Carlos Navarro

Carlos Navarro ( Durango , 6 of January of 1921 - City of Mexico , December of maypole of 1969 ) was a Mexican actor, who worked in the golden age of Mexican cinema . He acted in The illusion travels by tram (1954) directed by Luis Buñuel . He won an Ariel Award from the Mexican Film Academy for his performance in Doña Perfecta (1951) by filmmaker Alejandro Galindo .Carlos Navarro was born in the city of Durango on January 6, 1921, he made his debut as an actor in theater and later in cinema with a supporting role in the film Ramona (1946) starring Esther Fernández and Antonio Badú , following small interventions, until in 1951 he was given a larger role in the film Doña Perfecta , with the diva Dolores del Río leading the cast; Carlos wins the Ariel award for best male co-acting for this performance, immediately Ultramar Films gives him his first leading role in Angélica (1952), alongside Irasema Dilián, with such good acceptance as a film couple that they reappear together in Julio Bracho's La cowarde (1953) , A minute of goodness (1954) and History of a mink coat (1955). Other important participations were in Night of Perdition (1951) with Rosa Carmina , Camelia (1954) with María Félix and Jorge Mistral , The illusion travels by tram (1954), directed by Luis Buñuel and with the sensual Lilia Prado as a couple, El resurrected monster (1955) with the beautiful Miroslava, which at the time was not very successful but which today has become a cult work for specialized audiences, The Brave One (1956), the only Hollywood film in which it participates, Wild Heart (1956), with Martha Roth , Each his life (1960) and The empty star (1960), where he plays a couturier who remains the only friend of the ambitious "Olga Lang" ( María Félix ). In the 1960s Navarro moved away from the cinema to dedicate himself to acting on television in soap operas such as La Actress (1962), Madres egoístas (1963), Siempre tuya (1964) and Anita de Montemar (1967), among others. Navarro died on February 12, 1969 in Mexico City in unknown circumstances, although in his book Theater and Cinema , Ricardo Garibay hints that he died of his addictions (he even names him one of the probable first victims of AIDS ), but doing this revelation, only in doubt and without any foundation, perhaps he said it because of the gay conditionabout the actor, something about which little is known (the writer David Ramón in his biography of the diva Dolores del Río comments) perhaps because of the taboo of the subject at the time he lived.

Acting

1974

Street Law

- Actor
1942

Jungle Book

- Actor
1970

El Topo

- Actor