Luis Alarcón

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Luis Alarcón
Luis Alarcon.jpg
Born
Luis Alfonso Alarcón Mansilla

(1929-10-23) 23 October 1929 (age 91)
Other namesLucho Alarcón
Alma materUniversity of Chile
OccupationActor, theater director
Years active1951–present
Spouse(s)
  • Marion Soto
  • Lucía Eitel (until 2012)
Awards

Luis Alfonso Alarcón Mansilla (born 23 October 1929), popularly known as Lucho Alarcón, is a Chilean actor, theater director, and activist with a distinguished film, television, and stage career.[1]

In 1957, Alarcón began working as a stage actor participating in university theaters –  [es],  [es], Concepción,  [es] – and in independent companies. He later began his career as a cinematic actor, appearing in emblematic films such as Three Sad Tigers, Jackal of Nahueltoro, The Expropriation, Julio comienza en julio, Nadie dijo nada, Little White Dove, Caluga o menta, and The Shipwrecked.

In the 1980s he had roles in several telenovelas, but gained attention in the press only in 1983 when he played the evil Roberto Betancourt in  [es]. In 1993, he was instrumental in the creation of ChileActores, of which he would become the founding President. Alarcón was labeled the "Sabatini Star Actor", referring to his many appearances in the spectacular productions of  [es] on television, which were very successful due to their social content. In 1999, he co-starred in the telenovela  [es], starring actress Claudia di Girolamo, which became a praised and awarded soap opera. From 1995 to 2008 he was part of the stable cast of Sabatini. Through the producer's success, Alarcón continued to work with important figures in cinema, theater, and television.

He has also appeared in television series such as  [es], Estúpido Cupido, Romané,  [es],  [es],  [es], Pampa Ilusión,  [es], and El Señor de la Querencia.

He is the creator of the Patagonia Film Festival, a gala developed in the Cueva del Milodón.[2] Currently, he is officially recognized as the actor with the longest career in Chilean cinema, occasionally collaborating with Raúl Ruiz, Helvio Soto, Miguel Littín, Emilio Gómez Muriel, and Silvio Caiozzi.[3]

Career[]

The grandson of actor and director Justo Alarcón, Luis loved the art of film from a very young age. In Puerto Natales, where he was born, he became friends with the daughter of the cinema administrator, and there he learned the trade. In addition, his father – who worked in a refrigerator – was an amateur documentary filmmaker.

There is no other performer in Chilean cinema who has appeared, like Alarcón, in such a large number of films.[4] His origins as an actor, however, are in the theater, an activity that officially began (he had previously acted in school functions) in 1951, and since then he has acted in around 90 theatrical pieces. He relates that his vocation was defined after attending an exhibition of Death of a Salesman, by Arthur Miller. He studied Corporal Expression and Pantomime with Alejandro Jodorowsky, and with Enrique Gajardo and Pedro de la Barra at the Dramatic Arts Center of the Pedagogical Institute of the University of Chile, among others.

His first foray onto the big screen was made in the 1957 film Tres miradas a la calle by  [es].[5] Pedro Chaskel, who worked as assistant director on the film, would some years later become the director of Experimental Cinema at the University of Chile.

Alarcón participated in  [es]'s first film, La Universidad en la Antarctica (1962), which he narrated. Later, along with much of his theater company, he starred in Raúl Ruiz's first feature film El tango del viudo (1967).[5] Rather than ending, the shoot led directly into the making of Three Sad Tigers (1968), considered one of the most important films of Chilean cinema.[6]

That same year he was summoned to join the experimental film team of the University of Chile, which produced his first feature film project called Jackal of Nahueltoro, based on real events in the San Carlos region, where an illiterate murders a whole family and later, after being educated in prison, is condemned to death. Alarcón would initially play a journalist, but he then became involved in the production of the film with Luis Cornejo himself. Jackal of Nahueltoro broke public attendance records, only surpassed by the television hit adapted to the big screen, Germán Becker's Ayúdeme usted compadre.[7]

Later, Luis Alarcón participated in a large portion of Raúl Ruiz's films such as Nadie dijo nada (1970), The Penal Colony (1970), The Expropriation (1971), and Little White Dove (1973).

On television he has played emblematic characters on TVN's Dramatic Area series, such as Pedro Chamorro on La fiera, who at all costs wants to marry his eldest daughter, due to a promise made to his dying wife. He is also well known for his role as Roberto Betancourt on the television series La represa, a very evil and abusive landlord.

