José Régio (born Sept. 17, 1901, Vila do Conde, Port.—died Dec. 22, 1969, Portalegre) was a Portuguese poet, novelist, dramatist, and literary critic, generally considered one of the most accomplished literary figures in Portugal in the first half of the 20th century.
Régio began his literary career while still a student at the University of Coimbra with the publication of his lyric-dramatic Poemas de Deus e do Diabo (1925; “Poems of God and the Devil”). In 1927 he helped found the literary magazine Presença. Throughout his career as a high-school teacher, first in Porto and later in Portalegre, he continued to write. His novels, plays, and stories are distinguished by their emphasis on character delineation and their exploration of good and evil. His works are deeply introspective, and they reflect his preoccupation with human estrangement from the natural world and the human quest for the absolute or the divine. Representative are his novel O príncipe com orelhas de burro (1942; “The Prince with Donkey Ears”) and the play Benilde; ou, a virgem-mãe (1947; “Benilde, or the Virgin Mother”). Between 1945 and 1966 Régio produced his five-novel family saga A velha casa (“The Old House”). He wrote several additional volumes of poetry, collections of short stories, and essays on criticism and literature.