jobim wrote "Se todos fossem iguais a você" ("If Others Were Like You"), "Um nome de mulher" ("A Woman's Name"), and other songs included in the production. The play was staged in 1956 in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, having its text published in a deluxe edition illustrated by Carlos Scliar. At the end of 1956, Moraes returned to France, having been transferred in 1957 from the Brazilian embassy to the Brazilian representation at
UNESCO in
Paris. In 1958, he was transferred to the Brazilian embassy in
Montevideo, returning to Brazil in transit. While in Brazil, he married Maria Lucia Proença. == Bossa nova ==