He is also known for his Indian character in advertising for the Firestone tire brand. For one such commercial, shot by director Silvio Caiozzi, Alarcón won a Golden Lion Award at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival.[8]

In 2017, he received the Golden Spike Award from the Institute of Higher Communication Studies for his outstanding artistic career in Chilean cinema.[9]

Filmography[]

Films
Year Title Role Director
1957  [es] Offender  [es]
1961 La Novia Ernesto Arancibia
1962 La Flor de Irupé Roberto  [es]
1967 Erase un niño, un guerrillero, un caballo Helvio Soto
El tango del viudo Raúl Ruiz
1968 Three Sad Tigers Luis Úbeda Raúl Ruiz
1969 Jackal of Nahueltoro Judge Miguel Littín
1970 ¡Qué hacer! Osvaldo Alarcón Raúl Ruiz
The Penal Colony Head of State Raúl Ruiz
La Buscona Emilio Gómez Muriel
 [es] Abel Salazar
Flor de durazno Emilio Gómez Muriel
1971  [es] Voltigo Miguel Zacarías
 [es] Charles Elsesser
Nadie dijo nada Braulio "The Poet" Raúl Ruiz
Dos mujeres y un hombre Alfredo B. Crevenna
1972 Hoy he soñado con Dios Octavio Julián Soler
 [es] Roberto Gavaldón
1973 Little White Dove Stepfather of María Raúl Ruiz
1974  [es] Carrillo Silvio Caiozzi
The Expropriation Capataz Lucho Raúl Ruiz
1975 Vías paralelas  [es]
1977 Arrecife mortal John Randall
1979 El amor de mi vida Gene Curtis Joselito Rodríguez
Julio comienza en julio Alberto García del Castaño Silvio Caiozzi
1980  [es] Félix  [es]
1987 Sussi [es] Mario Gonzalo Justiniano
1990 Caluga o menta Marcial Gonzalo Justiniano
Hay algo allá afuera Pepe Maldonado
1992  [es] Don Pedro Sebastián Alarcón
1993 Johnny 100 Pesos Juez Gastón Mora Gustavo Graef-Marino
 [es] Octavio Cortázar
1994 The Shipwrecked Sebastián Mola Miguel Littín
1997 La huella Juan Diego Garreton
1998 Aventureros del fin del mundo Adventurer Miguel Littín
1999 Cinco marineros y un ataúd verde Hans Miguel Littín
El duelo Don Faustino Miguel Littín
2000 Tierra del Fuego Alexis Miguel Littín
Chilean Gothic
2002  [es]
2003  [es] Head of State
2004 La Isla Alex Leyton
2006 Kiltro Farah Ernesto Díaz
2008  [es] Valeria Sarmiento
2009 Mandrill Don Mario Ernesto Díaz
2011 Gente mala del norte Abelardo de la Puente Patricio Riquelme
2013 La gravedad del púgil Jorge Mella
2014 Mamá ya crecí Clemente Correa Gonzalo Badilla
Maldito Amor Señor Ossandón Gonzalo Badilla
La invención de la Patria Galut Alarcón

Television[]

TV series
Year Series Role Channel
1966 Historia de los lunes Chilevisión
1967  [es]
1975  [es] El Capataz Canal 13
1981  [es] Humberto Martínez Canal 13
1982  [es] Mariano Balcarce Canal 13
 [es] Marcial Canal 13
1983 Alamiro Villarrobles Canal 13
1984 Roberto Betancourt TVN
 [es] Ramón Oyarce TVN
1985  [es] René Barrientos TVN
 [es] Emiliano Cardoso TVN
1986  [es] Domínguez TVN
 [es] Rafael López "El Coyote" TVN
1988  [es] Albino Vega Canal 13
1989  [es] Adolfo Tropero Canal 13
1990  [es] Marcial Ríos TVN
 [es] Monseñor Sergio Valech Canal 13
1991  [es] Gastón de la Force TVN
1992  [es] Jaime Canal 13
1993  [es] Waldo Canal 13
1994  [es] Camilo Zamudio Canal 13
 [es] Alcides Mainardi TVN
1995 Estúpido Cupido Octavio Dublé TVN
1996  [es] Ambrosio Campos TVN
1997  [es] José María TVN
Brigada Escorpión Anselmo Marín TVN
1998  [es] Reynaldo Paz TVN
 [es] Nicanor Barros Jarpa TVN
1998–1999  [es] Ambrosio Campos TVN
1999  [es] Pedro Chamorro "El Guata de Sandía" TVN
2000 Romané Baldomero Lillo / Spiro Antich TVN
2001 Pampa Ilusión Emilio Fuenzalida TVN
2002  [es] Juan Lorenzo "El Capitán" TVN
2003  [es] Efraín Gallegos TVN
2004 Los Pincheira Padre Antonio Ortúzar TVN
2005  [es] Giorgio Capo "El Nono" TVN
2006  [es] Adolfo Duarte TVN
2007  [es] Pedro Lamarca TVN
2008 Viuda Alegre Edgardo Mansilla TVN
El Señor de la Querencia Renato Echeñique TVN
2009  [es] Vicente García-Huidobro TVN
2010 Martin Rivas Pedro San Luis TVN
La familia de al lado Igor Mora TVN
2011  [es] Francisco Grau TVN
2013 Somos los Carmona Rosendo Carmona TVN
2014 Caleta del sol Nicasio Mardones "Don Lobo" TVN
2015  [es] Manuel UCV Television
 [es] Arzobispo Chilevisión
2016 El camionero Emeterio Pérez TVN
2017  [es] Humberto Rodríguez TVN

