Ignacio López Tarso
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. The reason given is: no footnotes or sources for the bulk of his biography, which was likely copied from the Spanish version of Wikipedia. (March 2014) |
Ignacio López Tarso | |
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Born | Ignacio López López January 15, 1925 |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1940–present |
Spouse(s) | Clara Aranda |
Children | 3 (including Juan Ignacio Aranda) |
Parents |
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Relatives |
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Awards | List of awards |
Ignacio López Tarso (born Ignacio López López; January 15, 1925) is a Mexican actor of stage, film and television. He has acted in about 50 films and appeared in documentaries and in one short feature. In 1973 he was given the Ariel Award for Best Actor for Rosa Blanca, and the Ariel de Oro lifetime achievement award in 2007. He has also been honored multiple times at the TVyNovelas Awards.
Biography[]
Early life and education[]
López was born in Mexico City to parents Alfonso López Bermúdez and Ignacia López Herrera. Because of his father's job, he spent his childhood among several cities including Veracruz, Hermosillo, Navojoa and Guadalajara. His siblings are Alfonso and Marta. At around age 8-9, when he was in Guadalajara, his parents took him to see a play, where he became interested in acting.
He lived in Valle de Bravo, Estado de México, where he went to secondary school. Although his family's economic problems kept him from attending high school, he joined seminaries in Temascalcingo, Estado de México and Mexico City to continue his education. During his time there, a visiting priest from the United States organized a group to perform plays, in which he participated. He learned to read oral poetry and books of classical plays, including those by Lope de Vega and Calderón de la Barca.
When he was 20, he joined the military service at Querétaro, where he was in barracks for about a year. He also served in the Veracruz and Monterrey regiments, and eventually reached First Sergeant grade. After completing his service, he declined an opportunity to attend military school, even though he liked the discipline.
He worked in Mexico City as a sales agent for a clothing company. He aspired to work in the United States, and planned to work at an orange grove in Merced, California. However, a few days in, he fell from a tree and injured his vertebrate. He returned to Mexico City for rehabilitation therapy which lasted about a year.
Theatre[]
While López was in therapy, he read books on poetry and theatre, and became a fan of author Xavier Villaurrutia. After his recovery, he heard that Villaurrutia was teaching theatre at the Palacio de Bellas Artes, so he visited him, initially to ask for his autograph, but then was invited to listen in on his lessons. After a few days, he formally joined the theatre academy at age 24. When Villaurrtia advised Lopez to pick a stage name, he changed from "López López" to "López Tarso", the Tarso was Spanish for Paul the Apostle's hometown of Tarsus, and also one of the cities in Mexico that Lopez had also once lived. Besides Villaurrutia, he studied under other masters such as Salvador Novo, Clementina Otero, Celestino Gorostiza, André Moreau, Seki Sano, Fernando Wagner and Fernando Torre Lapham.
López Tarso's professional stage debut was in 1951 for the play Born Yesterday by Garson Kanin. He would also perform in several William Shakespeare plays such as A Midsummer Night's Dream, Macbeth, Othello and King Lear. Other productions included: The Crucible by Arthur Miller, Oedipus Rex and Oedipus at Colonus by Sophocles, Hippolytus by Euripides, La Celestina by Fernando de Rojas, Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand, The Miser by Molière, El villano en su rincón by Lope de Vega, The Mayor of Zalamea by Calderón de la Barca, and Exit the king by Eugène Ionesco. "Equus" by Peter Shaffer. He also performed works from authors Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Miguel de Cervantes, Guillén de Castro, Hugo Argüelles, Emilio Carballido, Ramón María del Valle-Inclán, over a hundred productions throughout his career.
Ignacio López Tarso's theatrical work has been mostly performing in drama, though in the years 2014 and 2015 he starred in a two-person comedy written by Carlos Gorostiza and titled Aeroplanos ("Airplanes"); his performance on stage was presented with who alternated appearances with Manuel "Loco" Valdés. The play was presented at the in Mexico City.
Film[]
López Tarso's film debut was in 1954 where he played a minor character in La desconocida, which was directed by Chano Urueta.
He played the title character Macario, a supernatural drama directed by Roberto Gavaldón set in the Day of the Dead. The film was entered into the 1960 Cannes Film Festival.[1] and was the first Mexican film to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1961.[2] He himself won a Golden Gate Award for Best Actor at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1960, and would win another for his work in the 1963 film The Paper Man, directed by Ismael Rodríguez.
