Emilia Guiú

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Emilia Guiú
Emilia Guiú.jpg
Born
Emilia Guiú Estivella

(1922-03-21)21 March 1922
Died7 February 2004(2004-02-07) (aged 81)
Years active1943–2000

Emilia Guiú Estivella (March 21, 1922 – February 7, 2004) was a Spanish-Mexican actress who appeared mainly in Mexican films, particularly in the 1940s and 1950s in the Golden Age of Mexican cinema. She made over 60 film appearances between 1943 and 2000 and typically played villain roles and "femme fatale". She also made a number of theatrical appearances.

Career[]

Guiu left Spain with her family, during the Spanish Civil War.[1] In 1943 she moved to Mexico and shortly after arriving, she discovered that a Spanish film director needed migrants as hired extras. This brought about her debut role in Flor silvestre (1943). In 1944 she had a small role in Roberto Rodríguez's comedy, as a jailer woman at the fair and further smaller roles that year including El abanico de Lady Windermere, under the helm of Juan José Ortega and 's El rey se divierte. Her first leading role came in 1945 in the musical drama film Club verde, directed by Raphael J. Sevilla, in which she starred opposite Emilio Tuero and Celia Montalván. In 1961 she appeared in , which would be her last performance on screen for 22 years as she moved into theatrical acting. She returned to the cinema in 1983, in the film .

Guiú made her last performance in the Mexican telenovela Abrázame muy fuerte in 2000. She died on February 7, 2004 in San Diego, California from cancer.[2]

Filmography[]

  • Wild Flower (1943)
  • El Rebelde (1943)
  • ¡Viva mi desgracia!(1944)
  • El Herrero (1944)
  • La vida inútil de Pito Pérez (1944)
  • Nana (1944)
  • El Rosario (1944)
  • El médico de las locas (1944)
  • El abanico de Lady Windermere(1944)
  • El Rey se divierte (1944)
  • Nosotros (1945)
  • Club verde (En México, Recuerdo de un Vals) (1945)
  • I Am a Fugitive (1946)
  • Amar es vivir (1946)
  • Pervertida (1946)
  • Nuestros maridos (1946)
  • Mujer contra mujer (1946)
  • Bel Ami (En México, El Buen Mozo o La historia de un canalla) (1947)
  • The Lost Child (1947)
  • Pecadora (1947)
  • La mujer del otro (1948)
  • Matrimonio sintético (1948)
  • Enrédate y verás (1948)
  • Little Black Angels (1948)
  • Paz (1949)
  • Carta Brava (1949)
  • Dos almas en el mundo (1949)
  • Mujeres en mi vida (1950)
  • Quinto patio (1950)
  • Traces of the Past (1950)
  • Furia roja (1951)
  • Una viuda sin sostén (1951)
  • Buenas noches mi amor (1951)
  • The Lovers (1951)
  • Monte de piedad (1951)
  • Puerto de tentación (1951)
  • Radio patrulla (1951)
  • Mujeres de teatro (1951)
  • Paco the Elegant (1952)
  • La noche es nuestra (1952)
  • Vive como sea (1952)
  • Prefiero a tu papá (1952)
  • ¡Amor, qué malo eres! (1953)
  • La extraña pasajera (1953)
  • (1953)
  • Angels of the Street (1953)
  • Píntame angelitos blancos (1954)
  • Solamente una vez (1954)
  • Sindicato de telemirones (1954)
  • De ranchero a empresario (1954)
  • Maternidad imposible (1955)
  • Ladrones de niños (1958)
  • Mujeres encantadoras (1958)
  • Señoritas (1959)
  • Siete pecados (1959)
  • Pancho villa y la Valentina (1960)
  • Confidencias matrimoniales (1961)
  • Las modelos de desnudos (1983)
  • Cacería de un criminal (1984)
  • Corrupción (1984)
  • Siempre en domingo (1984)
  • Abrázame muy fuerte (Serie de televisión) (2000)

References[]

  1. ^ "Se va una 'diva' del cine mexicano". Esmas. Archived from the original on 2010-05-12. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
  2. ^ "Emilia Guiu murió de cáncer". Teleguia. Retrieved November 30, 2009.[dead link]

Further reading[]

  • Agrasánchez, Jr., Rogelio (2001). Bellezas del cine mexicano/Beauties of Mexican Cinema. México: Archivo Fílmico Agrasánchez. p. 134. ISBN 968-5077-11-8
  • Varios (2002). Inolvidables rostros de nuestro cine. En SOMOS. México: Editorial Televisa, S. A. de C.V.
  • Varios (2000). Época de oro del cine mexicano de la A a la Z. En SOMOS. México: Editorial Televisa, S. A. de C.V.

External links[]

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