Jimmy Giménez-Arnau
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14 September 1943
Jimmy Giménez-Arnau | |
|---|---|
| Born | Joaquín José Victor Bernardo Giménez-Arnau Puente 14 September 1943 |
| Died | 17 September 2024 (aged 81) |
| Years active | 1977–2024 |
| Known for | Journalism |
| Spouse(s) | María del Mar Martínez-Bordiú y Franco (1977–82) María Teresa Fernández Peral (1987–93) Sandra Salgado González (2013–present) |
| Children | 2 |
| Father | José Antonio Giménez-Arnau |
Joaquín José Victor Bernardo Giménez-Arnau Puente (14 September 1943 – 17 September 2024), better known as Jimmy Giménez-Arnau, was a Spanish journalist, author and television personality.
Personal life and death
The son of the author and diplomat José Antonio Giménez-Arnau, and his wife María Inés Puente García-Arnaiz, Giménez-Arnau was born in Brazilian waters on the Spanish liner Cabo de Hornos. Between the ages of seven and nine, Giménez-Arnau studied in an English school, allowing him to achieve fluency in the language. He graduated in law and journalism, and took part in boxing and football in his youth, in addition to being an art seller.
As a journalist, he was the war correspondent for the satirical magazine Hermano Lobo, for which he wrote under the pseudonym "Jimmy Corso". In 1980, together with Julio Wizuete he directed, starred in and wrote the film Cocaína.[1] In 1983 he created the television soap Onda Blúmini.
As a writer, he started to write poems and published Cuya selva ("Whose jungle") and La soledad distinta ("Distinct loneliness"). In 1977 he published his first novel, Las islas transparientes. In 2020, he published his autobiography, La vida jugada.[2]
As a journalist, he presented the Antena 3 Radio show Hora de lobos, and on television he has appeared on shows such as the Telecinco shows La máquina de verdad and Sálvame, the regional chat show Tómbola, and the Antena 3 show Sabor a ti.
On 3 August 1977, Giménez-Arnau married María del Mar Martínez-Bordiu y Franco, the granddaughter of Francisco Franco,[3] whom he met at a party. They have a daughter, Leticia, however he has admitted he doesn't see her.[4] During their marriage they lived in the Palace of Canto del Pico. Ten years later, he got together with a model, and in 1993 Giménez-Arnau and Martínez-Bordiu split. This immediately made him a figure of the tabloid press. Giménez-Arnau has used his status as a relative of the Francos to criticise the family, especially in his book Yo, Jimmy: La vida entre los Franco.[5]
In April 2013, Giménez-Arnau married the journalist Sandra Salgado,[6] 35 years his junior.[7]
Giménez-Arnau died on 17 September 2024, three days after his 81st birthday.[8]