In 1961, López Tarso starred in Rosa Blanca, directed by Gavaldon. Because the film was censured by political interests of the time, it was not released until 1972. He won the Ariel Award for Best Actor in 1973. Other notable movie performances included: Cri Cri, el grillito cantor (1963), directed by Tito Davison; La vida inútil de Pito Pérez (1969), directed by Gavaldón; The prophet Mimi (1972), directed by José Estrada; Rapiña (1973), directed by Carlos Enrique Taboada; and The bricklayers (1976), directed by Jorge Fons.
As part of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, López Tarso has acted in over fifty films, sharing star roles with actors such as Dolores del Río, María Félix, Marga López, Carlos López Moctezuma, Elsa Aguirre, Luis Aguilar, Katy Jurado, Irasema Dilián, Pedro Armendáriz and Emilio el indio Fernández.
Besides film, López Tarso has appeared in over twenty television series, and has released eight albums, many of which he recites poems and corridos about the Mexican Revolution. At one time, he served as a politician and became a federal deputy. He also had jobs in various organizations and trade-unions related to the actor and cinematographic associations.
Personal life[]
López Tarso married Clara Aranda. They have three children: Susana, Gabriela and Juan Ignacio, the last of whom became an actor Juan Ignacio Aranda.
On May 22, 2016, Tarso underwent surgery to treat a growing tumor in his large intestine and polyps in his small intestine.[3] Tarso was later placed under intensive care unit.[3]
Awards and accolades[]
López Tarso has won many Mexican and international awards including the following:
- Golden Gate Award (San Francisco International Film Festival 1960, United States) Best Actor for Macario.
- Golden Gate Award (San Francisco International Film Festival 1963, United States) Best Actor for The Paper Man.
- Ariel Award (Mexican Academy of Film, 1973, Mexico) Best Actor for Rosa Blanca.
- Association of Latin Entertainment Critics Award (2001, United States).
- Hispanic Heritage Society Award (2006, United States).
- Ariel de Oro (Mexican Academy of Film, 2007, Mexico) for his lifetime achievement in the film industry. Shared award with the cinematographer, Rosalío Solano.
- TVyNovelas Awards (Mexican Award 2011, Mexico) for his lifetime achievement on stage. Shared award with the actress, Silvia Pinal
Premios Ariel[]
Year | Category | Movie | Result |
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1973 | Best Performance | Rosa blanca | Won |
1974 | El profeta Mimí | Nominated | |
1975 | Rapiña |
TVyNovelas Awards[]
Year | Category | Telenovela | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Best Male Antagonist | El derecho de nacer | Nominated |
1988 | Best First Actor | Senda de gloria | |
1991 | Ángeles blancos | ||
1995 | Imperio de cristal | Won | |
1998 | Esmeralda | ||
2001 | La casa en la playa | Nominated | |
2003 | De pocas, pocas pulgas | Won | |
2014 | Corazón Indomable | Nominated |
Filmography[]
Films[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | La desconocida | Debut film | |
1955 | Chilam Balam | ||
1957 | Feliz año, amor mío | Manuel | |
1957 | Vainilla, bronce y morir | Ricardo Castillo | |
1958 | Ama a tu prójimo | Voice only | |
1959 | Nazarín | El sacrílego | |
1959 | Sonatas | Jefe de guerrilleros | |
1959 | La cucaracha | Trinidad | |
1959 | El hambre nuestra de cada día | Pablo | |
1960 | Macario | Macario | |
1960 | La estrella vacía | Luis Arvide | |
1960 | La sombra del Caudillo | General Hilario Jiménez | |
1961 | Ellas también son rebeldes | Dr. Gabriel Renteria | |
1961 | Juana Gallo | Pioquinto | |
1961 | Los hermanos Del Hierro | El pistolero | |
1961 | Y Dios la llamó tierra | Efren Domínguez | |
1961 | Rosa Blanca | Jacinto Yáñez | |
1963 | La bandida | Anselmo | |
1963 | Corazón de niño | ||
1963 | El hombre de papel | Adán | |
1963 | Días de otoño | Albino | |
1963 | Cri Cri el grillito cantor | Francisco Gabilondo Soler "Cri-Cri" | |
1964 | Furia en el Edén | ||
1964 | El gallo de oro | Dionisio Pinzón | |
