Aurelia Ferrer | |
---|---|
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1939–1960 (film) |
Aurelia Ferrer was an Argentine film actress. [1] She appeared in around forty films, generally in supporting roles.
John Alton, born Johann Jacob Altmann, in Sopron, Kingdom of Hungary, was an American cinematographer of Hungarian-German origin. Alton photographed some of the most famous films noir of the classic period and won an Academy Award for the cinematography of An American in Paris (1951), becoming the first Hungarian-born person to do so in the cinematography category.
Luis Bayón Herrera was a Spanish film director and screenwriter who worked in Argentine film of the 1940s and 1950s. He was "one of the most important directors of the golden age of Argentine cinema".
Mario Soffici was an Italian-born Argentine film director, actor and screenwriter of the classic era.
Carlos Schlieper was an Argentine film director and screenwriter of the classic era.
Pierre Bruno Hugo Fontana, otherwise known as Hugo del Carril, was an Argentine film actor, film director and tango singer of the classic era.
Luis César Amadori was an Italian-Argentine film director and screenwriter and one of the most influential directors in the cinema of Argentina of the classic era. He directed over 60 films between 1936 and 1967, writing the scripts to over 50 pictures.
Roque Funes was the most prolific Argentine cinematographer in the history of the Cinema of Argentina whose career spanned over 40 years of cinema.
Juan Carlos Thorry, born José Antonio Torrontegui, was an Argentine film actor, tango musician and director.
Guillermo Battaglia was a prolific Argentine film actor of the classic era of Argentine cinema.
Alberto Closas Lluró was a prolific Spanish film actor who appeared in the Cinema of Argentina in the 1940s and 1950s and in Spanish cinema after 1955.
Manolo Morán was a Spanish film actor.
Arturo Soto Rangel was a Mexican film, television, and stage actor. Soto was best known for appearing in over 250 Mexican films. He appeared in one American movie, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, which won three Academy Awards and starred Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett, and many other successful actors. Soto last appeared on television in 1963, where he starred in Voy de gallo.
María Elena Marqués Rangel was a Mexican actress and singer who was a star during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the 1940s and 1950s.
Max Citelli was an Argentine film actor, active during the Golden Age of Argentine cinema between 1936 and 1959.
Santiago Eduardo Urueta Sierra, more commonly known as Chano Urueta, was a Mexican film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor.
Carlos Orellana Martínez was a Mexican actor, film director and screenwriter.
Adriano Rimoldi (1912–1965) was an Italian film actor.
George Andreani, pseudonym Josef Dvořáček (born as Josef Kumok; 28 February 1901 in Warsaw, Poland – 2 April 1979 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) was a Polish composer, film score composer, pianist, conductor, and actor. He was noted for his scores of some 75 Argentine films during the Golden Age of Argentine cinema from 1937 to 1959. Aside from his prolific work as a score composer, he was also conductor of the Orquesta Sinfónica Schenley in the 1940s.
Víctor Manuel Mendoza (1913–1995) was a Mexican film actor.
Manuel Dondé was a Mexican film actor. He frequently played villains during his long film career.