Awards and recognitions[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Ciclo en homenaje a Luis Alarcón" [Cycle in Homage to Luis Alarcón] (in Spanish). Portal de Arte. 2007. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Luis Alarcón: es un orgullo inaugurar Muestra de Cine de la Patagonia con 'Machuca'" [Luis Alarcón: It is an Honor to Inaugurate the Patagonia Film Festival with 'Machuca'] (in Spanish). Radio Cooperativa. 2 February 2005. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  3. ^ "Luis Alarcón". La Tercera (in Spanish). 9 January 2013. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  4. ^ González, Gabriela (2 November 2009). "Entrevista a Luis Alarcón" [Interview With Luis Alarcón] (in Spanish). Cinechile. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Cultura, Issues 4-9 (in Spanish). Secretary of Communication and Culture. 1992. Retrieved 7 February 2018 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Olave, Daniel (1 January 1997). Chile v/s Hollywood. Grijalbo. p. 175. ISBN 9789562580519. Retrieved 7 February 2018 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Barnard, Timothy; Rist, Peter, eds. (28 June 2010). South American Cinema: A Critical Filmography, 1915-1994. University of Texas Press. ISBN 9780292792104. Retrieved 7 February 2018 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Actor Luis Alarcón es elegido Personaje Magallánico del Año" [Actor Luis Alarcón is Chosen Magallánico Personage of the Year]. La Prensa Austral (in Spanish). 30 November 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b "Instituto de Altos Estudios Comunicacionales entregó 'Premio Espiga de Oro' a Luis Alarcón" [Institute of Higher Communication Studies Grants 'Golden Spike Award' to Luis Alarcón] (in Spanish). ChileActores. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  10. ^ Ercilla, Issues 2955-2976 (in Spanish). Sociedad Editora Revista Ercilla. 1994. p. 56. Retrieved 7 February 2018 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Morales, Karina (26 September 2007). "Luis Alarcón corona 50 años de carrera con la Orden al Mérito Pablo Neruda" [Luis Alarcón Crowns 50 Year Career With the Pablo Neruda Order of Merit]. El Mercurio (in Spanish). Santiago. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  12. ^ "Luis Alarcón: Un actor de larga y exitosa trayectoria" [Luis Alarcón: An Actor With a Long and Successful Career] (in Spanish). Senate of Chile. 16 January 2008. Archived from the original on 24 April 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  13. ^ "Universidad de Chile premia a Luis Alarcón por su aporte cultural" [University of Chile Awards Luis Alarcón for His Cultural Contribution]. La Tercera (in Spanish). 16 April 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  14. ^ 9º Versión (in Spanish). Quilpué Film Festival. 2017. p. 12. Retrieved 7 February 2018 – via issuu.
  15. ^ "El actor natalino Luis Alarcón sera nombrado hijo ilustre" [The Natalan Actor Luis Alarcón to be Named Illustrious Son] (in Spanish). Radio Natales. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  16. ^ "Distinguen en Puerto Natales a actor Luis Alarcón" [Actor Luis Alarcón Honored in Puerto Natales] (in Spanish). Radio Polar. 1 June 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  17. ^ "Andrew Bargsted y Luis Alarcón son reconocidos en Premios Caleuche 2018" [Andrew Bargsted and Luis Alarcón are Recognized at 2018 Caleuche Awards] (in Spanish). TVN. 24 January 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2018.

External links[]

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