1965 | Un hombre en la trampa | Javier Ortiz | |
1965 | Tarahumara | Raúl | |
1967 | Pedro Páramo | Fulgor Sedano | |
1968 | Un largo viaje hacia la muerte | ||
1968 | Las visitaciones del diablo | Félix Estrella | |
1969 | Melitón Torres | Segment: "La mujer del carnicero" | |
1969 | La trinchera | ||
1970 | La vida inútil de Pito Pérez | Pito Pérez | |
1971 | La Generala | Rosauro Márquez | |
1972 | Cayó de la gloria el diablo | Don Emeterio Sánchez | |
1973 | El profeta Mimi | Ángel Peñafiel, Mimi | |
1973 | The Divine Caste | Don Wilfrido | |
1974 | En busca de un muro | José Clemente Orozco | |
1974 | Hernán Cortés | Short film | |
1975 | Rapiña | ||
1976 | Renuncia por motivos de salud | Ingeniero Gustavo Sánchez Camero |
Television[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1957 | Noches de angustia | Television debut | |
1961 | Cuatro en la trampa | ||
1963-1964 | Gran teatro | Episodes: "Cyrano De Bergerac" & "Hipolito" | |
1966 | Amor y orgullo | ||
1967 | La tormenta | Gabriel | |
1970 | La constitución | ||
1971 | Rosas para Verónica | ||
1972 | El edificio de enfrente | ||
1972 | El carruaje | Cura | |
1973 | El honorable Señor Valdez | Humberto Valdéz | Lead role |
1978 | Henry Morell | ||
1979 | Amor prohibido | Arturo Galván | |
1980 | El combate | ||
1981 | El periquillo sangriento | ||
1981 | El derecho de nacer | Don Rafael del Junco | |
1987 | Senda de gloria | General Eduardo Álvarez | |
1990 | Ángeles blancos | Perfecto | |
1994 | Imperio de cristal | Don César Lombardo | |
1995 | Bajo un Mismo Rostro | ||
1997 | Esmeralda | Melesio | |
1998 | Camila | Genaro | |
1998 | Ángela | Feliciano Villanueva | |
2000 | La casa en la playa | Don Ángel Villarreal Cueto | |
2001 | Atrévete a olvidarme | Gonzalo Rivas | |
2001 | Navidad sin fin | Rodito | |
2002–2003 | ¡Vivan los niños! | Don Ignacio Robles | |
2003 | De pocas, pocas pulgas | Don Julián Montes | |
2005 | La esposa virgen | Francisco Ortiz | |
2005 | Peregrina | Don Baltazar | |
2007 | Amor sin maquillaje | ||
2008 | Mañana es para siempre | Isaac Newton Barrera | |
2009 | Mar de amor | El Mojarras | |
2011 | La Fuerza del Destino | Don Severiano | |
2011 | La que no podía amar | Fermín Peña | |
2013 | Corazón Indomable | Don Ramiro Olivares | |
2014 | La malquerida | Juan Carlos Maldonado | |
2015 | Amores con trampa | Don Porfirio Carmona | |
2019 | Médicos, línea de vida | Héctor |
Discography[]
This section needs expansion with: add studio albums and compilations here. You can help by . (March 2014) |
1964 Laura; {{Collapsible List
1. Los Mejores 3:45 2. A Ver 1821 2:47 3. Koala es una ciudad 5:45 4. La Ciudad de la historia 2:28 5. Una gran 1:23 6. Simple question 1:00 7. Bala es una gran 0:44 8. Gracias por todo (¿Como na Tede?) 2:11}} 1992 Una gran 1. Lu La La 1:45 2. La Mejor Forma 4:23 3. Sevilla 2:28 4. Una Gran 1:23 5. Se trata del primer 4:35 6. Roma Roma 2:45 7. Cine y cine 1:45 8. Ole y ole 2:20 9. La Air de la historia 1:22 2000 Sevilla es una ciudad 1. Promo Ana 5:55 2. Lu Es una ciudad muy 1:28 3. Se trata 1:55 4. Cómoda 1:25 5. El Juego de la historia 2:45 6. Lo que pasa es que no se pueden 3:22 7. La Ciudad 3:33 8. Lola 2:14
References[]
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Macario". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-02-15.
- ^ "The 33rd Academy Awards (1961) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 2011-10-29.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Armando Tinoco (23 May 2016). "Ignacio López Tarso Hospitalized: Mexican Actor In Intensive Care After Surgery". Latin Times. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
External links[]
- Ignacio López Tarso at IMDb.
- Estrellas del Cine Mexicano: Ignacio López Tarso, ITESM Database (in Spanish).
- 1925 births
- Living people
- Mexican male television actors
- Mexican male telenovela actors
- Mexican male stage actors
- Mexican male film actors
- Male actors from Mexico City
- Male Shakespearean actors
- Golden Ariel Award winners
- Mexican actor-politicians