María Rosa Salgado

María Rosa Salgado (1929–1995) was a Spanish actress. She appeared in around twenty films including It Happened in Broad Daylight.[1] In the early 1950s she moved to Hollywood for her launch as an international star. After the failure of the initiative she returned to Spain and retired form acting in 1960, after her marriage to bullfighter Pepe Dominguín. She briefly returned to film and theatre after their separation, including performances in roles for directors such as Jorge Grau ("Chica de club"), Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón ("Sonámbulos") and Jaime Chávarri ("A un dios desconocido").

María Rosa Salgado
Born20 April 1929
Died11 March 1995
Madrid, Spain
Other namesMaría Rosa Jiménez Juan-José
OccupationActress
Years active1949-1978 (film)

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1949The Captain from LoyolaInfanta Catalina
1949PazNovia de Raúl
1950That Luzmela Girl
1950Child of the NightMania
1950Don JuanDoña Iñés de Ulloa
1950Saturday NightDonina
1951RecklessMayte Mendoza
1951El Negro que tenía el alma blancaEmma Cortadel
1951Our Lady of FatimaHelena
1951Séptima páginaIsabel
1958Historias de la feriaSusette
1958El inquilinoMarta
1958Rapsodia de sangreLenina Kondor - Maria
1958It Happened in Broad DaylightFrau Heller
1960María, matrícula de BilbaoAmparo
1970Chicas de clubMadrina
1972FuenteovejunaLos Reyes Católicos
1977A un dios desconocidoAdela
1978Carne apaleadaFuncionaria prisión
1978SonámbulosMaría Rosa Gala(final film role)
gollark: It's so irregular.
gollark: SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
gollark: Then why `Wer bist du?`?
gollark: Pretty sure it'd be `Wie heißt du?` for `what is your name?`.
gollark: lollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,lOLlollollollollollol, lollollollollollollollOLlollollollollollollolLOllollollollollollollOLLoLLOLlOLlollollolLoLlollollollollollollol:lollollollollollolLollollollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllollOLLOLlOLLoLlOL;lOLLoLLOLlOllOLLolLOLloLlOL:LOLlOllOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollol#lollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllolLOLLOlLOLloLlOLLolLOLloLlOLLoLlOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollol;lollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllollOLLOllOL:lOL;LOLloLLOLlOllOL:lOL#lOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollolLOllollollollollollolloL.loLloLlollollol.lollollollollollollol,lollollollollollollolLoLlollollollollollolLOLlolLOLlOllOL:lOLLOllollollol.lollollollollollollol,lollollollollollollollOllollollollollollollol?lollollollollollolLOLlolLOLlOllOL:lOLLOllOLLoLLOLLOlLOLLOllOLLoLLOLLOllollollolLoLlollollollollollolLOLloLlOL.lOLLOllOL!lollol

References

  1. Hortelano p.210

Bibliography

  • Hortelano, Lorenzo J. Torres. Directory of World Cinema: Spain. Intellect Books, 2011.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.