Juan Bono

Last updated
Juan Bono
Born1893
DiedMarch 1979
Argentina
OccupationActor
Years active1936-1964 (film)

Juan Bono (1893-1979) was an Argentine stage and film actor. [1] He appeared in eighteen films during his career, most during the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema.

Contents

Selected filmography

Related Research Articles

Juan Carlos Cobián

Juan Carlos Cobián (1888–1953) was an Argentine bandleader and tango composer. He led the "evolutionary" tendency in tango which was perceived as tending to concert music than to traditional dance music.

Anselmo Alfredo Aieta was an Argentine bandoneon musician, composer and occasional actor.

<i>The Charge of the Gauchos</i> 1928 film by Albert H. Kelley

The Charge of the Gauchos is a 1928 American-Argentine silent historical film directed by Albert H. Kelley and starring Francis X. Bushman, Jacqueline Logan and Guido Trento. Bushman plays Manuel Belgrano, the leader of the 1810 May Revolution. The film's Spanish title refers to a line from the Argentine national anthem. It was made as a patriotic endeavor designed to boost the small Argentine film industry, but with enough action and romance to appeal to international audiences particularly in the UK and the United States. The film is also titled The Beautiful Spy.

Georges Benoît

Georges Benoît was a French cinematographer who worked on more than sixty films during his career. During the silent era, he was employed mostly in Hollywood. Later he worked in his native France on films such as Jacques Tourneur's Departure (1931). Between 1929 and 1934 he appeared in approximately ten films as an actor.

Domingo Sapelli (1895–1961) was a Uruguayan stage and film actor. After emigrating to Argentina he appeared in around fifty films during his career.

Angelina Pagano (1888–1962) was an Argentine stage and film actress. Pagano appeared in eighteen films, but was best known for her stage acting and work as a theatre director.

Helena DAlgy

Helena D'Algy was a Portuguese film actress. D'Algy appeared in twenty films, the majority in Hollywood during the silent era. Her career began to falter following the introduction of sound. She later starred in the Spanish-language box office hit Suburban Melody (1933), her last known film role. She was the sister of actor Tony D'Algy. She was last seen in a 1991 documentary.

<i>Suburban Melody</i>

Suburban Melody is a 1933 American Pre-Code musical film directed by Louis J. Gasnier and starring Imperio Argentina, Carlos Gardel and Vicente Padula.

Vicente Padula

Vicente Padula was an Argentine film actor. Padula moved to the United States, and appeared regularly in Hollywood films. He also made films in Mexico. Padula was a friend of the Argentine film star Carlos Gardel and appeared in several of his American films including Suburban Melody (1933) which was one of the highest-grossing film in their native Argentina that year.

Felisa Mary (1892–1956) was a Spanish-born Argentinian film actress. She appeared in more than forty films during her career, which coincided with the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema.

Juana Sujo (1913–1961) was an Argentine stage and film actress. Sujo was a noted stage actress, and in 1939 appeared in her first film. In 1948 she left Argentina due to her opposition to the regime of Juan Perón and settled in Venezuela where she lived until her death.

Froilán Varela Uruguayan actor

Froilán Varela (1891–1948) was a Uruguayan stage and film actor. He spent most of his life in Argentina, where he appeared in twenty two films including the historical Savage Pampas (1945) for which he won the Silver Condor Award for Best Supporting Actor.

Ricardo Conord was an Argentine architect and art director. He designed sets for more than eighty films throughout his career during the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema.

Enrique Roldán Argentine actor

Enrique Roldán (1901–1954) was an Argentine stage and film actor. He appeared in twenty four films during his career which spanned the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema. Roldán often played villains, particularly in the films of Manuel Romero.

Roberto Blanco (1903-1965) was an Argentine stage and film actor. He appeared in more than thirty films during his career many of them during the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema.

Aurelia Ferrer was an Argentine film actress. She appeared in around forty films, generally in supporting roles.

Francis Boeniger was an Argentine cinematographer. He worked on around seventy films during his career.

Lucio Demare

Lucio Demare (1906–1974) was an Argentine composer who worked on a number of film scores. He was the brother of the film director Lucas Demare, and scored several of his films.

César Fiaschi (1891-1954) was an Argentine film actor.

Santos Vega is a 1917 Argentine silent historical film directed by Carlos de Paoli. It is based on the story of the legendary gaucho Santos Vega.

References

  1. Finkielman p.208

Bibliography