Pilar Montoya

[3] In her dances, she was known for bulerías of great precision,[3] and especially for tangos "with a touch of mischief and the canastero seal" in the family's style, to which she added her own stamp.

[1][2][3] Her son Juan "El Barullo" Fernández has continued the family tradition, winning an award at the 2015 Festival del Cante de las Minas [es].

[1] On the occasion of a tribute to Pilar Montoya by her nephew Farruquito, Europa Press described her style: Like that of her illustrious progenitor, La Faraona's dance is short and straightforward, simple in its technical aspect but very precise, full of strength and confidence in its own transmission capacity.

La Faraona was unique because, within the familiar aesthetic keys, she developed a style of strength but also whimsy, full of flavor and sense of humor, a facet that exploded mainly in tangos.

The last image of La Faraona is her canastero style, her way of breaking into a barefoot scene and with a wicker basket on her arm, bouncing to the rhythm of tangos.