Arnaldo André

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Arnaldo André
Born
Andrés Pacuá Zaracho

(1943-11-12) November 12, 1943 (age 78)
NationalityParaguayan, Argentine
Awards2009 Martín Fierro award

Arnaldo André (born November 12, 1943) is a Paraguayan actor for soap-operas. He spent most of his career in Argentina, where he has been active since 1964. He earned a Martín Fierro award in 2010, and his most recent work was in the Los únicos TV series.

Biography[]

Arnaldo André was born in San Bernardino, Paraguay in 1943. His father died when he was aged 11, and he took care of his family since then.[1] He grew up influenced by American and Italian Movies, and initially intended to make a name in Argentina and, from there, move to other countries.[1] However, as his career developed, he did not follow this initial plan. He did not become a movie actor either, working mainly in TV telenovelas and productions by Alberto Migré a well-known Argentine writer and TV producer in protagonic couples with Soledad Silveyra. His work in TV allowed some occasional works in theater and cinema, and also works at telenovelas in other South American countries.

Arnaldo Andre made many protagonic couples with Luisa Kuliok. His character from was noted for his slapping of his wife.[1] The first slap was used in a promotion of the telenovela at its early stages, and the positive popular reception turned this into a cliché.[2] He kept on slapping his fellow actresses in later telenovelas, and always slapped them for real; which caused an incident with Giselle Blondet, who was not aware of it.[2] Arnaldo André retired his slapping act after Carlos Monzón was sentenced for the death of his wife, in a widely publicized trial.[2] Nowadays, Arnaldo André thinks that he would not do a similar character, because of the public concern about corporal punishment in the home.[1][2] He also thinks that feminism is greater now than in the 1980s, and a female character submissive to corporal punishment would not be considered realistic by the public anymore.[1]

Arnaldo André worked as the main villain of the Valientes telenovela, which is among the most successful Argentine telenovelas.[3] This was the first time he played character of a villain instead of a gentleman, as he thought he had exhausted the role during his career.[4] Even so, as a villain he used little physical violence, working instead like a crime boss.[4] He earned the 2009 Martín Fierro award as best male lead actor of telenovela with this work.[5] He worked during 2011 in the superhero live-action television series Los únicos.

Works[]

TV[]

Filmography
Year Telenovela Character
1964 El amor tiene cara de mujer
1968 Ufa con el sexo
1972 Rolando Rivas, taxista Juan Marcelo
1973 Ariel Mejia Guzmán
1974 Santiago Yáñez
1975 Juan Manuel Alinari
1976 Mariano Mayol
1977 Enrique
1977 Rafaela Juan José Hernández
1978 María del Mar Víctor Manuel Galíndez
1980 Fabián
1981
1981
1983 Amor gitano Renzo Chamorro
1984 Alonso Miranda
1985 Mariano Romero
1986 Don Julio Olmedo
1986 El lobo Salvador Rivero
1987 Reinaldo Herrera
1987 Bruno Sánchez
1988 Amándote Martín Arana
1990 Martín Arana
1990 Marcelo Cardona
1991 Augusto Luna
1992 Corazones de fuego Agustín Casenave
1993 Juan
1996 Luis A. "Gino" Spadalacua
1996 Luis. A. 'Gino' Spadalacua
1997 Gerardo Murúa
2000 Pobre Diabla Andrés Mejía Guzmán
2000 Abrázame muy fuerte Dr. Ángel Luis Robles
2001 Felina Asdrúbal
2002 Jorge
2003 Soy gitano Lázaro Jesús Heredia
2004 Juan Manuel Alinari
2004 Sebastian Prusi
2005 Juan
2006 Pablo Cuevas
2009 Valientes Laureano Gómez Acuña
2011 Los únicos Alfredo Monterrey

Cinema[]

Filmography
Year Film Character
1968 Ufa con el sexo (censored)[6]
1970 Los Muchachos de mi barrio
1971 Argentino hasta la muerte
1971 Balada para un mochilero
1971
1972
1973 José María y María José: Una pareja de hoy
2008 Juan
2009
2009 El niño pez Sócrates Espina
2013 Lectura Según Justino As director

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e Arnaldo André: "La televisión me dio todo, todo, todo" (in Spanish)
  2. ^ a b c d Personajes: Arnaldo André (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Terminó Valientes Archived March 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  4. ^ a b “Dejé de ser el eterno galán y ahora soy el peor villano” (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Martín Fierro 2010: todos los ganadores (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Cinenacional.com The movie was censored at the time, and premiered in 2007

External links[]

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