Spanish Serenade

Spanish Serenade (Spanish: Ronda española) is a 1952 Spanish musical film directed by Ladislao Vajda, and starring José Isbert and Manolo Morán. The film was a success on its release.[1]

Spanish Serenade
Directed byLadislao Vajda
Produced byRamón Plana
Written byRafael García Serrano
José María Sánchez Silva
StarringJosé Isbert
Manolo Morán
Music byJesús García Leoz
CinematographyTheodore J. Pahle
Edited byAntonio Martinez
Production
company
Chamartín
Distributed byChamartín
Release date
14 January 1952
Running time
91 minutes
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish

Cast

  • Manuel Aguilera as Tipo 1º
  • Margarita Alexandre as Diana
  • Ramón Baillo as Repartidor de telégrafos
  • Barta Barri as Jefe de los saboteadores
  • Félix Briones as Capitán 2º
  • Beni Deus
  • Adriano Dominguez as Andrés
  • Luciano Díaz as Chato
  • Miguel Ángel Fernandez
  • Fernando Heiko Vassel as Teniente en Curaçao
  • Casimiro Hurtado as Tipo 2º
  • José Isbert as Capitán del barco
  • Carolina Jiménez as Mercedes
  • Milagros Leal as Lola
  • Julia Martínez as Rosita
  • Alejandro Millán as Oficial 2º
  • Manolo Morán as Morgan
  • Joaquin Musulen as Mariano
  • María Esperanza Navarro as Ana
  • Clotilde Poderós as Victoria
  • Elvira Quintillá as Magdalena
  • Enrique Ramírez as Misionero
  • José Riesgo as Agregado
  • Santiago Rivero as Tipo 3º
  • José María Rodero as Juan
  • Gerardo Rodríguez as Capellán
  • Alfonso Rojas as Capitán 2º
  • Emilio Ruiz de Córdoba as Capitán 3º
  • Elena Salvador as Ángeles
  • Juana Sebastian as Luisa
  • José Suárez as Pablo
  • Roberto Zara as Giulio
gollark: Just dense.
gollark: I don't think depleted uranium is very light.
gollark: How do you plan to configurably encode rules anyway?
gollark: Different moderator types would also be interesting.
gollark: It's not strictly necessary, but it would be nice if any reactor design would work on any other NuclearCraft installation of the same version.

References

  1. Bentley p. 87

Bibliography

  • Bentley, Bernard. A Companion to Spanish Cinema. Boydell & Brewer 2008.


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